Category talk:Jewish collaborators with Nazi Germany
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This category was nominated for deletion on 18 April 2021. The result of the discussion was no consensus. |
What about Karl Legat and Myrtil Frank? They were both Jewish and both helped the Nazis loot art from other Jews in occupied Netherlands. https://www.theartnewspaper.com/2022/11/08/how-an-old-postcard-helped-jewish-heirs-retrieve-their-kandinsky-painting-from-a-dutch-museum — Preceding unsigned comment added by Jfmcel (talk • contribs) 03:48, 4 March 2023 (UTC)
Overview article
[edit]Do we have any articles which would be the central article for this category? I was thinking about where to discuss figures who may not be notable enough for their own pages yet who would make sense in such an overview. For example I read about:
- Erhard Milch who got a Ritterkreuz
- Arty Johannes Zukertort apparently got a Deutschblutigkeitserklarung (not to be confused with 19th century chess player Johannes Zukertort)
- Walter H. Hollaender who got a Ritterkreuz and German Cross in Gold and Deutschblutigkeitserklarung, see List_of_Knight's_Cross_of_the_Iron_Cross_recipients_(Hn–Hz)
- Helmut Wilberg who got a 1935 Aryan declaration from Hitler
- Horst Geitner who got an Iron Cross Second Class and Silver Wound Badge
- Werner Goldberg used as "Ideal German Soldier" model
- Paul Ascher, got Deutschblutigkeitserklarung but his article was deleted Wikipedia:Articles_for_deletion/Paul_Ascher
- Bernhard Rogge, got Ritterkreuz Deutschblutigkeitserklarung
However I do not know if they would qualify because I have only seen them described as "Half-Jew" (or "Quarter-Jew" in the case of Rogge) do people in this category need to be "full" Jew?
I can see some of these already have coverage. Per Milch, https://www.timeshighereducation.com/books/half-shadows-of-the-reich/175487.article
- Hitler was not the only senior Nazi to enforce the racial laws inconsistently. Hermann Göring, Martin Bormann, Reinhard Heydrich and Karl Dönitz, to name a few, also knowingly left several high-ranking Mischlinge officers at their posts or campaigned on their behalf for exemptions. The most significant example was that of "half-Jew" Field Marshal Erhard Milch who became one of the most powerful men in the Luftwaffe.
The Mischling article appears to be an overview of this. ScratchMarshall (talk) 22:08, 28 December 2017 (UTC)
Dina Poljakoff
[edit]Poljakoff may have treated German soldiers and been part of an organization that was friendly to germans- but I question if she can be seen as a collaborator with Nazi Germany. Can she be removed from this category? Sfar13 (talk) 23:17, 28 April 2024 (UTC)