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Charles Thau

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Polish-born Red Army soldier (1921–1995)
Charles Thau
A black and white photograph depicting a Soviet officer (center) looking at the camera, positioned behind two soldiers, one Soviet and one American, shaking hands on a damaged bridge structure.
Chaim (Charles) Thau (center) meeting US soldiers at the Elbe River, 25 April 1945
Born
Chaim Thau

(1921年07月07日)7 July 1921
Zabłotów, Poland
Died(1995年04月02日)2 April 1995
Allegiance Soviet Union
Branch
Red Army
Service years
1942–1945
Rank
Lieutenant
Unit56th Guards Rifle Regiment, 58th Guards Rifle Division
Conflicts
Awards
Other workResistance activities; Bricha operative; US businessman

Charles Thau (born Chaim Thau; 7 July 1921 – 2 April 1995) was a Polish-born Jewish resistance member and Red Army soldier during World War II. He appears at the center of the widely reproduced 1945 photograph "East Meets West", taken during the Allied–Soviet link-up at the Elbe River on 25 April 1945, commemorated annually today and known as Elbe Day.[1]

Born in Zabłotów, Poland, Thau survived the Holocaust by fleeing into the Carpathian forests after the German invasion of the Soviet Union in 1941. He became a partisan and later joined the Red Army, serving as a translator and front-line soldier before being field-commissioned as a lieutenant. He was wounded multiple times in combat, including during the Battle of Berlin, and received the Medal "For Courage" .

After the war, Thau was active in the Bricha movement in Austria, assisting Jewish displaced persons seeking to leave Europe. He immigrated to the United States in 1951 and settled in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, where he raised a family, became a businessman and owned several automobile repair garages.

His appearance at the center of the widely reproduced 1945 photograph links his personal story, one of survival at every turn of his young adult life, to a defining symbolic moment of Allied cooperation at the close of World War II, commemorated annually as Elbe Day. As an aside, the misidentification of a US soldier in that same photograph, and subsequent correction, brought renewed attention to the image and its participants.

Early life and education

[edit ]

Born Chaim Thau on 7 July 1921 in the shtetl of Zabłotów (present-day Zabolotiv, Ukraine) in eastern Poland, he grew up in an agrarian Jewish family. His father, Mordechai, was a merchant peddler operating from the family farm, while his mother, Esther, taught Yiddish, German, and Polish from their home, which also functioned as a small classroom. He had two younger brothers.[2]

Zabłotów was a market town with roughly equal Jewish and Christian populations.[3] Archival tax records place the Thau family among the more highly assessed households.[4] In this multilingual environment, he became proficient in several languages.[5] [a]

Map showing the division of Poland in 1939, with a demarcation line separating German and Soviet zones.
Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact, 1939, Polish demarcation line
Black and white photo of a Soviet soldier talking to civilians in a village setting
Residents speak with a Red Army soldier, 1939

In September 1939, Germany and the Soviet Union signed the Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact,[8] leading to the partition of Poland at the outset of World War II. Zabłotów came under Soviet administration.[3] [6] [9] [10] Russian was subsequently mandated as the language of instruction in local schools.[11] With unexpected Russian soldiers then stationed in Zabłotów, and Thau's interaction with the soldiers, Thau learned Russian which added to his existing knowledge of Polish, German, Yiddish, and Hebrew.[5] [12]

Contemporary accounts indicate that some residents initially welcomed the Soviets and perceived their presence as protective, but soon the region was incorporated into the Soviet system.[13] [14] [15] [16]

This environment of cultural diversity and relative stability would be abruptly shattered with the German invasion in 1941.

