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Major Karl Plagge (July 10, 1897, in Darmstadt  June 19, 1957 in Darmstadt) was a German officer and Nazi Party member who during World War II used his position as a staff officer in the Heer to employ and protect some 1,240 jews  500 men, the others women and children, in order to give them a better chance to survive the nearly total annihilation of Lithuania’s Jews that took place between 1941–1944.-
Plagge served as an officer of the Wermacht in Vilna (Vilnius) from June 1941 to June 1944. While stationed in Vilnius he was in charge of a repair facility for military vehicles (HKP 562), where hundreds of Jews worked. According to the brutal decimation policy adopted by the SS in occupied Lithuania, the first to be slated for extermination were the "unproductive" jews. Employment at Plagge's HKP unit thus offered a chance for survival.-
Plagge treated his workers well, and included many people who were not qualified as mechanics to work there in order to save them from deportation; among the Jews of Vilna it was known that if one wanted a chance to survive, the only option was to work in Plagge's plant.-
In the last days of June 1944, on the eve of the German evacuation of Vilnius, Plagge assembled his jewish workers and warned them in thinly veiled language that they were going to be handed over to the care of the SS. Some managed to escape and/or hide and some 200 survived.-
Plagge after the war
Karl Plagge died in 1957 and was posthumously recognized by the Yad Vashem Committee on July 22, 2004.

Plagge served as an officer of the Wermacht in Vilna (Vilnius) from June 1941 to June 1944. While stationed in Vilnius he was in charge of a repair facility for military vehicles (HKP 562), where hundreds of Jews worked. According to the brutal decimation policy adopted by the SS in occupied Lithuania, the first to be slated for extermination were the "unproductive" jews. Employment at Plagge's HKP unit thus offered a chance for survival.-
Plagge treated his workers well, and included many people who were not qualified as mechanics to work there in order to save them from deportation; among the Jews of Vilna it was known that if one wanted a chance to survive, the only option was to work in Plagge's plant.-
In the last days of June 1944, on the eve of the German evacuation of Vilnius, Plagge assembled his jewish workers and warned them in thinly veiled language that they were going to be handed over to the care of the SS. Some managed to escape and/or hide and some 200 survived.-

Plagge after the war
Karl Plagge died in 1957 and was posthumously recognized by the Yad Vashem Committee on July 22, 2004.