Käte Lasker née Meyer

born in Berlin on December 13, 1889 – died in Berlin-Wedding on October 24, 1977
Persecuted person
Käte Lasker, July 1942.

The Jewish teacher Käte Lasker lived in Berlin and went into hiding in the home of a non-Jewish acquaintance in January 1942. This woman obtained a train ticket to Offenburg and identity papers for her, into which Lasker inserted her own photo. She planned to use them to escape to Switzerland.
At the end of January 1942, she went to the Black Forest and rented a room in a guesthouse, posing as spa patient in need of recuperation. After a failed attempt to cross the border on her own, she turned to the Catholic town priest in Singen, August Ruf. An opponent of the regime, Ruf contacted his former curate Eugen Weiler from the border community of Wiechs am Randen. With Weiler’s help, Lasker managed to enter Switzerland but was handed over to the canton police in Schaffhausen. She mentioned Weiler’s name in her interrogation. The Gestapo learned of this and arrested the priest on June 1, 1942, a few days after Lasker’s escape. After being held in prison, Weiler was transferred to Dachau concentration camp, where he remained until shortly before the end of the war. August Ruf was also sentenced to six months’ imprisonment. He died on April 8, 1944, only days after his early release.
Lasker moved to Israel to join her daughter in 1949, but returned to Berlin in 1957.

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