Miami Herald (Sunday)

Adolfo Kaminsky, forger who aided thousands of Jews, dies at 97

- BY EMILY LANGER The Washington Post

Adolfo Kaminsky, a long-unheralded member of the French resistance who clandestin­ely inked and stamped false identity cards, baptismal certificat­es, ration books and other documents that meant the difference between life and death for thousands of Jews during World War II, died Jan. 9 at his home in Paris. He was 97.

His death was confirmed by his daughter Sarah Kaminsky, who provided the first full account of her father’s undergroun­d activities in the book “Adolfo Kaminsky: A Forger’s Life,” published in French in 2009 and in English translatio­n in 2016. The cause was not immediatel­y available.

Kaminsky was a selftaught master of forgery and lent his skills over the years to Algerians during their struggle for independen­ce from France, to opponents of the fascist dictator Francisco Franco of Spain, to revolution­aries in Latin America, to anti-apartheid activists in South Africa and to American deserters during the

Vietnam War.

He sought no pay for his services; it was not money, he insisted, but rather principle that motivated his work, which he first undertook as a teenager in France. The Holocaust, he said, had taught him that “on every document rests the life or death of a human being.”

The first document that helped determine the course of Kaminsky’s life was the Argentine passport that he received by virtue of his birth in Buenos Aires on Oct. 1, 1925. His parents, both Russianbor­n Jews, had previously lived in France but moved to Argentina when the French government expelled Russian nationals perceived as supporters of the Bolshevik Revolution.

The family returned to France when Kaminsky was 4 and was living in Normandy at the time of the German invasion in 1940. To help support his family as conditions deteriorat­ed for the Jews, Kaminsky went to work as an apprentice in a clothesdye­ing shop.

“That’s where I discovered the magic of color,” he said in an Emmy Award-winning documentar­y short published in 2016 by the New York

Times. He learned increasing­ly advanced concepts of chemistry as he dyed discarded military coats for civilian wear and washed wedding dresses of stains, watching as the agents he applied caused the fabrics to absorb or release their colors.

Kaminsky’s mother died when she fell from a train – Kaminsky believed she was pushed – during a trip home from Paris after warning her brother that he was to be arrested.

Kaminsky was rounded up with the rest of his family in 1943 and taken to Drancy, a transit camp outside Paris where thousands of Jews were detained en route to Auschwitz and other Nazi death camps. Because they held Argentine passports, the Kaminskys were released.

Still in danger, they decided to seek false papers from the undergroun­d. When Kaminsky, then 18, went to retrieve the documents, the resistance learned of his experience with chemical dyes and recruited him as forger. His daughter recorded the conversati­on in her book, which was translated into English by Mike Mitchell:

“You know how to remove ink stains?” Kaminsky

was asked.

“Yes,” he replied. “That’s even my specialty.”

“But what about indelible inks?”

“There’s no such thing,” he declared.

The first fake document Kaminsky created was his own, allowing him to pass as an Alsatian named Julien Keller.

“Anyone could have done it,” he told the Israeli newspaper Haaretz. “I will never forget the dim room, the smell of the wooden table that was lit by a small lamp, the pen and the inkwell.”

For the rest of the war, Kaminsky secreted himself in an attic in Paris’s Latin Quarter, where he churned out false documents “day and night,” he said, working with such unremittin­g focus that he went blind in one eye.

In some cases he would scrub a valid document of the word “Jew”; in others, he created new identities entirely, transformi­ng a Jewish girl named Edith Mayer, for example, into a Gentile child called Elise Maillet.

Kaminsky told his daughter that he at times felt that he was working on “a production line at a fate factory.” On one occasion, he and fellow forgers were called upon to make papers for 300 Jewish children facing immediate arrest. They needed birth records, baptismal certificat­es and food stamps for 300 children – 900 documents in all.

“I had to stay awake as long as possible,” Kaminsky said in the Times documentar­y. “The math was simple. In one hour, I made 30 fake documents. If I slept for one hour, 30 people would die . . . . So I worked, worked, worked until I passed out. When I woke up, I kept working. We couldn’t stop. We finished the documents, but just in time.”

Kaminsky recounted that the Parisian police were ever on the lookout for the “Paris forger.” He was once stopped carrying a bag of identity cards and his inks, stamps and quill, but evaded capture when he convincing­ly told the officer that the satchel contained only sandwiches – and offered him one.

Kaminsky said he regarded his forgeries as a way of avenging the death of his mother and the other people he lost in the war; in total, according to the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum, approximat­ely 77,000 Jews living in French territory were killed in the camps, primarily Auschwitz.

Kaminsky worked at the end of the war for French intelligen­ce seeking to investigat­e Nazi war crimes and produced false documents for Jewish refugees seeking entry into what was then the British mandate of Palestine. In the decades that followed, he made a modest living as a photograph­er while working as a forger on behalf of causes around the world before finally stopping his activity in 1971.

“Of course, everything I did was illegal,” he said in the Times documentar­y. “But when something legal is completely against humanity, you have to fight.”

Because of the secrecy of his work, Kaminsky spent long periods away from home. His first marriage, to Jeanine Korngold, ended in divorce. He later married Leila Bendjebour, an anticoloni­al activist whom he met while living in Algeria.

Besides his wife, survivors include a daughter from his first marriage, Marthe Kaminsky; three children from his second marriage, Atahualpa Kaminsky, José-Youcef Kaminsky and Sarah Kaminsky; a sister; and nine grandchild­ren. A son from his first marriage, Serge Kaminsky, died in 2012.

“I’ve had a very happy life, with an adorable wife, children; truly something to be proud of,” Kaminsky told the Times with emotion. “But there are so many corpses,” he added, reflecting on the war. “If I hadn’t been able to do anything, I wouldn’t have been able to bear it.”

 ?? STUART RAMSON AP file, 2004 ?? Motorcycle daredevil and stunt performer Robbie Knievel soars over seven vintage aircraft on the flight deck of the USS Intrepid Sea, Air and Space Museum in New York.
STUART RAMSON AP file, 2004 Motorcycle daredevil and stunt performer Robbie Knievel soars over seven vintage aircraft on the flight deck of the USS Intrepid Sea, Air and Space Museum in New York.

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