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Film

Rudolf Kasztner: The hated Shoah hero

He saved thousands of Jews from the Nazis, but was murdered in Israel after being branded a collaborator. Now a new film tells his remarkable story.

February 26, 2009 11:54
Rudolf Kasztner with his daughter Zsuzsi in the early 1950s. She has mounted a decades-long campaign to rehabilitate her father’s name

By

Jenni Frazer,

Jenni Frazer

6 min read

The film director and producer Gaylen Ross was working on the film Blood Money: Switzerland’s Nazi Gold, when she first met a Holocaust survivor who said she had been on the Kasztner train. “I had no idea what she was talking about,” says Ross, “but I was fascinated and started to pursue the story.”

The result of Ross’s pursuit is a remarkable documentary, Killing Kasztner, which will be shown for the first time in London next week, at a special screening held by the UK Jewish Film Festival. The whole process, from that first casual mention of the Kasztner train to the finished film, has taken seven years.

“This is a very difficult story to understand,” says Ross with a certain ruefulness. “It is a very complex and controversial case. Many people said to me, leave it alone, you don’t know what you’re getting into. But I wanted to know, who was this man, why wasn’t he part of the names whom we know as heroes of the Jewish people?”

There are facts, and then there is speculation. Rudolf Israel Kasztner was a Hungarian-Jewish lawyer who, in 1944, began complicated and difficult negotiations with the Nazi SS colonel Adolf Eichmann — the so-called architect of the Holocaust — in order to send almost 1,700 Hungarian Jews to Switzerland, in exchange for money, gold and diamonds. The Jews who left on the train (not including Kasztner himself) went first, temporarily, to Bergen-Belsen concentration camp, and then to safety in Switzerland.