Dannie Heineman

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Dannie Heineman

Dannie N. Heineman (23 November 1872 – 31 January 1962) was a Belgian-American engineer and businessman.[1] He was the managing director and controlling shareholder of the Belgian industrial multinational Sofina. He was a prolific sponsor of science especially through in medical sciences and awards in mathematical physics and astrophysics.

In 1939, while living in Belgium, Dannie Heineman managed to get the Luxembourg government to open its closed borders and admit approximately 100 Jewish families from Germany. The persuasive argument was that hotels in Luxembourg were empty and he would pay for the rooms and give the Jews an allowance, and they would not be working and taking jobs away from Luxembourg workers. This arrangement worked until 10 May 1940 when Hitler invaded. At that point his assistant Mr. Schmidt made a final six months payment to the families. Among the families was the physicist Ernst Ising who survived the war.

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  1. ^ "Obituary: Dannie N. Heineman". Physics Today. 15 (3): 84. March 1962. doi:10.1063/1.3058089. Archived from the original on 2013-09-20.

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