Nazi invasion and persecution

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In June 1941, Nazi Germany violated the Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact by invading the Soviet Union in Operation Barbarossa.[8] German and Hungarian forces occupied Zabłotów in early July 1941.[3] [17] [18] [19] [b]

Persecution of the Jewish population intensified thereafter. In the latter half of 1941, German security forces and local collaborators helped carry out mass shootings as part of Einsatzgruppen operations.[3] [17] By the end of the year, approximately 1,100 of the town’s roughly 2,700 Jewish residents had been killed.[3] [20]

Black and white photo of people being loaded onto trucks under military supervision.
Jews transported, 1941–1942, Zabłotów area

Most of the remaining Jewish residents were subsequently deported to extermination camps.[3] [17] [20] Thau's parents and two younger brothers—Mordechai, Esther, Barrish, and Hershel—did not survive.[20] [21] [22]

Hiding and partisan activity

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With the destruction of his community underway, Thau’s flight into the forests marked the beginning of a prolonged struggle for survival.[23] [24] His experience was uncommon, as relatively few Jews were able to escape into the forests or join partisan formations. [20] [21]

In the forests, the ability to survive involved foraging, acquiring food from nearby farms, and using concealed dugouts (Zemlyanka ) to endure winter conditions and avoid detection.[23] [24] [25] [26]

Thau survived in forested areas near the Romanian border

Thau later linked up with a childhood friend, another Jewish survivor, and the two operated together near the Romanian border.[24]

According to Der Spiegel (2025) and The Forward (2025), Thau at times disguised himself as a Wehrmacht officer, using his fluency in German and procured uniforms to enter nearby towns in order to obtain food and medical care.[23] [24] Similar use of disguise has been documented among other partisan groups in comparable conditions. [27] [28]

Red Army service

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After more than a year in hiding, Thau was discovered by Soviet combatants operating in the region. He was initially suspected of being a Nazi collaborator or Wehrmacht deserter, reflecting broader Red Army suspicion of civilians emerging from occupied territories.[29] Thau's fluency in German contributed to this suspicion.[30] After demonstrating Russian proficiency as well, the suspicions were eased and archival Red Army records indicated Thau was integrated into their ranks on 10 July 1942 as a translator.[31] His language skills were used for military interrogations and liaison duties.[32] [33]

During the Red Army's westward advance in 1944 and 1945, archival records identify Thau as a Guards sergeant rifleman in the 56th Guards Rifle Regiment of the 58th Guards Rifle Division.[31] [34] [c] On 15 January 1945, Thau was wounded during offensive operations in Poland near a position identified in Soviet records as "Height 55.2."[35] [d]

Russian archival letter indicating Thau was wounded on 15 Jan 1945

According to the regimental award citation, after another machine-gun crew was taken out of action by enemy fire, Thau assumed operation of their heavy mounted weapon and opened sustained defensive counter fire against advancing German infantry, thereby enabling the continued advance of Soviet infantry. He was awarded the Medal "For Courage" by regimental order dated 20 January 1945.[34]

Russian letter excerpt documenting Medal For Courage for bravery at Hill 55.2

Less than a month later, Soviet medical records identify Thau as a crew commander in the 56th Guards Rifle Regiment when he sustained a through gunshot wound to the right iliac region on 9 February 1945 before being medically evacuated. He returned to frontline service 20 February 1945. [36]

Russian medical archival extract – Thau was wounded on 9 February 1945 in the right abdomen evidenced by a pass-through gunshot, then released less than ten days later back to front lines.

As casualties among junior officers mounted, experienced enlisted soldiers were promoted.[37] [38] In this context, and according to later accounts, Thau was promoted in the field to lieutenant and assumed command of an anti-tank battery equipped with 76 mm divisional guns within the 58th Guards Rifle Division.[39]

In April 1945, his division reached the Elbe River and took part in the Allied–Soviet link-up at Torgau before advancing toward Berlin.[40] He was later wounded during street fighting in the Battle of Berlin. A bullet fragment remained lodged in his cheek until it was discovered and removed by a dentist in Milwaukee in 1951.[2] [41]

[edit ]

By April 1945, Allied operational plans called for US forces advancing eastward to halt along the Elbe–Mulde line in preparation for contact with advancing Soviet formations, culminating in the link-up known today as commemorated as Elbe Day.[42] [43] The meeting between elements of the 58th Guards Rifle Division and the US 69th Infantry Division was one of several contacts establishing the Allied–Soviet link-up in central Germany.

