"Shining Examples who show us how Important it is to stand up to Hatred and Intolerance"
President Steinmeier has awarded Ana María Wahrenberg & Rudi Haymann the Order of Merit
March 06th, 2025Federal President Frank-Walter Steinmeier has awarded Ana María Wahrenberg and Rudi Haymann the Order of Merit of the Federal Republic of Germany. “They have both made outstanding and admirable contributions to Germany, to our country", he said in recognition of the achievements of the two recipients.
Awarding decorations is one of the most joyful tasks for a Federal President. Each and every time I am deeply impressed by the broad spectrum of engagement for our country. However, meeting people like you on the other side of the world, people who have made outstanding contributions to our country, and having the privilege of decorating them is still something unusual for me. Something that also fills me with humility. After all, it shows: no matter where we go as Germans, our past comes with us.
Today when I present two decorations in Santiago, almost 13,000 kilometres from Berlin and thus also from your birthplace, it is an expression of our responsibility for our past – a responsibility under which no line can be drawn. Last year, the Jewish Claims Conference calculated that there are more than 90 countries which are home to survivors of the Holocaust. More than 90 countries in which our past lives on. And the Shoah is part of this past, this history. It is part of our identity. And just as we believe that a line can never be drawn, there is hardly a place in the world, no matter how remote it may be, where this memory does not live on.
Who would know this better than you two, Ms Wahrenberg and Mr Haymann! You are living your lives in service of remembrance and reconciliation. In recognition of your decades of work against forgetting, your engagement in promoting civic courage and humanity, I have the privilege of presenting you today with the Order of Merit of the Federal Republic of Germany.
Ms Wahrenberg, you were born in Berlin in 1930 and nine years later, after the horrors of the Night of the Pogrom on 9 November 1938, you emigrated to Chile with your parents. Just in time, as it turns out, as more than 20 members of your family, including your grandparents, were murdered during the Shoah. In 1970 you moved back to Berlin with your husband, arriving in a different Germany. A country that had finally started to engage with its past. When you returned to Chile 13 years later, you took with you a different image of Germany.
You became a mediator between generations and a strong voice speaking out against hatred and exclusion. “What is important are always the people themselves”, that is your firm conviction and precisely what you want to communicate, particularly to the younger generation. Enabling children and young people to get to know the past first hand is a matter very close to your heart. This is all the more important as the day will come when there will no longer be survivors and witnesses. At the same time, knowledge about the Holocaust is dwindling amongst the younger generation around the world.
This makes it painfully clear to us just how valuable your commitment is. During countless visits to schools, with your talks and publications but above all with your open, charismatic manner, you reach out to young people and keep your story alive, thereby also keeping a piece of German history alive. We all know that we need to find new ways of preserving and passing on this memory. But we must not and will not wane in our efforts to recount the memory to future generations so that what happened once does not happen again – this is my promise to you, Ms Wahrenberg!
You, Ms Wahrenberg, have made it your mission to remind people of the Shoah and give the victims and the survivors a voice, also here in Chile. A voice of reconciliation and understanding. You are an amazing role model for tolerance, humanity and civic courage. That is why you are being decorated today.
Mr Haymann,
Just like Ms Wahrenberg, you are to this day leading your life in service of reconciliation, remembrance and building a brighter future. Your own story is similarly a very special one. You were born in 1921, also in Berlin, and in 1938 were taken as a teenager as part of a Kindertransport to Haifa, back then in British-controlled Mandatory Palestine, and were one of the co-founders of Beit Zera kibbutz in the north of what is today the State of Israel.
Later, when the National Socialists were advancing in northern Africa, you volunteered your services to the British armed forces and, due to your comprehensive knowledge of Germany, you worked with the British intelligence services. As a courageous, fearless soldier, you were involved in the liberation of Rome and when the war was over in the arrest of National Socialists who had committed crimes in Italy. Seven years after fleeing Germany, you were transferred as a victorious British soldier from Rome to Berlin where you were reunited with your uncle who had survived Theresienstadt concentration camp. Your parents who had escaped to Chile were the only other Jewish family members to survive the Holocaust.
What joy you must have felt upon seeing your parents again here in Chile ten years later. Here, you carved out an impressive career for yourself as an interior designer. However, first and foremost, you kept telling your story of resistance, your journey from someone who was persecuted to your becoming a soldier. And, what is particularly impressive, you tell this story without resentment, without anger. Instead you advocate peace, working all your life to promote reconciliation and democracy.
By telling your story, by sharing your autobiography, you have made an important contribution to addressing the National Socialist past and provided future generations with a hugely important document depicting that era.
Ladies and gentlemen, Ms Wahrenberg and Mr Haymann are shining examples who show us how important it is to stand up to hatred and intolerance particularly at this time. They have both made outstanding and admirable contributions to Germany, to our country. A country that once robbed them of their homeland and yet to which they gave back so much. We cannot be grateful enough for the wonderful gift they have bestowed upon us. Ms Wahrenberg, Mr Haymann, it is an honour for our country that you wear these decorations.
Thank you very much for being here today. And now I am delighted to have the privilege of presenting you with the Order of Merit of the Federal Republic of Germany. My warm congratulations on behalf of our entire country!