After the war ended on May 9, 1945, Simon wrote a letter to United States Army intelligence offering his services. He became thepermanent representative of the victims. He began his work with the Army, then set up a small office in Linz, and finally moved it to Vienna. The task was overwhelming. The Allies had moved onand were now focused on the Cold War. The survivors were trying to put their lives back together. Retaining his sense of humor and singular purpose, he went out in search of the perpetrators ofgenocide.
In the end, this architect from Buchach helped bring hundreds of Nazi war criminals to justice. Not just ordinary criminals. Peoplelike Franz Stangle, the commandant of Treblinka; Gustav Wagner, the commandant of Sobibor; and Walter Rauf, the inventor of the mobile gas vans who had murdered hundreds of thousands.
But more significantly, he kept alive the torch of memory, not without considerable personal sacrifice, preserving a place in ourhearts for the victims of the Holocaust. If there are places today that educate the young about man's inhumanity, it was Simon Wiesenthal who helped plant some of those seeds.
To learn more about Simon’s life and legacy, watch/stream Moriah Films’ I Have Never Forgotten You. Narrated by Academy Award®-winning actress Nicole Kidman, this feature lengthdocumentary features interviews with longtime associates, government leaders, friends and family members, many of whom have never discussed the legendary Nazi hunter on camera.