Black and white photo of a Soviet officer standing center-frame behind a handshake between a US and Soviet soldier on a wrecked bridge.
Thau (center) behind the handshake, 26 April 1945

Thau appears in the reproduced photograph of the Allied–Soviet link-up, positioned at the center behind the handshake, looking directly into the camera. [33] [44] [1] [e] In the image, Thau is depicted wearing a standard Red Army field uniform (gymnastyorka Model 1943) with a sidearm carried in a belt holster.[45] He is also shown wearing Soviet military decorations, including the Medal "For Courage" and the Medal "For Battle Merit".[34] High-resolution reproductions show wound stripes (ranenie stripes) on his right chest, indicating injuries sustained prior to late April 1945.[f] [g]

Film from the camera was transmitted to the Associated Press, and one of the two photographs appeared on the front page of The New York Times on 25 April 1945.[46] Later research on the event led to the correction of a long-standing misidentification of one of the American soldiers in the photograph.[23] [47]

Postwar activities

[edit ]

After World War II, Thau returned to Zabłotów to search for his relatives. Finding no survivors among his immediate or extended family, he departed the region and relocated to Salzburg, Austria within the American occupation zone.[48] There, he worked as an automobile mechanic while becoming an active operative in the clandestine Bricha network—an underground effort that facilitated the transit of Jewish Holocaust survivors out of post-war Europe. [49] [50] [51]

Bricha operative

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Operating from the Salzburg region, including the displaced-persons camp at Saalfelden, Thau was involved in logistical operations supporting the movement of Jewish refugees across postwar Europe despite British immigration restrictions.[49] [52] He helped coordinate routes and facilitate border crossings as part of the broader Bricha network.[53]

Thau supported routes from Austria over the Alps to Mediterranean ports, 1946–1947

Bricha operations in Austria were closely connected to the displaced-persons camp system established by Allied authorities, which concentrated large numbers of Jewish survivors in the American occupation zone.[54] [55] Camps in the Salzburg region, including Camp Saalfelden, functioned as staging centers where refugee groups were assembled, transportation arranged, and documentation prepared for movement across Alpine transit corridors into Italy and onward to Mediterranean ports.[56] [57] [58]

Bricha unit at Camp Saalfelden, Austria, c. 1947–1948. See top row, third from right labeled "Chaim"

A contemporary photo collage from the late 1940s identifies Thau within the dedicated Bricha unit at Camp Saalfelden.[53] [49]

Immigration

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Recalling what soldiers of the 69th Infantry Division had told him at the Elbe link-up about life in America, Thau sought help from the American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee at Camp Saalfelden to immigrate to the United States. They assisted him in securing a sponsor, as prospective immigrants were required to have one. Attorney David Rabinowitz of Sheboygan, Wisconsin was identified as his sponsor.[59]

Thau arrived in New York on 7 September 1951 aboard the USS General M. B. Stewart, then traveled to Sheboygan and later settled in Milwaukee.[60]

Business career

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After years shaped by war and displacement, Thau established a stable civilian life resettling in Milwaukee. Thau adopted the name Charles Thau and resumed work as an auto mechanic, a trade he had practiced in postwar Salzburg.[2]

Thau (right) with assistant Glenn Retzlaff in the garage, c. late 1960s

From the early 1950s to the 1990s, he owned and operated multiple service stations, including several Phillips 66–branded locations in Milwaukee.[61] [62] [h]

Thau's Phillips 66 Garage on Capital Drive, c. 1970s

Independent records from the early 1960s list his business at 433 South 6th Street.[63] He later operated additional locations on West Greenfield Avenue and on Capital Drive. [64]

