Holocaust survivor, 102, is gracing the cover of German Vogue (2024)

A glamorous woman with a sleek bob and gold jewellery smiles warmly on the cover of the July/August edition of German Voguein a bright red peacoat by Italian designer label Miu Miu.

It is exactly the sort of cover the world's foremost fashion magazine is known for, only the striking woman on the front is neither a supermodel nor a film star, ratherMargot Friedländer,née Bendheim, is a 102-year-old German-Jewish Holocaust survivor.

After her mother and her younger brother were deported to Auschwitz extermination camp in 1943, Margotwent into hiding and sought to disguise herself by dyeing her hair and wearing a necklace with a cross.

While she was helped by some Germans, she was ultimately betrayed to the SS and deported to Theresienstadt on June 16 in 1944 where she saw 'so many people murdered'. Her entire family were killed at Auschwitz the previous year.

Today, as German Vogue's accompanying interview notes, she works tirelessly with students to 'make her story tangible for the next generation.'

Margot Friedländer, 102, on the cover of the July/August edition of German Vogue wearing a peacoat by Italian label Miu Miu. On her left lapel is the Federal Cross of Merit 1st Class and on the right lapel is the Order of Merit of the State of Berlin

Margot in the spring of 1943. She had already been living underground for several months and had sought to disguise herself as a Christian by wearing a necklace with a cross on it

Born in Berlin, Margot was 12 years old when Hitler came to power and saidher family hoped he would just 'disappear again', and everything could go back to normal.

It was a happy upbringing, where she enjoyed family weekend trips to Lake Scharmützelsee and playing on the swings at the Friedrichstadt-Palast, and spending time with her beloved grandmother, Adele, who called Margot, 'my little mouse'.

In 1936 she started a course at the Berlin School of Arts and Crafts where she specialised in fashion drawing and advertising.

'I had big plans,' she told the magazine of her hopes of becoming a seamstress and designer.

Margot, who spends her time talking to school children about her experiences during the war, was photographed wearing a floral ensemble by Loro Piana for German Vogue

Margot (right) is pictured with two friends on theKurfürstendamm, one of Berlin's most famous streets, in 1943. She would be deported toTheresienstadt just a few months later

A young Margot pictured with her husband AdolfFriedländer. Both interned atTheresienstadt, the couple married when the camp was liberated

Margot spent a year at the Rosa Lang-Nathanson salon, training to be a seamstress but in November 1938 she arrived to see broken glass everywhere and smoke in the air fromburning synagogues.The salon never re-opened after Kristallnacht.

In the mid-1940s, at the age of 21, the Gestapo took her mother and brother Ralph away.

The last words her mother left for her, passed on verbally by a neighbour, were 'Versuche, dein Leben zu machen' - 'Try to live your life'.

Margot tore off her yellow star - marking her as Jewish - and wore a chain was a cross pendant around her neck and dyed her black hair red.

A doctor even operated on her nose to try to 'Aryanise' her features.

Aided by anunderground network of 16 Germans, she moved around different hiding places after dark.

Her 13 months in hiding came to an abrupt end in the spring of 1944 when two men - Nazi collaborators - stopped her in the street and demanded her papers.

They carried her away because she could not produce identification documents, and while on the way to the police station, she told them the truth.

Margot Friedlander (fifth from right in the third row) is pictured with classmates at the Jewish Middle School in Berlin, around 1930

After saying 'I am Jewish', Margot says, she was 'reunited with the fate of my family and all other Jews'.

She was deported to the Theresienstadt ghetto (in what is now the Czech Republic), a transit camp for sending people to their deaths further east.

Recalling her experiences at Theresienstadt she said that she will never forget seeing the murders of 'old ladies who asked for a piece of bread'.

At the camp, she reunited withAdolf Friedländer, 11 years her senior, who she knew from the administrative office of the Cultural Association in Berlin, where she had worked as a young woman.

She recalled: 'I wasn't in love with Adolf. I needed time to become human again. It was the same for Adolf. The pain brought us closer together than being in love.'

The couple married shortly after the camp had been liberated and began a new life together in Queens, New York, where she worked as a travel agent and seamstress.

After Adolf died in 1997,Margot began writing her memoir, documenting her experiences in Germany during the war.

She was also approached by a documentary filmmaker who convinced her to return to Berlin and tell her story on camera.

The documentary 'Don’t Call It Heimweh' was released in 2004 while her memoir followed four years later.

The book's title - '"Try to Make Your Life": a Jewish Girl Hiding in Nazi Berlin' - immortalised her mother's plea from decades earlier.

Around this time, Margot came to realise that she 'wasn't done with Berlin yet' and, in 2010 at the age of 88, she returned to the city of her birth permanently.

Margot (left) with her younger brother Ralph and a cousin in 1937. Ralph was murdered in Auschwitz along with the rest of Margot's family

Despite experiencing unimaginable horrors at the hands of her compatriots, and despite spending over 50 years in the US,she sees herself simply as a German and, as the magazine notes, she 'speaks without being bitter.'

