The 22 martyrs of Plötzensee: remembering the anti-nazi Baum Group

In the heart of Hitler’s Berlin, a small group of young Jewish men and women chose to fight back. On this day in 1943, nine of them were beheaded by guillotine at Plötzensee Prison. They were mostly in their early twenties. Their crime was resistance. The Baum Group was founded in 1933, almost immediately after…

In the heart of Hitler’s Berlin, a small group of young Jewish men and women chose to fight back. On this day in 1943, nine of them were beheaded by guillotine at Plötzensee Prison. They were mostly in their early twenties. Their crime was resistance.

The Baum Group was founded in 1933, almost immediately after the Nazis seized power, by Herbert Baum, a Jewish electrician and committed socialist, and his wife Marianne.

Soviet paradise exhibition, Baum Group
Soviet paradise exhibition, set on fire by the Baum Group

What began as clandestine meetings in friends’ apartments, discussing politics and distributing anti-fascist leaflets, grew into one of the most remarkable acts of organised Jewish resistance inside the Third Reich.

By 1942, with deportations accelerating and death camps operating in the east, the group resolved to strike a visible blow.

On 18 May 1942, they set fire to Das Sowjetparadies, a vast Goebbels-sponsored propaganda exhibition in Berlin’s Lustgarten, designed to mock the Soviet Union and associate Jews with Bolshevism. The fire caused limited physical damage, but the symbolic impact was enormous.

Jewish resisters, in the very capital of the Nazi state, had attacked the regime openly.

The reprisals were savage. Herbert Baum was arrested, tortured in Moabit Prison and murdered by his captors on 11 June 1942, his death falsely recorded as suicide.

Baum Group
Members of the Baum Group murdered on 4 March 1943: clockwise from left, Marianne Joachim, Siegbert Rotholz. Hella Hirsch, Hanni Meyer. Heinz Birnbaum and Lothar Salinger,

Marianne Baum and eight others were executed on 18 August 1942.

Then, on 4 March 1943, a second group, including Heinz Birnbaum, Hella Hirsch, Marianne Joachim, Heinz Rotholz, Siegbert Rotholz, Lothar Salinger and others, were put to death.

Memorial to the Baum Group
Memorial to the Baum Group in Berlin

A final group followed in September 1943. In total, 22 members were executed.

Others perished in Auschwitz.

The Nazis also murdered 500 Berlin Jews in collective punishment for the arson attack.

The Baum Group was not a monolithic organisation. Its members came from communist, socialist, and Zionist backgrounds, united less by ideology than by urgency and courage.

Non-Jewish German comrades stood and died alongside them.

Sala Kochmann fractured her own spine attempting suicide under torture rather than betray her friends.

Only five members survived the war.

We remember them.


Paul Holborow

Paul Holborow

In the campaign against the National Front, Searchlight provided a rich and utterly reliable basis for much ANL propaganda – particularly with reference to the two leading NF figures, John Tyndall and Martin Webster. The appearance of Tyndall in full nazi uniform, drawn from the archives of Searchlight, was a key part of ANL propaganda, coupled with deeply damaging nazi quotes from Webster.

Paul Holborow
Founding member of the ANL and National Organiser 1977-81

Alf Dubs

Lord Alf Dubs

Searchlight’s voice is more important than ever, and I am delighted that it will now be available to a wider audience than ever before in its new incarnation online. Searchlight has been extremely helpful over the years in exposing the far right, corruption, criminality and the murky links between organised crime and powerful interests in the UK and abroad. I wish Searchlight the very best.

Alf Dubs
Labour peer, former MP and Cabinet Minister, and Kindertransport child

Professor Colin Holmes

Professor Colin Holmes
Everyone who wants to understand contemporary racism and its historical background needs to read Searchlight.
Professor Colin Holmes
University of Sheffield

Peter Hain

Peter Hain, founder of the ANL and friend of Searchlight

British Jews have been persecuted over the centuries; British blacks since the Windrush generation of the 1950s; British Muslims, especially after the Islamist 9/11 and then 7/7 terrorist attacks in New York 2001 and London 2005. But until the last few years there has not been a simultaneous threat against all three British communities of Jewish, Black and Muslim Britons – meaning the need for Searchlight has never been greater.

Peter Hain
Labour peer, former MP and Cabinet Minster

Paul Nowak

Paul Nowak

The essence of trade unionism is solidarity, fairness and equality – for all workers – from all backgrounds. That’s why our fight against the far-right has always been part of our movement’s DNA. Searchlight is an incredibly important resource for trade unions and members to understand the contemporary tactics of far-right activity. Their work and intelligence gathering over the years have been incredibly insightful for the work we do, and how we fight the scourge of fascism.

Paul Nowak
TUC General Secretary

Nick Davies

Nick Davies

To investigate fascists takes real courage and unusual commitment. The government, police, mainstream media occasionally take a look, but in the UK only Searchlight have kept at it, relentlessly and admirably, regardless of threat or obstacle. It’s journalism that matters. A rare thing.

Nick Davies
Multi-award-winning investigative journalist and writer

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