NameFriedrich Löhner-Beda
Birth24 Jun 1883
Death4 Dec 1942
FatherDavid Löhner (1840-1907)
MotherNetti Scherbak (1845-1921)
Notes for Friedrich Löhner-Beda
{geni:occupation} Author and librettist
{geni:about_me} Viennese opera librettist and satirist. His first volume of collected satires had been published in 1908, when he was twentyfive years old.

In the midst of march 1938 Fritz was captured by the nazis and transported to Dachau KZ. October 1938 was transfered to and remained in Buchenwald KZ for more than three years. While in the camp he organised as best he could, cultural activities and competitions.

On 17 October 1942 he was deported from Buchenwald to Auschwitz. There are different opinions about how he died; if shot or beaten to death.

His librettos was and are still very popular and e.g. he is represented on the swedish national library's catalogoue with sixteen posts under the name Fritz Löhner Beda. He made librettos to "Singspiel" and many of the songs havebeen reprinted and reproduced many times. Among the most popular are the texts to Franz Lehárs (1870-1948) music. But also music composed by Paul Abraham (1892-1960).

[http://libris.kb.se/hitlist?q=WFRF%3A%28L%C3%B6hne...s=rc&g=&m=25 LIBRIS].



=Source=
*''The Holocaust'' - Martin Gilbert, page 62
*[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fritz_L%C3%B6hner-Beda English Wikipedia]


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Wikipedia:

"In the 1920s he became one of the most sought-after librettists and lyricists of Vienna. Together with Franz Lehár as composer, Ludwig Herzer as co-author and Richard Tauber as singer he produced the operettas Friederike (Frederica) (1928), Das Land des Lächelns (The Land of Smiles) (1929) and, with Paul Knepler as co-author, Giuditta (1934). Together with his friend Alfred Grünwald as co-author and Paul Abraham as composer, he produced Viktoria und ihr Husar (Victoria and Her Hussar) (1930), Die Blume von Hawaii (The Flower of Hawaii) (1931) and Ball im Savoy (Ball at the Savoy) (1932).

In mid-March 1938 Fritz Löhner-Beda was arrested and deported to the Dachau concentration camp on 1 April 1938. On 23 September 1938 he was displaced to the Buchenwald concentration camp. There he composed, together with his fellow prisoner Hermann Leopoldi, in the end of 1938 the famous anthem of the concentration camp, Das Buchenwaldlied ("The Buchenwald Song"):

O Buchenwald, ich kann dich nicht vergessen,
weil du mein Schicksal bist.
Wer dich verließ, der kann es erst ermessen,
wie wundervoll die Freiheit ist!
O Buchenwald, wir jammern nicht und klagen,
und was auch unser Schicksal sei,
wir wollen trotzdem Ja zum Leben sagen,
denn einmal kommt der Tag, dann sind wir frei!
O Buchenwald, I can’t forget about you,
because you are my fate.
Who leaves you, only he can appreciate
how wonderful freedom is!
O Buchenwald, we don’t cry and complain
and whatever may be our destiny,
even so we shall say "yes" to life
for once the day shall come when we shall be free!

His initial hope for an intercession by Franz Lehár was deceptive. On 17 October 1942 he was deported to the Monowitz concentration camp near Auschwitz. The circumstances of his death have been described by Raul Hilberg in The Destruction of the European Jews: After an inspection by directors of the syndicate IG Farben at which the already diseased Löhner-Beda was denounced as working not hard enough he was beaten to death on 4 December 1942."

'''Dokumentationsarchiv des österreichischen Widerstandes'''
* First Name Fritz
* Last Name Löhner
* Date of Birth 24.06.1883
* Place of Birth Wildenschwert
* Residence Wien 8, Lange Gasse 46
* Date of death 04.12.1942
* Place of death Auschwitz
* Deportation Dachau
* Date of Deportation 01.04.1938
* Transport Dachau/Buchenwald
* Second transport Buchenwald/Auschwitz
* Date of second transport 16.10.1942
Last Modified 24 Jun 2014Created 10 Jun 2015 using Reunion for Macintosh