While many descendants of survivors are committed to carrying their parents' and grandparents' stories forward, no one working in Holocaust studies would dispute the fact that it will only become harder to refute denialists once the survivor generation has passed on.

Margot speaks 'in the name of the victims who can no longer speak' but, as the cover text - the word 'Love' scrawled in her own handwriting - indicates, she tells her story not only to memorialise the past but in an effort to shape the future.

She told the magazine: 'Don't look at what divides you. Look at what unites you. Be human beings. Be reasonable.'

Dismayed by the rise of antisemitism in Germany and elsewhere, and alarmed by the traction gained by right-wing parties like Alternative for Germany, Margot has been sharing a version of that message with young people for years.

Now part of a dwindling generatinon of survivors, she continues to travel around Germany to tell the story of her life and promote remembrance. In 2022, sheaddressed the European Union parliament on Holocaust Memorial Day.

'We must be vigilant and not look the other way as we did then,' she said. 'Hatred, racism and antisemitism must not be the last word in history.'

'Today, I see the memory of what happened being abused for political reasons, sometimes even derided and trampled all over,' she told lawmakers, according o Reuters.

Margot (second from right) is pictured with family friends atScharmützelsee, which is located in Brandenburg in Germany

Margot is pictured with a family friend at the summer resort at Scharmützelsee in Brandenburg around 1937

Margot and husband Adolf on the ship to USA where they emigrated in 1946. When Margot's husband died in 1997, she thought it was time to return to Berlin

Adolf Friedländer (right) is pictured with his parents and sister Ilse around 1915, when his father was serving as a soldier in the German army during WWI

On January 27 2022, Margot addressed the European Union parliament in Brussels, Belgium, on Holocaust Memorial Day. She is seated next to President of the European Parliament Roberta Metsola during the special plenary session to mark the international day of remembrance

Margot was applauded for her speech in which she insisted that the future must not be dominated by 'hatred, racism and antisemitism'

Pictured in 2019, Margot lights the first candle of the menorah at Pariser Platz in Berlin, Germany. She is accompanied by Rabbi Schmuel Segal, nine-year-old Jewish child Noah Aberschanskij, Josef Schuster - president of the Central Council of Jews in Germany- and Rabbi Yehuda Teichtas

Margot, who returned to Berlin, her city of birth, in 2010 is pictured at city's Hanukkah candle-lighting event in 2019

'Incredulous, I had to watch at the age of 100 years how symbols of our exclusion by the Nazis, such as the so-called "Judenstern," are shamelessly used on the open street by the new enemies of democracy, to present themselves - whilst living in the middle of a democracy - as victims,' she added, referring to anti-vaccine demonstrators pin yellow star badges to their clothes.

Speaking to the New York Times, Anna Wintour, Vogue's editor in chief, referred to the 'political currents across Europe' and described Margot as 'a wonderful subject, and a meaningful one.'

'A modern Jewish settlement': How the Nazis tried to fool the world by turning a concentration camp into a fake town to convince Red Cross visitors the Holocaust was not happening

It was a place of death and despair that was dressed up to look like a model town in a bid to fool others that one of the greatest atrocities in history did not happen.

Months before the true horrors of the Holocaust were revealed the Nazi regime went to great lengths to try to convince the world they were not running concentration camps.

And the Czech camp Theresienstadt became the location to try out the deception after representatives from the International Red Cross were invited to inspect it, with the cruel camp directors forcing the inmates to build fake homes and shops to con the delegation into thinking it was a town.

Theresienstadt was a fortress built near Prague in the Bohemia region of Czechoslovakia between 1780 and 1790, named after the mother of the Austrian Emperor Joseph II who ordered its construction as part of a series of fort defences.

By the 20th Century it had become obsolete and began being used as a jail for military and political prisoners.

The gate atTheresienstadt (pictured) had a huge sign reading 'Arbeit Macht Frei', which translates as 'Work Sets You Free'. The phrase, which was also written above the entrance to Auschwitz extermination camp, was intended to fool the deportees into thinking that the sites were work camps

But after Nazi Germany invaded it was taken over by the Gestapo in 1940 and turned into a ‘Jewish ghetto’, with a smaller fortress within the main building also used for political prisoners.

From 1942 onwards tens of thousands of Jews were imprisoned at Theresienstadt, with the camp serving as a transit stop before they were moved on to extermination camps, including Auschwitz.

To try to dispel rumours the camp was being used to exterminate prisoners, the Nazis presented it as a ‘model Jewish settlement’.

In order to prepare for the visit, the inmates were 'screened' and around 200 of the more 'socially prominent' were transferred to two-bed rooms to make it appear they lived in relative comfort.

On June 23, 1944, a delegation from the Danish and International Red Cross, including doctors and civil servants, was welcomed by an SS-appointed ‘mayor’ who gave them a tour of the ‘town’.

