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8 - Wartime rumors and postwar revelations

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 June 2012

Rebecca Boehling
Affiliation:
University of Maryland, Baltimore County
Uta Larkey
Affiliation:
Goucher College, Baltimore
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Summary

Strewn across continents themselves, Marianne, Kurt and Lotti received in early November 1942 their mother and their aunt's last Red Cross message, dated 27 May 1942. In late November Kurt relayed a “sad message” to Marianne from the brother-in-law of their cousin Ernst Roer:

Richard Rothschild at Tel Aviv got a Red Cross message from [his wife's brother] Ernst Roer, then in Essen … that they were leaving for the “Reich Aged Ghetto” at Theresienstadt “where the Cologne aunts had gone already beforehand.” That is all we know. Of course among the “Cologne aunts” we certainly must count our dear mother… I think you spare me [sic] to tell you my thoughts and feelings, particularly in connection with the awful general news about the European Jewry which are [sic] in the papers just now.

Kurt and Lotti sent inquiries about their mother's fate to the office of the Prague Jewish Community (Jüdische Kultusgemeinde) at the end of 1942 and encouraged Marianne to do the same. Even if the Prague Jewish Community had had information about their loved ones' internment in the former garrison town of Theresienstadt (Terezín), their office would not have been able to readily send news to countries at war with Germany, given the ongoing internment and deportations of its community members. Nevertheless, Hans and Lotti inquired in Red Cross messages there and even at the Vatican about their loved ones' fate.

Type
Chapter
Information
Life and Loss in the Shadow of the Holocaust
A Jewish Family's Untold Story
, pp. 217 - 237
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2011

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