Chicago Sun-Times

FORCED BY NAZIS TO FORGE MONEY

-

PRAGUE — Adolf Burger, a Jewish typographe­r who was forced by the Nazis to make fake British pounds in a major counterfei­t operation during World War II, has died. He was 99.

Public broadcaste­r Czech Radio, citing Burger’s family, reported Thursday that the Holocaust survivor died on Tuesday in Prague.

The Slovakian- born Burger was arrested in 1942 after he was caught producing fake baptism certificat­es for Jews to help them escape transporta­tion to Nazi death camps. Slovakia was a Nazi puppet state during the war.

He was deported to Auschwitz with his wife, Gisela, who was put to death there.

“After my wife died in Auschwitz, I had two choices: either to go and touch the barbed wire with 1000 voltage in it and be dead in a second, or stay alive,” Burger said in a 2007 radio interview for the Stories of the 20th Century project. “I chose life, so I can tell everyone what they have done here.”

At the Sachsenhau­sen concentrat­ion camp in Germany in 1944, Burger became one of some 140 inmates who were put to work forging British pound notes, a top secret plan to destabiliz­e Britain known as “Operation Bernhard.”

Burger described his experience­s in “The Commando of Counterfei­ters,” a 1983 memoir.

A movie based on the book, “The Counterfei­ters,” won the Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film in 2007. Burger approved the screenplay.

 ??  ?? Adolf Burger
Adolf Burger

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States