Many Jews had been deported to Auschwitz in preparation while remaining prisoners were ordered to clean up the area and build fake shops and cafes to imply those who lived there had access to everyday amenities.

The delegation stayed in freshly decorated rooms in the ‘prominent’ section of the camp for wealthy prisoners while they were also treated to a performance of a children’s opera written by an inmate.

They were given a tour of the facilities based on a pre-determined route.

Theresienstadt was a fortress built near Prague in the Bohemia region of Czechoslovakia between 1780 and 1790

Nazi officials asked questions to prisoners about their happiness along the way, with the inmates ordered to ignore any direct questions from the delegates.

Despite the overwhelming censorship, the delegation was said to have left with a ‘positive impression’ of Theresienstadt.

It gave the Nazis impetus to produce a propaganda film nicknamed ‘The Fuhrer Gives a Village to The Jews’, directed by an experienced Jewish actor Kurt Gerron, who was also a prisoner.

The shoot lasted 11 days in September 1944 but to ensure those who made it kept quiet, most of the cast were deported to Auschwitz while Gerron himself was executed in a gas chamber in October.

It was intended to be widely distributed as a means to quell the allegations against concentration camps but although a few screenings were staged, the end of the war prevented its full release.

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And, as the brooches on Margot's lapels indicate, she has received some of the highest honours awarded by the German government for her efforts, namely the Federal Cross of Merit 1st Class and the Order of Merit of the State of Berlin.

But if Margot is an esteemed educator and activist, she is also a fashion enthusiast with a love of opera - and the photoshoot for the July/August collector's edition of German Vogue celebrates her as much more than a Holocaust survivor.

A photograph inside the magazine shows Margot dressed in a floral ensemble by Loro Piana while another image shows her wearing an outfit from her own stylish wardrobe.

She continues to enjoy attending the opera and lives quite independently, rarely eating at the restaurant in her building because she prefers to whip herself up a fried egg at home after a busy day of campaigning.

Holocaust survivor, 102, is gracing the cover of German Vogue (2024)

FAQs

Holocaust survivor, 102, is gracing the cover of German Vogue? ›

102-year-old holocaust survivor Margot Friedländer features on the front cover of the new issue of Vogue Germany. A 102-year-old Holocaust survivor whose family was murdered at Auschwitz is the cover star for the July/August edition of Vogue Germany. Margot Friedländer, née Bendheim, was born in Berlin in 1921.

Who is the Holocaust survivor on the cover of Vogue? ›

Anna Wintour, the editor-in-chief of American Vogue, commended the U.S. magazine's German counterpart for featuring Holocaust survivor Margot Friedländer, one of the world's oldest and best-known survivors, on the front cover of its July/August edition.

Who is the 102 year old woman on Vogue? ›

Margot Friedländer, a 102-year-old Holocaust survivor whose family was murdered at Auschwitz, would seem an unlikely — even radical — choice to front a fashion glossy that customarily features comely models and celebrities.

What did Anna Wintour do to Vogue? ›

In 1988 Anna Wintour became editor of Vogue and immediately transformed the magazine's covers by emphasizing the woman's body, rather than just her face, as well as by frequently featuring Hollywood actresses and other celebrities as opposed to traditional fashion models, thereby sparking an international trend.

Who was the girl who escaped Auschwitz Mala? ›

Mala Zimetbaum, the first woman and the first Jewish woman to escape from Auschwitz-Birkenau, was born on January 26, 1918, in Brzesko, Poland, the fifth and youngest daughter of Pinhas and Chaya Zimetbaum. In 1928, when she was ten years old, her family emigrated from Poland to Belgium, where they settled in Antwerp.

Who was the first plus size woman on Vogue? ›

Ashley Graham (second from left) is the first-ever plus-size model to cover American Vogue.

Who is the youngest person on Vogue magazine? ›

In 1980, at fourteen years old, Brooke Shields appeared on the cover of Vogue magazine, making her one of the youngest models ever to do so.

Who replaced Diana Vreeland at Vogue? ›

Grace Mirabella
Term1971–1988
PredecessorDiana Vreeland
SuccessorAnna Wintour
SpouseWilliam G. Cahan ​ ( m. 1974)​
7 more rows

Who is the woman in charge of Vogue? ›

Dame Anna Wintour CH DBE (/ˈwɪntər/ WIN-tər; born 3 November 1949) is a British-American media executive, who has been serving as editor-in-chief of Vogue since 1988.

Was Audrey Hepburn on Vogue? ›

Audrey Hepburn | Vogue | OCTOBER 15, 1961.

What fashion magazine was headed by Anna Wintour? ›

Anna Wintour, editor-in-chief of American Vogue and the chief content officer of Condé Nast, is widely regarded as the most influential figure in fashion. American Vogue reaches over 12 million readers in print and an average of 1.2 million monthly visitors online.

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