Kurt Lingens


Kurt Lingens, M.D. and his wife Ella Lingens, M.D. were honored by Yad Vashem, which named them Righteous Among the Nations. At the age of 103, Kurt is the last living German who helped Jews survive the Holocaust.

Life

Born on May 5, 1912, in Düsseldorf, Kurt Lingens was disqualified from all German academies in 1933 because of his membership in an anti-fascist group of students. His father, chief of police in Cologne, Germany, was fired from his job in 1936 because he was associated with the Catholic, anti-Nazi Zentrumspartei, and because he had tried to thwart Sturmabteilung persecution of Catholics.
Ella, who was born in Vienna in 1908, had a doctoral degree in law and studied medicine at the University of Vienna. When the Nazis annexed Austria, she began to help Jews, especially students she knew through her studies. For example, during the Kristallnacht pogrom, she hid 10 Jews in her room.
In 1939, the Lingenses met and became friends with Baron Karl von Motesiczky, an anti-Nazi whose mother was Jewish, and who until that time had - like Ella - studied medicine in the University of Vienna. Motesiczky invited the Lingenses to live in a large house he owned in the Vienna suburb of Hinterbrühl during the summer months. At this house, the Baron often hosted Jews and members of the anti-Nazi resistance, and he, the Lingenses, and other collaborators hid and provided other assistance to Jews.
In summer 1942, the Nazi regime began to deport Jewish people from Vienna. Many Jews asked the Lingens couple for help. Some of the Jewish people stored their valuables at the Lingens' home. Additionally, the anti-Nazi Polish underground movement, with which the couple worked together, asked them to help two Jewish couples to escape or to find a suitable hideaway.

Arrests and punishment

On 13 October 1942, the Lingens and Motesiczky were arrested because they financially supported members of the Polish resistance and because they distributed faked IDs. They, some of their collaborators, and some people they'd helped had been betrayed by their "friend", Rudolf Klinger, a Jewish former stage actor who was later proven to be an informer.
Motesiczky and the couple were taken to the Gestapo headquarters at Morzin place. After a short custody Kurt Lingens was transferred to a penalty unit comprising soldiers who were sent to the Russian front as a form of punishment for various crimes. While at the front, Lingens sustained serious injuries.
Ella and Motesiczky were sent to Auschwitz; Motesiczky died there of typhus on June 25, 1943. Ella was assigned as a doctor of the camp inmates and managed to save a number of Jews from death in the gas chambers; she was sent on a death march from Auschwitz to Dachau and managed to survive until the end of the war.
Klinger, the Gestapo informant, was arrested in 1943 after his handlers decided he could no longer be useful to them. He was sent to Auschwitz, where he died.

Post-war

After World War II Kurt Lingens first worked in a paediatric clinic in Vienna and then emigrated to the United States, where he worked as a psychiatrist. In 1980, he and Ella were honored by Yad Vashem with the medal of honor "Righteous among the nations".

Personal life

The Lingens' son is the Austrian journalist Peter Michael Lingens.