Stella Goldschlag / Kübler-Isaacksohn
She was a German Jewish woman who collaborated with the Gestapo during World War II, exposing and denouncing Berlin’s underground Jews.
In the spring of 1943, she and her parents were arrested by the Nazis. Stella Kübler was subjected to torture. In order to avoid deportation of herself and her parents, she agreed to become a “catcher” for the Gestapo, hunting down Jews hiding as non-Jews. She was promised a salary of 300 Reichsmark for each Jew that she betrayed. She proceeded to comb Berlin for such Jews and, as she was familiar with a large number of Jewish people, Kübler was very successful at locating her former schoolmates and handing their information over to the Gestapo. Some of Kübler’s efforts to apprehend Jews in hiding included promising them food and accommodation, meanwhile turning them over to the Nazi authorities; she would also follow clues provided to her by the Gestapo. The data concerning the number of her victims varies, depending on different sources of information, from between 600 and 3,000 Jews. Stella Kübler’s charisma and striking good looks were a great advantage in her pursuit of underground Jews. The Nazis called her “blonde poison”.
The Nazis would break their promise of sparing the lives of Kübler’s parents. They, along with her husband Manfred and his family, were killed in Auschwitz. However Kübler still continued her work for the Gestapo until March 1945. During that time, she met and married her second husband, Rolf Isaaksohn, a fellow Jewish Nazi collaborator, also warking as a Greifer (“catcher”).
She committed suicide in 1994 in West Berlin.