Thau's Brake & Muffler Shop at 43rd and Greenfield, c. 1980s

Thau used his multilingual abilities in Polish, Russian, Yiddish, German, and English to assist newly arrived immigrants from Europe. His garages served as gathering places for Milwaukee's postwar Jewish and European community, where he helped with translations, employment referrals, and introductions.[41] [65] As Thau's multiple Phillips 66 service stations grew across Milwaukee over several decades, he became an established local businessman. During this period Thau remained personally involved in daily operations and maintained close ties with his family and community. [65]

Personal life

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Thau and daughter Esther at her wedding, June 1975

Thau married Ida (née Faich), and they had three children: Martin, Jeffrey, and Esther.[41]

Thau (right) with his sons Jeff (center) and Martin (left), March 1965

In 1951, during a routine dental X-ray in Milwaukee, a bullet fragment from his wartime injury in Berlin was discovered still lodged in his jaw and was surgically removed.[66]

Photographs from the 1960s and 1970s document his family life during the period he operated his businesses in Milwaukee.[47] Charles Thau died on 2 April 1995, several weeks before the 50th anniversary of Elbe Day.[62]

Legacy

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Although he lived much of his later life outside the public eye, Thau’s notoriety is his image embedded in the visual Allied–Soviet linkup photo from World War 2.

Symbolism and diplomatic significance

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The image represents wartime cooperation between the Western Allies and the Soviet Union prior to the onset of Cold War tensions.[12] [67] US President George W. Bush and Russian President Vladimir Putin issued a joint declaration citing the Elbe meeting as a symbol of wartime cooperation. Similar references were made by Presidents Bill Clinton and Barack Obama, and by former Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev.[68] [69] [70] [71]

Commemoration and public memory

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In 1955, Thau discussed his wartime experiences in an interview with the Milwaukee Journal.[2] The Elbe Day event was later commemorated in a bas-relief sculpture at the National World War II Memorial in Washington, D.C.[72]

The city of Torgau’s elected officials, city volunteers, and independent journalists from nearby Leipzig have hosted spectacular events recognizing the participants in the photograph, and commemorating diplomatic cooperation among the countries involved, including Russia, the United States, and greater Germany.[73] Following his death, Thau has been represented at Elbe Day anniversary events by his youngest son, retired US Air Force Colonel Jeff Thau.[72]

The photograph in which Thau appears remains one of the most widely reproduced visual records of the Allied–Soviet link-up, securing his place in the documented history of the final days of World War II.

Historical Photo Correction

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For years one of the American soldiers in the iconic East meets West photograph was misidentified in both commemorations and Torgau historiography as Delbert Philpott, including during the in-person official 2005, 60th-anniversary, state-level observances held in Moscow and attended by US and Russian Presidents Bush and Putin.[74] [75] [76]

In 2008, the 69th Infantry Division Association and Torgau officials corrected the soldier’s identity to Technician Fifth Grade Bernard E. Kirschenbaum.[77] The correction was only made after an alerting testimony and emails from a retired USAF colonel (Charles Thau’s youngest son) who, while reviewing 69th Infantry Division regimental records, including the regiment’s Colonel C. M. Adams’ report, found no evidence supporting the attribution to Philpott.

Upon discovering evidence pointing toward Kirschenbaum, the USAF colonel tracked him down to verify the specifics of the encounter. Over the course of several telephone conversations, Kirschenbaum confirmed key historical details and revealed the existence of a note he had left in Torgau’s visitor log in 1995—a gesture that was not noticed at the time by city officials, and remained an unobscured historical detail for years.

Surprisingly, this note remained overlooked by the Torgau historian for thirteen more years. In 2008, the findings were presented to the 69th Infantry Association officials, and subsequently, a formal correction was made to the long-standing misidentification within the iconic World War II photograph.[78]

Kirschenbaum himself had verbally challenged the misidentification directly with Philpott in 1995 when they both met each other, face-to-face, during the 1995 anniversary visit to Torgau. Kirschenbaum then penciled the aforementioned note in 1995 in the city visitors' log stating he was "the American in the middle on the bridge shaking hands with the Russian soldiers."

