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  • Media Combination  (4)
  • 1965-1969  (4)
  • [Place of publication not identified] :[publisher not identified],  (4)
  • Frankfurt am Main (Germany)  (2)
  • Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945)  (2)
Region
Material
  • Media Combination  (4)
Language
Year
  • 1
    Media Combination
    Media Combination
    [Place of publication not identified] :[publisher not identified],
    Language: German
    Pages: 8 + 12 , typescript.
    Year of publication: 1946-2000
    Keywords: Tepper, Elsa, ; Tepper, Minna. ; Tepper, Wilhelm, ; Auschwitz (Concentration camp) ; Salaspils (Concentration camp) ; Stutthof (Concentration camp) ; Forced labor. ; Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) ; Holocaust survivors. ; World War, 1939-1945. ; Women authors. ; Lauenburg (Germany) ; Rīga (Latvia) ; Vienna (Austria) ; Autobiographies ; Biographical sources ; Memoirs
    Abstract: The memoir was written 1946 in Austria, shortly after her liberation. Minna recalls her deportation in February 1942. She was taken to Riga together with her parents and her husband. Her mother was killed upon their arrival. Her father and her husband were taken to Salaspils for forced labor, where the later perished. Minna, who was pregnant with her first child, was forced to undergo an abortion. She describes her experiences of Nazi sadism in the Ghetto of Riga, especially by the Ghetto commanders Krause and Roschmann. In 1943 Minna was taken for peat cutting labor to Olaine. In November 1943 Minna and her father were reunited at the concentration camp Kaiserwald near Riga. From there both were taken to Spilve - a labor camp at a German air base, which was under worse conditions than the first camp. They worked in the cold without appropriate shoes and in thin clothes. Due to the exhausting conditions Minna's father Wilhelm was getting weaker and eventually was deported to Auschwitz in April 1944. Minna was taken to Stutthof, which was overcrowded and in primitive conditions. They were taken to an exterior labor camp, where they had to build trenches for the German defense in the rain and cold. They suffered of constant hunger. In January 1945 the camp was dissolved and all sick and disabled were killed. They were marched under exhausting conditions in the snow and cold. For all missing women ten others were chosen randomly to be killed. After a week Minna was finally too exhausted to continue walking and stayed behind. The guard who was supposed to kill her fired the bullet over her head and left her for dead in the snow. She was rescued and brought to a house, where she was given food and a place to sleep. She was discovered by a German police officer, who was about to shoot her along with other Jewish fugitives. Minna was saved by her Viennese accent, which convinced him that she was a gentile woman.
    Abstract: She was taken to a mobile army hospital and treated for her frozen feet. In March 1945 Minna was liberated in Lauenburg, Prussia, where she was sent by German hospitals as an unidentified Jewish patient.
    Description / Table of Contents: Also included is Nini Ungar's questionnaire with the Austrian Heritage Collection, AHC 1536.
    Note: German , Synopsis in file
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  • 2
    Media Combination
    Media Combination
    [Place of publication not identified] :[publisher not identified],
    Language: English
    Pages: 30 + 29 + 46 + 30 pages : , annotated typescript.
    Year of publication: 1966
    Keywords: Antisemitism. ; Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) ; Jews Persecution 1933-1945. ; Jews History 1933-1945. ; Jews Legal status, laws, etc. ; Germany. ; Germany Politics and government 1933-1945. ; Manuscripts.
    Abstract: Draft for a 1966 doctoral thesis at the University of Minnesota on the origins of the ‘Final Solution’ to the Jewish question.
    Note: Available on microfilm , English
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  • 3
    Media Combination
    Media Combination
    [Place of publication not identified] :[publisher not identified],
    Language: German
    Pages: 15 , typescript.
    Year of publication: 1966
    Keywords: Oppenheim, Moritz Daniel, ; Jewish painters ; Jews History 19th century. ; Jews Social life and customs. ; Judaism Customs and practices. ; Hanau (Germany) ; Frankfurt am Main (Germany) ; Manuscripts.
    Abstract: Transcript of a lecture on the life and work of painter Moritz Daniel Oppenheim, which includes discussion of his childhood in a traditional Jewish family; early education at a Talmud Torah school and later at Gymnasium; art education at the Staatliche Zeichenakademie Hanau under Conrad Westermayr and the Akademie der Bildenden Künste München; studies in Paris and Rome; and success as a painter and portraitist in Frankfurt.
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  • 4
    Media Combination
    Media Combination
    [Place of publication not identified] :[publisher not identified],
    Language: English
    Pages: 19 pages (single space) : , typescript.
    Year of publication: 1965
    Keywords: Grätz, Anna Margarete. ; Maier, Hans, ; Maier, Hermann. ; Maier, Max Hermann, ; Arbeiterwohlfahrt Bundesverband (Germany) ; Deutsche Demokratische Partei. ; Sozialdemokratische Partei Deutschlands. ; Education, Higher 1871-1918. ; Jews Persecution 1933-1945. ; Lawyers. ; Political persecution ; Politicians. ; Social workers. ; Frankfurt am Main (Germany) ; Germay History 1871-1918. ; Germay History 1918-1933. ; Autobiographies ; Biographical sources ; Memoirs
    Abstract: Biography of Hans Maier, written by Walter Friedlander in 1965, inculding an introduction by Lotte Lemke, a foreword with information on the visit of Hans Maier's grandchildren in Germany, a bibliography of Maier's publications, and the memoir itself describing Hans Maier's childhood and schooling, his studies of law and economics at the universities of Freiburg, Munich, Berlin, Marburg and Tuebingen, his marriage, his involvement in the "Freisinnige Partei," the "Deutsche Demokratische Partei" and from 1923 on in the Social Democratic Party, his teaching position at the Frankfurt Women's Seminar for Social Work, his appointment at the German Association for Public and Private Social Welfare in 1919, and as "Ministerialrat" at the Saxonian Department of the Interior in Dresden in 1923, his work for the "Arbeiterwohlfahrt," his dismissal in 1933, and his suicide in 1937.
    Note: This is a translation of an article published in "Neues Beginnen", # 4 (April, 1964) pp. 49-53. , Available on microfilm , English
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