Creation of usage statistics for this website by the National Fund.

Presentation of a map from Google Maps.

Cross site request forgery protection.

Storage duration: Dieses Cookie bleibt nur für die aktuelle Browsersitzung bestehen.

Stores the current PHP session.

Storage duration: Dieses Cookie bleibt nur für die aktuelle Browsersitzung bestehen.

Our website uses necessary functional as well as optional cookies. Data protection notice

National Fund of the Republic of Austria for Victims of National Socialism
Skip navigation
  • Contact
  • Press
  • Site map
 
  • DE
ä ö ü ß
Links to our other websites
  • General Settlement Fund
  • Jewish Cemeteries Fund
  • Findbuch
  • Art Database
  • FOGIS - Geoinfosystem
Skip navigation
  • Victims' recognition
  • Project funding
  • Life stories
  • Auschwitz
  • Other tasks
 
Skip navigation
  • About us
    • Organs
    • Statutes
    • Profile
    • Team
  • Service
    • News
    • Newsletter
    • Filing an application
    • Press
    • Media
  • Publications
    • Volume 8 "Erinnerungen" ("Lives Remembered")
    • Exhibition: From Repression to Remembrance
    • Houses of Eternity
    • Jewish Cemeteries in Austria 2024 Edition
    • Volume 7 "Erinnerungen" ("Lives Remembered")
    • Volume 6 "Erinnerungen" ("Lives Remembered")
    • Volume 5 "Erinnerungen" ("Lives Remembered")
    • Volume 4 "Erinnerungen" ("Lives Remembered")
    • Volume 3 "Erinnerungen" ("Lives Remembered")
    • Volume 2 "Erinnerungen" ("Lives Remembered")
    • Volume 1 "Erinnerungen" ("Lives Remembered")
    • Jewish Cemeteries in Austria
    • A personal telling of history
    • Audio book "Erinnerungen" (Lives Remembered)
    • Austria | Auschwitz. Drawings by Jan Kupiec, 1945
    • 20th Anniversary of the National Fund magazine
    • Österreichische Gedenkstätte 1978–2013. Staatliches Museum Auschwitz-Birkenau
    • 15th Anniversary of the National Fund. Development, function, impact
    • 10th Anniversary of the National Fund. Figures. Data. Facts.
    • 10th Anniversary of the National Fund. A Closer Look and Future Prospects
    • In die Tiefe geblickt
    • Außenpolitische Dokumentation 2001
    • Media Information
    • Findbuch Brochure
    • Annual Report 2010-2011
    • Annual Report 2008-2009
    • Annual Report 2007
    • Book series "Erinnerungen" ("Lives Remembered")
 
Placeholder for a header image.
  • Service /
  • News /
  • Announcement
    • Facebook
    • Twitter

In Memoriam Maria Gabrielsen and Otto Nagler

22 Jan 2025

In the first few days of the new year, we sadly lost two Holocaust survivors: Maria Gabrielsen passed away in Norway on 4 January, just one day after her 91st birthday. One day later, on 5 January, Otto Nagler passed away in Israel at the age of 104. Both were born in Austria and forced to leave their homeland to escape Nazi persecution.

Maria Gabrielsen (3.1.1934 – 4.1.2025)

Maria Gabrielsen, née Schwarz, was born in 1934 in Vienna into modest circumstances – her mother Rosa was a maker of straw hats, her father Michael a tailor. Maria lived with her parents, who had been married for 16 years, and her six siblings in a former barrack in Simmering. After the “Anschluss” of Austria to Nazi Germany, her parents’ relationship deteriorated – her mother Rosa, who had converted Judaism at her wedding, no longer wanted to be married to a Jew. When Maria’s father was put to work as a forced labourer in Steyr, her mother began an affair with a Nazi and refused to let her husband come back home, abusing her husband and children with threats and insults. The older children paid secret visits to their father, providing him with food and clean clothes. Finally, Rosa Schwarz denounced her husband to the authorities for alleged earlier anti-Nazi activities and dropped her five younger children off at a home run by the Jewish Community. The siblings were deported to Theresienstadt, where, by nothing short of a miracle, they survived the war. On their return, they learnt that their father had been gassed at Auschwitz. Their mother, who had betrayed her husband and children, was sentenced to 5 years in prison.

  • Gallery
  • Gallery
  • Gallery
  • Gallery
  • Gallery

Having lived through the experience of having her family torn apart and destroyed by racial hatred, Maria Gabrielsen was an active contemporary eyewitness well into old age and accompanied groups and school classes on visits to former concentration camps.

Otto Nagler (28.10.1920 – 5.1.2025)

Otto Nagler was born in Vienna on 28 October 1920, into the period of great starvation that followed the First World War. Under the shadow of the Nazi Party’s rise to power and the accompanying upsurge in antisemitism, he became a member of the Zionist movement. After Hitler and his troops entered Austria in 1938, Otto made his escape, arriving in Haifa in March 1939 with a group of Austrian and German students. He went on to study civil engineering at the Technion there. Otto Nagler became a pioneer in the field of irrigation engineering and played a key role in designing Israel’s national water supply system. This system went on to serve as a blueprint internationally, becoming a model for modern agriculture. He later travelled to more than 40 countries worldwide and was involved in the planning of water and irrigation systems in developing countries.

  • Gallery
  • Gallery
  • Gallery
  • Gallery
  • Gallery

For Otto Nagler, his work allowed him to live the principles of partnership and cooperation and to take a stand against anti-Jewish prejudice. Throughout his life the importance of sharing his experiences as a Holocaust survivor remained constant, but he also liked to talk about his childhood in Vienna, to keep reminding people of the Holocaust. Until the end, he regularly gave talks to groups of teachers from Austria and to Austrian government representatives and, in connection with the dangers of climate change, advocated cooperation between youth groups from Austria and Israel, providing new impetus while passing on his legacy to future generations.

Honours received as contemporary eyewitnesses

Maria Gabrielsen and Otto Nagler, together with other contemporary eyewitnesses, were honoured at the Simon Wiesenthal Prize award ceremony in March 2024. Although they were unfortunately unable to accept their certificates of honour in person, it is to be hoped that they felt the gratitude that they were intended to express: gratitude for sharing their most difficult memories with the world and entrusting their experiences to younger generations. Over the decades, they have as survivors made a vital contribution to Holocaust education, combatting antisemitism and strengthening democracy with their extraordinary personal dedication.

back

Skip navigation
  • News
  • Newsletter
  • Filing an application
  • Press
    • Press photos
    • Tables and diagrams
  • Media
    • Photos
    • Videos
    • Logos
 
Skip navigation
  • Contact
  • Imprint
  • Data protection
  • Site map
  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • X.com
  • Bluesky
 
updated: 05 Sep 2025 - version: 1.4.6