Handwritten log entry (1995) by Kirschenbaum. No responsive action or awareness by others until 2008.

Kirschenbaum’s 1995 verbal challenge was not taken seriously, thereby allowing the misidentification to persist for another 13 years.[23] Subsequent historical accounts have since documented both the earlier misidentification and its correction.[79] [80] [81] [82]

Unexpectedly, the above correction added a further dimension to the photograph. That is, as Olivia Haynie wrote in The Forward (April 2025), the image preserves not only a moment of Allied cooperation between East and West, but with soldiers Thau and now Kirschenbaum recognized (both of the Jewish faith), the photo also preserves one of Jewish survival on each side of the bridge, whom the Nazi regime had sought to destroy.[47]

See also

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Notes

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  1. ^ During the interwar years, Zabłotów's Tuesday markets connected surrounding agrarian communities with Jewish merchants and craftsmen. The town's population was multilingual, speaking Polish, Yiddish, Ukrainian, and German, reflecting the region’s diverse demographics.[6] ; [7]
  2. ^ Following the Soviet retreat, Zabłotów fell within the Hungarian occupation zone administered by the Hungarian Carpathian Group (Kárpát Csoport). German security elements, including personnel from Einsatzgruppe, operated in the area shortly thereafter.
  3. ^ A cover letter in the archival file incorrectly identifies Thau as serving in the 19th Division. However, the formal award order (No. 01) and accompanying service records confirm his assignment to the 56th Guards Rifle Regiment of the 58th Guards Rifle Division.
  4. ^ The location identified in Soviet records as "Height 55.2" corresponds to a numbered elevation used for tactical reference on Red Army operational maps. Combat accounts of the 58th Guards Rifle Division (part of the 5th Guards Army) place the unit in mid-January 1945 in the Stopnica–Nida River sector during the opening phase of the Sandomierz–Silesian Offensive. Contemporary military analyses describe this phase as characterized by heavily fortified German positions on elevated terrain that were reduced through concentrated artillery and infantry assaults.

    See also: D. Sims and A. Schilling, "Breakout from the Sandomierz Bridgehead," Field Artillery (October 1990), pp. 20–24; V. N. Kiselyov, "Sandomirsko-Silezskaya operatsiya 1945," in S. Ivanov (ed.), Voyennyy entsiklopediya, vol. 7 (Moscow: Voenizdat, 2003), pp. 373–374.
  5. ^ The photograph was taken during a formal, press-arranged meeting staged for photographers after the initial contact between US and Soviet patrols earlier on 25 April 1945.
  6. ^ Decree of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet of the USSR No. 213 (14 July 1942): "On the establishment of insignia for military personnel of the Red Army wounded in battles."
  7. ^ The stripes are distinct from the wound he received during the subsequent Battle of Berlin.
  8. ^ The earliest site of Thau's garage was located at 59th and Lisbon

