Tribute to Tomi Reichental

My Nazi grandfather sent Tomi Reichental to Bergen-Belsen death camp 
Despite all the suffering he endured, the Holocaust survivor chose compassion over hate
Alexandra Senfft in: Irish Times, 2. Juni 2026

„I was deeply anxious during the train journey from Vienna to Bratislava, the Slovak capital, in 2014. Holocaust survivor Tomi Reichental was expecting me there, together with Gerry Gregg’s film crew. They were shooting the documentary Close to Evil. 

Tomi was born in Czechoslovakia but moved to Ireland in 1959. He had been a young boy when he and his family were deported by the Nazis to the Bergen-Belsen concentration camp in Germany in 1944. Tomi survived, but 35 of his relatives were murdered in the Holocaust; his grandmother died before his eyes in the camp.

My grandfather, however, was Hanns E Ludin, the “envoy of the Third Reich to Slovakia”, and it was he who signed the deportation orders. Ludin was convicted as a war criminal and executed in Bratislava in 1947.

Tomi’s and my family histories were thus tragically intertwined…“

>> weiterlesen, Irish Times, 2. Juni 2026

Foto: Tomi Reichental mit Alexandra Senfft und ihrer Tochter Magdalena bei den Dreharbeiten zu Close to Evil, Bratislava 2014

Plan to remove Sinti-Roma memorial causes outrage

A new train tunnel running under the memorial has been described as ‘macabre’ given how many Sinti and Roma were deported by rail to their deaths
Derek Scally in Berlin
The Irish Times, Fri Aug 02 2024

“This is a symbolic grave for all those who lost their lives, and it is a shame if it is up to this minority to defend it,” said Alexandra Senfft, co-author of Great Uncle Paul’s Violin Bow, a memoir about Romeo Franz and his family. “This is also a memorial for the German people and it is our responsibility, as the majority in the society, to save it.”

>> zum Artikel, Irish Times, 2. August 2024

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