Jonny Moser


Jonny Moser was an Austrian historian of the Holocaust and a survivor of the Holocaust.

Life

Jonny Moser was the son of a Jewish mother. Josef and Katharina Moser owned a general store in Burgenland at Parndorf which was the eastern end of Austria as remapped in 1919. Early in 1938 Austria was merged with Germany as part of Hitler's strategy for again redrawing the map of central Europe. Government policy for Burgenland now involved deporting the region's Jewish residents to Hungary. For the Moser family this meant, initially, some months spent under house arrest while their property was "aryanized". They were then deported to Vienna where Jonny's father, Josef Moser, was again taken into custody by the Gestapo. In 1939 Josef was deported to the Hungarian capital, Budapest. Hungary was politically allied with Germany throughout this period, and Josef Moser was again interned. The next year, in October 1940, Katharina Moser and their son, Jonny were also able to transfer to Budapest and the family spent the next few years in a succession of Hungarian internment camps. In the summer of 1944 the family found themselves unexpectedly released, and presented in the Swedish legation of the diplomat Raoul Wallenberg. The Mosers were among those for whom Wallenberg organized "protective passports" after which they were accommodated in "protected houses". Johnny Moser was now employed in the "Relief Team" of Raoul Wallenberg.
After the war Jonny Moser studied History at the University of Vienna, later completing his doctoral dissertation on the subject of "Anti-Semitism in Austria". He published works on Nazi persecution of Jews in Austria.
Jonny Moser was a co-founder of the Documentation Centre of Austrian Resistance in Vienna. From 1964 he was a member of its governing board. Between 1964 and 1996 he sat on the District Council, representing the Social Democratic party in central Vienna's first District. He was on the board of the "Social Democratic Freedom Fighters" and of the Association "Victims of Fascism and Active Anti-Fascists".
His autobiography, entitled "Wallenbergs Laufbursche. Jugenderinnerungen 1938-1945" appeared in 2006.

Recognition

In 2011 he received the honour of a "Bundesehren" award from the Austrian state, shared four ways with other freedom activists :de:Gertrude Spieß|Gertrude Spieß, :de:Hugo Pepper|Hugo Pepper and Peter Weidner.

Publications