Ursula Beutelspacher née Holschke

born in Dresden on February 7, 1926
Helper
Ursula Beutelsbacher, Jerusalem, 1999.

Ursula Holschke lived with her brother Walter in Naundorf near Oschatz in Saxony, where her father Alfred Holschke worked as an estate manager. After her mother’s death in 1943, 17-year-old Ursula took charge of the household.
In the end phase of the war, one of the infamous “death marches” passed by the estate. On April 17, 1945, Hanna Levy, Anna Borinski, and three or four other women managed to escape from the group marching from Auschwitz concentration camp. The next day, Walter Holschke found them utterly exhausted and hiding in bushes. He informed his father, who hid the Jewish women in a barn on the estate. Ursula Holschke in particular took care of the women, nursing them back to health with porridge. Oschatz was liberated by the Western Allies on April 26, 1945.
When Alfred Holschke was threatened with arrest for alleged sabotage in 1952, he fled to West Germany with his son and daughter. In 1998 Ursula Beutelspacher, as she was called after her marriage, her brother, and posthumously their father were honored by Yad Vashem as Righteous Among the Nations.

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