She slapped a Nazi in the face and staged one of the most dramatic acts of wartime rebellion
Mala Zimetbaum was the first Jewish woman to escape Auschwitz and she refused to let the Nazis decide her fate
Children liberated from Auschwitz in World War II, 1945.
“I will die a heroine, but you will die like a dog!”
Mala Zimetbaum (Museum Kazerne Dossin)
These
were the words Mala Zimetbaum spat at an SS officer as she slapped
him — hard — across the face. The blood that streamed from her slit
wrists sprayed over his face and neck, and the symbolism of that moment
was hard to miss: He literally had her blood on his hands. She would pay
bitterly for this act of resistance, which was her last but certainly
not her first. On September 15, 1944, the young woman who fought the
terror of the Nazis time and time again, first in Antwerp, then in
Brussels, and finally in the living nightmare known as Auschwitz, was murdered after having escaped weeks beforehand with her lover Edward Galinski (known as Edek), a Polish political prisoner in the camp.
Edward 'Edek' Galinski
When
Zimetbaum was sent to Auschwitz in 1942, she was given a relatively
desirable job as a courier and translator due to her fluency in German,
Polish, English, French, and Flemish. That’s where her real legacy began
to take shape: Many Auschwitz survivors have her to thank for their
lives. Her privileged job allowed her to bring food and clothes to those
who needed it the most, warn sick people when “selections” were coming
up so that they could pretend to be healthy (any sick person was
immediately sent to the gas chamber on selection day), strike as many
names as possible off of selection lists, and send messages to the
outside world.
Along
the way, she somehow, miraculously fell in love — and together they
planned their escape. In June 1944, Zimetbaum became the first Jewish
woman to escape Auschwitz. But the good fortune was short-lived: They
were caught 13 days afterward, and interrogated (read: tortured) in the
hopes that they would reveal their collaborators. Both refused to speak.
Some say that Zimetbaum and Edek managed to see each other one last
time before their execution, others say that they were only able to
exchange messages. You can still see their names today, which they
carved into the walls of their cells.
When
the day came for her “trial,” Zimetbaum refused to participate in the
show. She was going to take matters into her own hands, and
somehow — probably through one of the many supporters she had amassed at
the camp — managed to get ahold of a razorblade. When the verdict
against her was being read aloud, she slashed her wrists — and when the
SS officer tried to stop her, all her rage, fear, and indignation was
channeled into the ferocious slap she delivered to the face of her
torturer, right in front of the other inmates of the women’s camp. He grabbed her arm and broke it. The camp staff jumped on her, knocking her to the ground, and taped her mouth shut. She
was beaten violently, and was probably dead by the time she was
dragged off to the crematorium — although the head supervisor of the
women’s camp supposedly yelled that “this beast should burn alive in the
chimney.”
Up to the very last moment of her life, 26-year-old Zimetbaum remained defiant, bold, courageous — a heroine.
Malka Zimetbaum,
also known as "Mala" Zimetbaum or "Mala the Belgian"
26 January 1918 – 15 September 1944
Now, go make something beautiful.
¸.•´
¸.•*´¨) ¸.•*´¨)(¸.•´
(¸.•´♥ Tristan ♥
(¸.•´♥ Tristan ♥
9 comments:
Thank you for sharing this heroine’s story. Gail
What a story. Makes life's inconveniences seem quite insignificant!
Tristan, Thank you for sharing that heart warming history of a wonderful woman. Have a great week. Sylvia D.
I didn't know of this. What a wonderful woman.
Thank you so much for sharing this story with us.
Neet (tearfully) x
More people should know about her.The Nazis often are depicted as if to suggest that no one dared to stand up to them whatsoever.
I have never read about her before. Thanks for sharing her story
A truly brave heroine. There were many in that dark era that we will never know. I'm glad to know Malka's story
Thank you so much for sharing this, Tristan. I don't know anything about her and I will now have to look her up, see if I can find more. She is a most remarkable, courageous woman and what a legacy to leave. I can't tell you how grateful I am to know of this.
What a story! Thank you so much for sharing this Tristan- a beautiful and courageous woman! I agree with JP more should know that some made it a point to let the Nazi's know they would not decide their fates!
Jackie xx
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