An exhibit examining the story of thirteen Jews who escaped from a Nazi death march during World War II is currently on display in the Libraries' Diversity Room. "Anyone Would Have Done That: The Rescue of the Thirteen Jews from Ergoldsbach" (Germany), coordinated by Gerhard F. Strasser, Emeritus Professor of German, is sponsored by the Jewish Studies Program, and through the support of the Gene and Roz Chaiken Endowment for the Study of the Holocaust; the departments of Germanic and Slavic Languages and Literatures, Comparative Literature, and History; and the Penn State University Libraries.
The exhibit highlights the rescue of thirteen Jews on one of the death marches from the Buchenwald concentration camp at the end of World War II. While thousands perished, some 200 prisoners reached the small town of Ergoldsbach in Bavaria at the end of April, 1945, and from there thirteen of them managed to escape. They were found by Max Maurer, the local police sergeant, who-contrary to SS orders he had received that morning-did not shoot them on sight. Instead he arranged for a cart to take the emaciated men to a barn belonging to a farmer who was known for her opposition to the Nazis. They were hidden in the hay loft, fed by the farmer Anna Gnadl, and rescued by the U.S. troops the following morning.
John Weiner is the last surviving member of this group and was instrumental in creating this exhibit, which was first shown in Ergoldsbach and Bavarian schools in 2005. Weiner himself weighed fifty-three pounds when Anna Gnadl took him in; he finally left a Regensburg hospital after almost a year.
The exhibit includes various German newspaper clippings from the 1930s translated into English that give some insight into local politics during the Nazi regime. Additional documentation and material is accessible online (http://www.personal.psu.edu/gfs1/exhibition.html).