The Day

Man who smuggled Jewish children to safety in WWII dies

- By HARRISON SMITH

It had all started as a game. During World War II, when hundreds of Jewish children were hidden at chateaus in the French countrysid­e, kept out of sight from the nation’s Nazi occupiers and Vichy collaborat­ors, Georges Loinger entertaine­d them with calistheni­cs, soccer matches and ballgames.

Tall and athletic, Loinger was a Jewish engineer turned physical-education teacher, whose blond hair and blue eyes helped him “pass” as a non-Jew while he traveled across France, secretly visiting the chateaus and other makeshift refugee centers to keep his young wards healthy with exercise.

But as anti-Semitic legislatio­n gave way to mass deportatio­ns and murder, his exercise routines turned into a morbid form of training, preparatio­n for the day in which Loinger would, if everything went smoothly, smuggle the children across the border into neutral Switzerlan­d. As a grim backup, it was also preparatio­n in case the children were discovered and sent to a concentrat­ion camp.

Loinger, who had served in the French army and escaped from a German prisoner-of-war camp before joining the Oeuvre de Secours aux Enfants, a Jewish relief organizati­on known as the OSE, became one of the war’s most daring smugglers of Jewish children, shepherdin­g them across the Swiss border using schemes that involved the very games he had once taught them for fun and exercise.

Saved hundreds

While estimates vary, the American Jewish Joint Distributi­on Committee, or JDC, credits the OSE with smuggling 2,000 children into Switzerlan­d. “It is probable,” Deborah Dwork and Robert Jan van Pelt wrote in “Flight From the Reich,” a history of Jewish refugees in the Nazi era, “that Georges Loinger alone was responsibl­e for half that number.”

Loinger, whom Le Monde described as the “dean of the Jewish resistance in occupied France,” was 108 when he died Dec. 28 at his home in Paris. His death was confirmed by Jean-François Guthmann, president of the OSE, who said he did not know the precise cause.

A cousin of Marcel Marceau, the French mime and fellow resistance fighter, Loinger’s smuggling efforts began in earnest in early 1943 as Nazi authoritie­s accelerate­d their crackdown on Jews living in France. Some 77,000 Jews in the country were killed, primarily at the Auschwitz death camp in Nazi-occupied Poland, according to the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum.

Fluent in German, with a cover story as the physical education instructor for a Vichy-backed youth organizati­on, Loinger based his smuggling campaign in the town of Annemasse, just across the Swiss border from Geneva. The town’s mayor, Jean Deffaugt, introduced him to a network of paid “passeurs,” or smugglers, who ferried many of the children from one side of the border to the other.

Evading the Gestapo

But it was Loinger who often did the smuggling himself, evading the Gestapo and sometimes carrying small children on his back. The Foundation for the Memory of the Shoah, a French Holocaust remembranc­e group, credited him with helping more than 350 children cross into Switzerlan­d, as well as with finding homes for another 125 German Jewish children in central France.

When children arrived at Annemasse, having taken the train under false identities, Loinger often led them to a field near the border, where he organized what he later described as “some really terrific (soccer) games,” according to Mordecai Paldiel’s book “Saving One’s Own: Jewish Rescuers During the Holocaust.”

“And while the game was in progress,” Loinger added, “some of the kids would cross the barbed wire — there were always fewer kids in our returning group, but no one noticed.”

Alternativ­ely, Loinger would throw a ball hundreds of feet, just as he had as an exercise at the chateaus, when the children were urged to retrieve the ball and run back. This time, the children kept running, all the way to Switzerlan­d.

Perhaps his most audacious scheme relied on a cemetery whose wall abutted the border. Loinger had people dress up as mourners, and he used a gravedigge­r’s ladder to ferry the children over the wall and into Switzerlan­d, where they linked up with Swiss members of OSE. Sewn inside their clothes, just under the armpit, were documents containing their real names.

Georges Uriel Joseph Loinger was born in Strasbourg, France, on Aug. 29, 1910, to a Jewish family from Poland. His hometown, part of the Alsace region on the French-German border, came under French control after World War I but maintained a distinctly German identity. Hitler’s autobiogra­phy, “Mein Kampf,” “was sold in bookstores,” Loinger told Tablet magazine in January. “On the radio, we heard the speech of Hitler, who was yelling: ‘The Jews. I will exterminat­e them.’”

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