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The true story of Salomon Sorowitsch, counterfeiter
extraordinaire and bohemian. After getting arrested in a German
concentration camp in 1944, he agrees to help the Nazis in an organized
counterfeit operation set up to help finance the war effort.
It was the biggest counterfeit money scam of all times.
Over 130 million pound sterling were printed, under conditions that
couldn't have been more tragic or spectacular. During the last years of
the war, as the German Reich saw that the end was near, the authorities
decided to produce their own banknotes in the currencies of their major
war enemies. They hoped to use the duds to flood the enemy economy and
fill the empty war coffers. At the Sachsenhausen concentration camp,
two barracks were separated from the rest of the camp and the outside
world, and transformed into a fully equipped counterfeiters workshop.
"Operation Bernhard" was born. Prisoners were brought to Sachsenhausen
from other camps to implement the plan: professional printers,
fastidious bank officials and simple craftsmen all became members of
the top-secret counterfeiter commando. They had the choice: if they
cooperated with the enemy, they had a chance to survive, as first-class
prisoners in a "golden cage" with enough to eat and a bed to sleep in.
If they sabotaged the operation, a sure death awaited them. For THE
COUNTERFEITERS, it was not only a question of saving their own lives,
but also about saving their conscience as well...
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