Herbert Steiner
Herbert Steiner, born in 1923, was active in the resistance during his secondary school years and had to flee Austria in 1938. In British exile, Herbert Steiner was active in the youth organisation "Young Austria". Steiner's parents were murdered in the Holocaust. In the 1960s, Herbert Steiner co-founded the Documentation Centre of Austrian Resistance (DÖW), which he directed from 1963 to 1983.
https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Herbert_Steiner
https://ikf.ac.at/schwerpunkte/hist-sozialforschung/oral-history/2014-vom-ueberschreiten-der-grenzen-das-leben-und-werk-von-herbert-steiner-1923-2001
https://www.doew.at/foerderpreise/herbert-steiner-preis/herbert-steiner-1923-2001
Ernst Gabriel
Ernst Gabriel, born in 1926, grew up in Deutschkreutz as the son of a working-class family. He did an apprenticeship as an electrician. At first, he was a member of the Hitler Youth. However, after the death of his father in 1942, who was a convinced opponent of the National Socialists, he turned away from it. He preferred to meet with other young people from the village. The group he hung out with was non-conformist, wore longer hair, and was provocative because of its non-conformity. They were disdainfully called "Schlurfs" by the Nazis. The group politicised itself and formed a resistance group that carried out acts of sabotage. In the end, the group was arrested and tortured (two members were only 14 years old). Ernst Gabriel died in prison in 1945.
From: Heribert Brettl: Nationalsozialismus im Burgenland. Innsbruck: Studienverlag, 2012. p. 354.
Josef Hans Grafl: A Resistance Fighter in the Service of the Allies
Josef Hans Grafl, born in 1921 in Schattendorf, was involved with the Communist Party since his earliest youth. When he was drafted to the Wehrmacht, he remained true to his ideology and passed on secret radio messages to the Soviet army. When he was discovered, he fled and fought his way to the English army. He fought on the side of the Allies for the liberation of his homeland until the end of the war.
From: Heribert Brettl: Nationalsozialismus im Burgenland. Innsbruck: Studienverlag, 2012. p. 356.
Käthe Sasso
Käthe Sasso was born in Vienna in 1926. Her parents Agnes and Johann were both politically engaged against the Federal State of Austria, 1934-1938 (“Ständestaat”) and against National Socialism, 1938-1945. After her father was drafted to the Wehrmacht and her mother died of a serious illness in July 1941, the young girl became a member of the resistance group Gustav Adolf Neustadl. The group's main goals were to support widows of executed resistance fighters with food, to listen to foreign radio stations and to distribute leaflets against fascism. In August 1942, aged 16, she was arrested by the Gestapo. In January 1943, she was sent to the Vienna Regional Court as a prisoner, narrowly escaped the death sentence, was transferred to the Oberlanzendorf labour education camp, and was finally deported to Berlin in September 1944 and two weeks later to Ravensbrück concentration camp. On 28 April 1945, she was forced to a death march to Bergen-Belsen concentration camp. On the first night of the death march, near Wustrow, she managed to escape together with her friend Mizzi Bosch and returned to Vienna.
https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/K%C3%A4the_Sasso
Ernst Kirchweger
Ernst Kirchweger, born in 1898 in Vienna, was a streetcar conductor and later managing director of the Compass publishing house. He was fatally injured by an extreme right-wing student during a demonstration against Taras Borodajkewycz, an Austrian National Socialist historian, in 1965. He was the first victim of political violence in Austria after 1945.