Re: [Cz-L] Daily life in Czernowitz

From: Paul Heger <pheger_at_gmail.com>
Date: Mon, 04 Oct 2010 07:44:57 +0100
To: Miriam Taylor <mirtaylo_at_indiana.edu>
Reply-to: Paul Heger <pheger_at_gmail.com>

In our family we called the Steppdecken ¨Kolderes."
The Sobotnikes kept Sabbath their rest day, not Sunday
There werer also Lipovener, the men had beards like the Jews and in
der Luttinger Schil off the Austriaplatz a sory was told thqt once a
Lipovener was called in to be the "Zehnter" the tenth person to
complete the Minjan and only after finishing the prayer they got aware
the truth. I cqnnot guarantee that it is true, but I davened there
often before going to the L3 Gymnasium
and the rumor subsisted
Paul/Pessach Heger
On Sun, Oct 3, 2010 at 4:30 PM, Miriam Taylor <mirtaylo_at_indiana.edu> wrote:
> This morning, as soon as I woke up, I wanted to open the windows, but it was
> quite cold outside and I debated with myself whether to open them or not.
> Then I remembered our Czernowitz compulsion about "Frische Luft". Czernowitz
> winters were quite cold and most if not all homes were heated by means of
> Kachelofen"  (tiled ovens in which we burned wood). By morning the oven,
> which had been stocked with wood, shortly before we went to sleep, was quite
> cold. No matter how cold it was outside, my mother would open all the
> windows, shake out the pillows and the "Steppdecken" (quilted covers), or
> "Uberbett" (down comforters) and put them on the window sill to "luften"
> (air out). Even at the end of November 1944 when I was sick with measles and
> had a high temperature, my mother covered me very well and the windows were
> opened as usual.
>
> The next ritual, was to sweep and dust the whole apartment and then, on all
> reasonably warm days, usually around 8 o'clock my mother would go to the
> market, which was on the Austria Platz. There she would buy vegetables,
> fruit, butter and cheese, from the peasant women who had come from the
> villages. I think that each housewife had her favorite supplier and I
> remember my mother engaging in friendly conversation with the woman from
> whom she bought the butter, wrapped in a large rhubarb leaf. It was the best
> butter, creamy yellow and smelling of red flowered clover. During the war,
> Jews were not allowed to be on the streets before 10 o'clock and therefore
> there was no point going to the market, because by 10 o'clock all provisions
> would be sold. The peasant woman, from whom my mother usually bought butter
> and cheese, even though prohibited by law from doing so, brought the butter
> and the cheese, hidden inside her short fur jacket, to us. She belonged to
> the sect of "Sabotniki" and was very upset at the fate of the Jews.
>
> By the way, does anyone know whether this sect was a large percentage of the
> population? Also, in which villages, most of them lived?
>
> I think it would be interesting if those of us who remember daily life in
> Czernowitz as it was, or as it was described to them by their parents and
> grandparents, would write about it to the list.
>
> Shavua Tov,
>
> Mimi
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Received on 2010-10-04 05:25:30

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