The Nazi Officer’s Wife is an autobiographical account of Beer’s life as a “U-boat.” Essentially, U-boats were Jews living in Nazi Germany, who disguised themselves, calling themselves Germans. The book, however, begins before the war and looks at Beer’s life …show more content…
She describes tensions even then between the Jewish community and the Germans and Austrians. While in Austria, she attends high school, which is uncommon for a girl. Even more interestingly, she travels to Anschluss to study law, but must leave because she is Jewish. Her education will later become important – and potentially an obstacle to keeping her identity secret.
In 1939, she and her mother are sent to a ghetto in Vienna. But in 1941, they are separated when Beer is sent to an asparagus plantation in Osterburg, Germany and then to the Bestehorn box factory in Aschersleben. Before Beer finally returns to Vienna in 1942, her mother is deported to Poland. With no ties keeping her in Vienna, Beer acquires false papers from her friend, Christa Beren, and sets off to Munich.
In Munich, Beer meets Werner Vetter, a distinguished member of the Nazi party. He falls in love with her, and quickly desires her hand in marriage. Beer plucks up her courage and admits to her real identity, initially refusing his advances. However, Vetter vows to keep her identity secret and still wants to marry …show more content…
She puts her education to good use and becomes a judge in Brandenburg for the Allies. After pleading with the Soviet authorities on Vetter’s behalf, Beer secures his release in 1947, but their marriage ends. He dies in 2002.
Beer finally finds herself in London, where her sisters settle after taking shelter in Palestine during WWII. Beer finds employment as a corset designer and housemaid. She marries a Jewish jewellery merchant and moves to Israel upon his death in the 1980s. She died in 2009.
Beer recounts many tragic events from her past, which reveal true courage and perseverance. For example, she describes undergoing repeated questions about her parents’ lineage from German soldiers and officials, and how she was so afraid of revealing her truth that she refused all painkillers during her daughter’s birth. She even talks about how she was bombed out of her house when the Soviet army attacked, and how she had to hide and listen to women being raped in the street.
Beer does not only talk of her own experiences. For example, she discusses the simple but selfless act of a nurse smuggling an onion into a hospital for an enemy solider. She recounts the small but significant acts of bravery demonstrated by men and women she encounters, and the harrowing hardships of life spent hiding her