Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of figures
- List of tables
- List of contributors
- Preface
- 1 Introduction: the business–government relationship
- Part I The business–politics paradigm
- Part II Banking finance
- Part III Business and politics in the National Socialist period
- 8 German business and the Nazi New Order
- 9 ‘Aryanisation’ in Central Europe, 1933–1939: a preliminary account for Germany (the ‘Altreich’), Austria and the ‘Sudeten’ area
- 10 The Gildemeester Organisation for Assistance to Emigrants and the expulsion of Jews from Vienna, 1938–1942
- 11 Deutsche Lufthansa and the German state, 1926–1941
- Part IV The business community and the state
- Appendix: Alice Teichova: a select bibliography
- Index
10 - The Gildemeester Organisation for Assistance to Emigrants and the expulsion of Jews from Vienna, 1938–1942
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 12 March 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of figures
- List of tables
- List of contributors
- Preface
- 1 Introduction: the business–government relationship
- Part I The business–politics paradigm
- Part II Banking finance
- Part III Business and politics in the National Socialist period
- 8 German business and the Nazi New Order
- 9 ‘Aryanisation’ in Central Europe, 1933–1939: a preliminary account for Germany (the ‘Altreich’), Austria and the ‘Sudeten’ area
- 10 The Gildemeester Organisation for Assistance to Emigrants and the expulsion of Jews from Vienna, 1938–1942
- 11 Deutsche Lufthansa and the German state, 1926–1941
- Part IV The business community and the state
- Appendix: Alice Teichova: a select bibliography
- Index
Summary
Austrian historian Hans Safrian, in his book Eichmann's Men, is highly suspicious of the subject of this chapter. According to Safrian, the Vienna-based Gildemeester Organisation for Assistance to Emigrants (Auswanderungshilfsaktion Gildemeester or Gildemeesteraktion) ‘allegedly’ assisted impoverished Jews in their efforts to leave German-occupied Austria. It is quite obvious that Safrian shares a feeling of distrust, widespread amongst commentators after 1945, towards philanthropic associations operating on behalf of the Jews on German soil before and during the Holocaust. In our case, scepticism seems the more warranted as Francis (Frank) van Gheel Gildemeester, founder of the agency which afterwards bore his name, initially negotiated deals between rich Jewish families and the German authorities in Austria. These deals, enabling the Jews to leave the territory of the Reich, required them to donate a share of their wealth to a ‘Gildemeester fund’, promoting emigration from Austria of poor ‘non-Aryans’. This clearly smacked of profitable business exploiting the plight of refugees, but under the cloak of charity.
The purpose of this chapter is to discuss in some detail the motives, achievements and shortcomings of the Gildemeesteraktion. To this end I have utilised material from archives in Israel, the United States, Austria and the Netherlands. While this chapter was being prepared, the government of Austria initiated a historical research project to inquire into the ‘precise amount and structure of Jewish fortunes handled under the auspices of Gildemeester's organisation, between spring 1938 and the beginning of 1941’.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Business and Politics in Europe, 1900–1970Essays in Honour of Alice Teichova, pp. 215 - 245Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2003
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