References

[edit ]
  1. ^ a b Getty 2014, editorial description.
  2. ^ a b c d Milwaukee Journal 1955, p. 193.
  3. ^ a b c d e f Kahan 2017.
  4. ^ State Archive of Ivano-Frankivsk Oblast 1939.
  5. ^ a b Haynie 2025, para. 6.
  6. ^ a b Jewish Galicia and Bukovina n.d.
  7. ^ YIVO n.d.
  8. ^ a b Brecher & Wilkenfeld 1997, p. 255.
  9. ^ Radio Free Europe 2008.
  10. ^ Lviv Center n.d.
  11. ^ Der Spiegel 2025, Daily normalization of life in the "Kresy".
  12. ^ a b Wilms 2015.
  13. ^ Gross 2002, pp. 24–33.
  14. ^ Gross 2002, pp. 71–113.
  15. ^ Snyder 2010, pp. 116–118.
  16. ^ Snyder 2010, pp. 125–130.
  17. ^ a b c Browning 2004.
  18. ^ Brandon & Lower 2008, p. 78.
  19. ^ HL 1941.
  20. ^ a b c d Yad Vashem n.d.
  21. ^ a b Haynie 2025, para. 7.
  22. ^ Milwaukee Journal 1955, p. 193, para. 21.
  23. ^ a b c d e Heinz & Harmann 2025.
  24. ^ a b c d Haynie 2025, para. 8.
  25. ^ Tec 1993, pp. 160–165.
  26. ^ Levine 2010, p. 44.
  27. ^ Slepyan 2006, pp. 102–104, 201.
  28. ^ USHMM n.d., Partisans in the Forest.
  29. ^ Merridale 2006, pp. 164–166.
  30. ^ Haynie 2025, para. 9.
  31. ^ a b TsAMO 2025a.
  32. ^ Reese 2011, pp. 208–210.
  33. ^ a b Wilms 2015, para. 4.
  34. ^ a b c TsAMO 1945a.
  35. ^ TsAMO 2025b.
  36. ^ TsAMO 2025c. sfn error: no target: CITEREFTsAMO2025c (help)
  37. ^ Glantz 1995, pp. 285–309.
  38. ^ Ziemke 1975, pp. 300–302.
  39. ^ Milwaukee Journal 1955, p. 193, para. 8.
  40. ^ Ziemke 1975, pp. 287–302.
  41. ^ a b c Wilms 2015, para. 22.
  42. ^ MacDonald 1973, p. 456.
  43. ^ Ziemke 1975, pp. 287–289.
  44. ^ Haynie 2025, para. 20.
  45. ^ Central Intelligence Agency 1955, p. 32.
  46. ^ Wilms 2015, para. 10.
  47. ^ a b c Haynie 2025.
  48. ^ Wilms 2015, para. 21.
  49. ^ a b c Haynie 2025, para. 21.
  50. ^ Nehari 2015, para. 4.
  51. ^ Ofer 1990, p. 295.
  52. ^ Bauer 1970, pp. 93–118.
  53. ^ a b Nehari 2015, para. 5.
  54. ^ Lavsky 2002, pp. 186–190.
  55. ^ Bauer 1970, pp. 93–98.
  56. ^ Bauer 1970, pp. 102–108.
  57. ^ Ofer 1990, pp. 293–296.
  58. ^ Lavsky 2002, pp. 190–194.
  59. ^ Milwaukee Journal 1955, p. 193, para. 31.
  60. ^ US Immigration and Naturalization Service 1951, passenger no. 10.
  61. ^ Milwaukee Journal 1955, p. 193, para. 32.
  62. ^ a b The Wisconsin Jewish Chronicle 1995, p. 22.
  63. ^ Milwaukee Sentinel 1961.
  64. ^ Milwaukee Journal 1991, p. 70.
  65. ^ a b Haynie 2025, para. 24.
  66. ^ Milwaukee Journal 1955, p. 193, para. 18.
  67. ^ White House Archives 2005.
  68. ^ White House Archives 2005, para. 1.
  69. ^ Friedman 1995, para. 4.
  70. ^ White House Archives 2010, para. 2.
  71. ^ Gorbachev 1996, p. 112.
  72. ^ a b Wilms 2015, para. 23.
  73. ^ Thau 2008, pp. 9, 25.
  74. ^ Niedersen 2007, p. 9.
  75. ^ Zaffern 2005, pp. 9–11.
  76. ^ NASA Ames Research Center 2005, p. 7.
  77. ^ The Octagonian 2008, p. 1.
  78. ^ Haynie 2025, para. 2.
  79. ^ Getty 2014.
  80. ^ Niedersen 2007.
  81. ^ Zaffern 2005.
  82. ^ The Octagonian 2008.

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