Wilhelm Hosenfeld: The German Soldier Who Saved a Jewish Pianist
Popular
•
15m
In the ruins of Nazi-occupied Warsaw, a starving Jewish pianist was hiding alone, expecting death. His name was Władysław Szpilman. The man who saved him wore a German uniform.
Wilhelm Hosenfeld, a German soldier stationed in Warsaw, discovered Szpilman in 1944. Instead of arresting him, Hosenfeld asked him to play the piano. After hearing Chopin echo through the destroyed city, the officer made a choice that would defy the Nazi regime.
Hosenfeld secretly brought Szpilman food, protected his hiding place, and gave him a coat to survive the winter—acts punishable by death. Thanks to this help, Szpilman lived through the final weeks of the war. His survival later inspired the film The Pianist.
Captured by the Soviets after the war, Hosenfeld died in captivity in 1952. Decades later, Yad Vashem honored him as Righteous Among the Nations. This is the true story behind The Pianist—and the German soldier who saved a Jewish life.
Up Next in Popular
-
The Wannsee Conference: From Mass Sho...
20 January 1942, Berlin.
Fifteen senior Nazi officials — led by Reinhard Heydrich — gather at a villa in Wannsee to coordinate the “Final Solution.” Mass shootings by Einsatzgruppen had already killed hundreds of thousands across Eastern Europe, but the regime now sought a more systematic method ... -
Hitler’s Photographer & Art Profiteer...
Heinrich Hoffmann was more than Adolf Hitler’s photographer. He was the man who built the dictator’s image. His photos filled propaganda posters, books, and newspapers, shaping Hitler’s public myth. But Hoffmann also grew rich from looted art and Nazi profiteering. Arrested after WWII, he was con...
-
The Hand Axe and Guillotine of the Th...
30 January 1933. Adolf Hitler becomes Chancellor of Germany, and the machinery of repression begins to accelerate. As the Nazi regime consolidates power, political opponents are arrested, courts tighten their grip, and executions once again become instruments of state control.
At the centre of t...