San Francisco Chronicle

Joseph Harmatz — led 1946 plot against Germans

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Imagine a real-life version of “Inglouriou­s Basterds,” Quentin Tarantino’s quixotic movie about Jewish avengers in World War II — but in this case involving a plot by a band of refugees to kill millions of Germans just after the war by poisoning their water supply.

The plot, which targeted five major cities in retributio­n for the Holocaust, failed. So did the conspirato­rs’ Plan B, which followed in midApril 1946: to murder 12,000 captured SS officers — members of the very unit that enforced the Nazis’ reign of terror and ran the death camps — by lacing their bread rations with arsenic.

The second scheme was not a complete failure, however. Led by 21-year-old Joseph Harmatz, a survivor of the Vilnius ghetto in Lithuania, the plotters sickened more than 2,200 German prisoners, inducing vomiting and other symptoms of cholera. Their weapons were 3,000 loaves of black bread, which had been painted with a mixture of arsenic and glue at a bakery, which one of the group had infiltrate­d.

Mr. Harmatz, who died at 91 on Sept. 22 at his home in Tel Aviv, Israel, never publicly expressed remorse for his role in either conspiracy. But later on, his son Ronel said Tuesday, he did acknowledg­e privately that he was grateful that the mass waterpoiso­ning plot was abandoned after one of his collaborat­ors was arrested.

“He did admit that it is good that this plan did not happen,” the younger Harmatz said. “He knew at the back of his heart that it would have damaged” the prospects for a state of Israel, then being advocated, “and that they would have compared the Jews to the German people.”

Still, he said, Mr. Harmatz was sorry that Plan B, to fatally poison the imprisoned SS officers, had not been as successful as he had hoped.

The conspirato­rs claimed that the poisoned bread killed several hundred prisoners at Stalag 13 in Langwasser, a district of Nuremberg. That was never confirmed, but Army investigat­ors found enough arsenic at the bakery to kill tens of thousands.

“Was he sorry? He was sorry that it didn’t work,” Ronel Harmatz said. “He wanted to do more.”

The conspirato­rs were made up of 50 or so former guerrillas who had fought the Germans from the sewers of the Vilnius ghetto, where the Jewish population plunged from about 40,000 to a few hundred during the war, and from the Rodniki forest south of Vilnius, now the capital of Lithuania that was also known then as Vilna. They reconstitu­ted themselves in Bucharest after the war ended, in 1945, and become known as the Nakam, Hebrew for avengers. Its mission was simple.

“Kill Germans,” Mr. Harmatz said this year. How many? “As many as possible,” he replied.

The avengers were believed to be responsibl­e for the kidnapping and killing of countless individual former Nazis in Europe and elsewhere after the war. In another daredevil plot, they sought to assassinat­e more than a dozen top Nazis on trial for war crimes in Nuremberg, only to cancel the operation after failing to find U.S. guards to help them.

Ronel Harmatz said he never doubted his father’s motivation: “He wanted the Germans to pay for their crimes, and for him it was not like the Nazis were aliens from a different planet. They were just Germans.”

Mr. Harmatz was born on Jan. 23, 1925, in Rokiskis, Lithuania, the son of Avraham and Devora Harmatz. His father was in the wholesale food business, and the family was well-to-do.

After the Germans invaded and Jews were confined to a Vilnius ghetto, his father, unable to provide for the family, left a suicide note and disappeare­d. All four grandparen­ts were slain. So was Mr. Harmatz’s younger brother. His older brother was killed in combat. Only his mother survived.

At 16, as a young communist, he joined the undergroun­d and smuggled partisans through the sewers to the forests so they could join a group of guerrilla fighters and saboteurs led by Abba Kovner. After the war, they reorganize­d as the Avengers. (Kovner became a prominent Israeli poet.)

Mr. Harmatz wrote about his experience­s in “From the Wings,” a book published in English in 1998. By his account the plot to poison the SS prisoners had been sanctioned by Chaim Weizmann, the Zionist leader who would become the first president of Israel. Weizmann was not told about the scheme to poison the water supply, Mr. Harmatz wrote, but other Zionist leaders were, and it worried them; they feared it would jeopardize support for the proposed Jewish state.

The plot was aborted when Kovner was arrested as he was returning to Europe with the poison.

Mr. Harmatz helped thousands of European and North African Jews reach Palestine. He settled in the new state of Israel in 1950 and married Gina Kirschenfe­ld. She died in 1987.

Besides their son Ronel, who confirmed the death, he is survived by another son, Zvi, and three grandchild­ren.

 ?? Tsafrir Abayov / Associated Press ?? Joseph Harmatz, shown in his Tel Aviv apartment in May, had to abandon his revenge plot to poison SS officers after one of his collaborat­ors was arrested.
Tsafrir Abayov / Associated Press Joseph Harmatz, shown in his Tel Aviv apartment in May, had to abandon his revenge plot to poison SS officers after one of his collaborat­ors was arrested.

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