The Jewish Chronicle

Jewish doctor gets his degree, 86 years late

- BY ELIANA JORDAN

A JEWISH doctor who was expelled from the University of Vienna medical school during the Anschluss in 1938 has received a posthumous doctorate 86 years later.

Fritz Deutscher, who later changed his name to Fred Dexter, passed away in 1988 at the age of 74, having establishe­d himself as a GP and ophthalmol­ogist in the UK.

Deutscher fled Austria after being expelled from the University of Vienna medical school with just one final exam left to complete when Austria was annexed into the German Reich on 12 March, 1938. Now, 86 years after he left university, his diploma has finally been issued.

Deutscher was born in 1914 to Jewish parents, though his father died in the final days of the First World War. He began medical school in 1932 and gave English lessons to pay for his degree.

A sharp young man, Deutscher also played violin to a high standard, according to his son Selwyn Dexter, 73, a GP and medical acupunctur­ist, who got in touch with the rector of the University of Vienna a year ago to see about getting his father a posthumous doctorate. “He would just be pleased that an injustice had been corrected,” said Dexter.

He said his father enjoyed medical school in Vienna, though by the mid-1930s Nazism was ramping up and universiti­es became increasing­ly hostile places for Jewish students and faculty. According to Dexter, Deutscher’s nonJewish friends would occasional­ly warn him not to come to campus on days when there were riots or protests.

“But one day he got caught up in a Nazi riot and he received a very significan­t head injury, which left him in the Vienna hospital,” Dexter said.

“He recovered from that. He was a very determined person.”

By 1938 Deutscher had finished all his studies and received his absolutori­um, a certificat­e attesting to the completion of one’s courses prior to the final exam. All he had left to do was sit his final exam in three months and he would have his MD.

But when Germany annexed Austria, and German laws stipulated that only a select number of Jews could remain at the university. Deutscher knew that he needed to leave Vienna.

Fortunatel­y, he had a contact from Wales willing to sponsor his visa to the UK, a banker whom he met

while hitchhikin­g in Europe.

Once Deutscher travelled to Britain, he secured visas for his brother and mother through a relative, who could covertly send them to Vienna through a third party.

Deutscher joined the British Army as a medical orderly in 1939 before attending the University of Edinburgh in 1943 to complete his medical degree.

There he met Judith Lurie, the daughter of a local kosher butcher, and the pair married in 1946.

They had five children and moved to Liverpool around 1950, though Judith died in 1960.

After that, the family spent time travelling around New Zealand and Australia before eventually returning to Liverpool.

Deutscher brought his absolutori­um and other certifying documents with him wherever he went, said Dexter, and his careful preservati­on of these documents enabled his family to secure his posthumous diploma.

After a year of negotiatio­n with the university rector, Dexter said the university finally agreed to award his father the degree he was so close to completing, and they received the official copy in the post last week.

“The fact that he kept his absolutori­um diploma protected by cardboard as he travelled the world and for more than 50 years showed it was obviously precious to him,” said Dexter.

“Finally having recognitio­n for him brings comforting resolution to our family.”

He would just be pleased that an injustice had been corrected

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 ?? ?? Belated recognitio­n: Dr Fritz Deutscher, later Fred Dexter, in British army uniform; (left) his newly arrived diploma from the University of Vienna Medical School; and (right) Dr Deutscher with his wife Judith and their young family in Liverpool in 1955
Belated recognitio­n: Dr Fritz Deutscher, later Fred Dexter, in British army uniform; (left) his newly arrived diploma from the University of Vienna Medical School; and (right) Dr Deutscher with his wife Judith and their young family in Liverpool in 1955

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