Hiltgunt zassenhaus biography for kids
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About the Author
Includes the names: H. Margret Zassenhaus, Dr Hiltgunt Zassenhaus
Works by Hiltgunt Zassenhaus
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Legal name
- Zassenhaus, Hiltgunt Margret
- Other names
- Zassenhaus, H. Margret
- Birthdate
- 1916-07-10
- Date of death
- 2004-11-20
- Burial location
- Cremated
- Gender
- female
- Nationality
- Germany (birth)
USA - Birthplace
- Hamburg, Germany
- Place of death
- Baltimore, Maryland, USA
- Education
- University of Hamburg
University of Bergen
University of Copenhagen - Occupations
- physician
philologist
interpreter
memoirist - Relationships
- Zassenhaus, Hans J. (brother)
- Awards and honors
- Red Cross Medal (1948)
Order of St. Olav (1964)
Order of the Dannebrog
Order of Merit (1969) - Short biography
- Hiltgunt Margret Zassenhaus was born in Hamburg, Germany. Her father Julius Zassenhaus was a liberal history professor who lost his job in 1933 when the Nazi regime came to power. Her mother Margret Ziegler Zassenhaus was an anti-Nazi dissident who helped
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Walls: Resisting the Third Reich: One Woman's Story
February 7, 2017Since reading Hiltgunt Zassenhaus’ book, Walls: Resisting the Third Reich–One Woman’s Story, I have also felt inspired to live my life in a better way.
I’ve read many memoirs by Jewish survivors of the Holocaust, but this one is by a German woman, a Gentile, who decided not to play it safe, but to “fight back” against the Nazis.
Her story reads like an adventure tale. I became caught up in the danger that Zassenhaus put herself through to save Scandinavian political prisoners. I learned what it was like for her and for her family, living in Germany during the war. Although she does anything but draw attention to it, Zassenhaus’ strong ethics and sense of honor inform the book. She refused to compromise these codes when her resulting actions put her life in danger.
The main theme seems to be how important it is to speak up or act in resistance against dangers to freedom like Nazism. Her clearly written scene•
Hiltgunt Zassenhaus
German philologist
"Hiltgunt" redirects here. For the character in a medieval poem, see Waltharius.
Hiltgunt Margret Zassenhaus (10 July 1916 – 20 November 2004) was a German philologist who worked as an interpreter in Hamburg, Germany during World War II, and later as a physician in the United States. She was honoured for her efforts to aid prisoners in Nazi Germany during World War II.
Early life
[edit]Hiltgunt Zassenhaus was born in Hamburg to Julius H. and Margret Ziegler Zassenhaus.[1] Her father was a historian and school principal who lost his job when the Nazi regime came to power in 1933.[2][3] Her brothers were the mathematician Hans (known for the butterfly lemma and the Zassenhaus group), and physicians Günther and Willfried.[3]
Following a bicycling holiday in Denmark in 1933, she decided to study philology, specializing in the Scandinavian languages. She graduated from the University of Hamburg wi