|

Honoring a Quiet Friend of
German Jews
Hamburg Archivist Is Recognized in Berlin for Decades of
Work Reassembling Shattered History
By John Burgess
Washington Post Foreign Service
Wednesday, January
28, 2004
BERLIN, Jan. 27 --
Sallyann Sack recalls the rainy day in 2000 that she spent on the Hamburg
waterfront, hoping to find clues to the voyage her grandmother had begun
there a century earlier. The rooming houses where the 16-year-old Jewish
girl might have stayed before traveling alone to America had disappeared;
so had most of the administrative buildings of the time.
But then her guide
said, "Sally, I cannot show you the boarding house where your grandmother
stayed when she was waiting to board the ship, but I can promise you that
she walked along this street."
With those words, the Bethesda woman said she felt suddenly and profoundly
the presence of her forebear. The gift came courtesy of Juergen Sielemann,
a courtly German who at his desk at the Hamburg State Archive has made
it his business for more than 30 years to organize and publicize the historical
record of Jews in Hamburg. On his own time, he helps people such as Sack
who come to conduct searches on a more personal scale.
On Tuesday evening,
Sielemann stood before the German Parliament in Berlin and accepted an
Obermayer German Jewish History Award for his efforts. Back in Bethesda,
Sack was particularly happy to hear the news because she was one of several
people who had nominated him for the honor. The award is presented each
year to five non-Jewish Germans who have made outstanding contributions
to the reassembling of the German Jewish record, shattered more than half
a century ago.
"I have been
personally touched" by the history of Hamburg's Jews, Sielemann said
Tuesday in an interview, explaining his dedication to a community that
was all but wiped out by Nazi deportations. "It upsets me. I feel
I have to do something, and I feel I'm not doing enough."
His thick glasses
and calm manner fit the image of a profession based on the love of documents,
and he seemed both amused by and uneasy with the attention his work has
generated.
But Sielemann is something
of a star in the world of Jewish genealogy. A regular at conferences in
the United States, Britain and Israel, he is renowned for his encyclopedic
knowledge -- he knows the street numbers of those lost boarding houses,
for example. He founded Germany's only Jewish genealogical society. And
he has helped put Hamburg's emigration records online so that people worldwide
can search for information about forebears who might have set out from
the North German port en route to the United States.
"He's one of
those Germans who's devoted their professional lives to making sure that
Jewish heritage and history isn't lost," Sack said. "He obviously
feels as a German the burden of the Holocaust."
Frank Bajohr, a historian at the Research Institute for Contemporary History
in Hamburg who has conducted research with Sielemann, said the man has
remarkable energy. "He's highly engaged," said Bajohr, a specialist
in Nazi confiscation of Jewish property.
The awards were given
on the anniversary of the 1945 liberation of the Auschwitz death camp,
which Germany has adopted as an official day of remembrance of the victims
of Nazism. In Parliament on Tuesday morning, Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder,
his cabinet and legislators listened reverently to an address by Simone
Veil, an Auschwitz survivor who became president of the European Parliament.
Through such events, Germans learn their country's history. Some prefer
to forget it, others invest their own time and money in making sure that
no one will. Tuesday's recipients of the prize, which is administered
by the Massachusetts-based Obermayer Foundation, also included a doctor
who has restored a Jewish cemetery, recovering old headstones that had
been used for steps in nearby houses, and another doctor who helped save
a former Jewish community center from demolition.
As Sielemann tells
it, he pretty much stumbled into his life work. He was born in 1944, just
south of Hamburg, and so has no personal memories of the prewar community
or the war. As a 20-year-old with a general interest in history, he was
hired by the Hamburg State Archive in 1966 and three years later took
over the Jewish files.
There were quite a
few. Hamburg's Jews had agreed in the 19th century to deposit their documents
with the government for safekeeping, and many of those papers survived
the Allied bombs -- birth, marriage and death certificates from local
synagogues were there to examine. So were passenger lists from the ships
that took immigrants from all over Central and Eastern Europe across the
Atlantic.
As he made his way
through the stacks of papers, Sielemann said, he became fascinated with
the centuries-long Jewish presence in Hamburg. In 1933, the year Adolf
Hitler took power, there were about 24,000 people in the city observing
three strands of Judaism.
But for years, he
felt as if he were laboring alone on an island. In Germany until the late
1970s, he said, "there was really no interest, there was no discussion,
there was nothing on the subject of the Holocaust and Jewish history.
Silence. . . . So that meant that the younger generation had to learn
not from the elder generation but by themselves."
Gradually he began
to make contacts with survivors from abroad, with relatives of the dead
and with a small but reconstituting Jewish community in Hamburg itself.
Sack, a clinical psychologist
who is active in genealogical groups, first came into contact with Sielemann
in 1984, when he wrote to ask her if a gentile would be welcome at a conference
the Jewish Genealogy Society of Greater Washington was organizing in Jerusalem.
She recalls laughing and responding: Of course, as long as you pay the
fee.
A string of initiatives
followed from her friend in Hamburg: in 1996 the German Jewish genealogical
society, in 1999 the online directory. Last year, he was the driving force
behind an invitation that the Hamburg city government extended to the
descendants of the one millionth immigrant who embarked at Hamburg.
On Wednesday, Sielemann
planned to head back to his office in Hamburg. For her part, Sack said
she felt embarrassed that she didn't nominate her friend for the prize
earlier. The reason, she said, was that "he seems so much like one
of us, even though he's not Jewish."
© 2004 The Washington
Post Company
Back
|