Susanne Altmann

born in Vienna on May 16, 1921
Persecuted person
Susanne Altmann (left) and Donata Helmrich, Paris, 1954.

Susanne Altmann lived with her parents and her sister Johanna in Vienna. After Austria’s annexation they fled to Krakow and continued to Soviet-occupied Lemberg in the fall of 1939. When the Wehrmacht invaded in June 1941, the family were put into Hyrawka forced labor camp near Drohobycz. The camp director Eberhard Helmrich deployed the sisters’ father, Wilhelm Altmann, as his administrator.
Helmrich, who helped many persecuted people, obtained forged papers for Susanne and Johanna Altmann in the fall of 1942, passing them off as Ukrainian Christians, and smuggled the sisters to his wife Donata in Berlin-Charlottenburg. Despite her concerns for her own children, Donata Helmrich took the young women into her home. When neighbors became suspicious, she looked for a way out. She applied to the labor office for permission to employ the escapees, since they could work in private households as “Ukrainians.” Then she placed the sisters in families looking for low-priced domestic workers; their employers did not know about their Jewish origins. Susanne Altmann moved in with a family in Potsdam-Babelsberg, where she was liberated in May 1945.

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