After expulsion I couldn’t put down roots, I miss feeling at home
Helmut Schmidt was born on 3 June 1943 in Česká Kamenice (Bӧhmisch Kamnitz, in German) to the parents Ingeborg and Maxmilián Schmidt. From 1943 onwards, his grandfather Uhman was mayor of Česká Kamenice, when it had a predominantly German population. After the war, Uhman was sentenced to six years in prison for membership in the NSDAP, interned at the former concentration camp in Rabštejn and released in 1948. Helmut’s father, a mechanical engineer, was enlisted into the Wehrmacht and died at the end of the war in Berlin. In June of 1945, together with his mother, grandmother and aunt, Helmut was expelled into the Soviet occupation zone of Germany. During the wild expulsion, his mother gave birth, but his newborn brother survived only a few weeks in the inhospitable conditions. The family later illegally crossed into the American occupation zone and this witness graduated from a grammar school in Düsseldorf. He continued his studies in Berlin, at the Faculty of Electrical Engineering. In 1968 he attempted to galvanise public discussion on issues surrounding the Second World War. Today he lives in Berlin, with his second wife, daughter and son. He has a strong relationship towards Česká Kamenice, where he organises meetings of expelled Germans. He has initiated the creation of memorial sites – in Hinterhermsdorf in Saxony as well as the former Rabštejn camp near Kamenice.