Re: [Cz-L] Fw: 1st November 2010

From: Miriam Taylor <mirtaylo_at_indiana.edu>
Date: Tue, 02 Nov 2010 09:13:38 -0400
To: Berti <berti_at_netvision.net.il>, frieda tabak <frieda_tabak_at_yahoo.com>
Reply-to: Miriam Taylor <mirtaylo_at_indiana.edu>

I hope that the two of you, Berti and Frieda, knew each other in your
childhood and youth. Very recently Silviu Landman and I discovered that we
probably knew each other, when we were 4 and 5 years old respectively.

Being part of this Email list, really brings back all the memories of
childhood.

Mimi

On 11/2/10 7:40 AM, "Dov Glaubach" <berti_at_netvision.net.il> wrote:

>
> Hello Frieda,
> So it means that may be some time we lived across the
> street.
> I stayed on Stefaniegasse 2a (vis a vis your No 5) from 1932 to
> 1937 and on No 2 from 1937 to 1939.
> Later again on No 2 during the first half of the Ghetto in October 1941,
> and afterwards from October 1942 to March 1944.
>
> Do your times match any of these?
>
> Berti
>
>
>
>
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: frieda tabak <frieda_tabak_at_yahoo.com>
> Date: Tuesday, November 2, 2010 3:34
> Subject: Re: [Cz-L] Fw: 1st November 2010
> To: Czernowitz-L_at_cornell.edu, Lucca <lucca99_at_netvision.net.il>
>
>> Dearest Lucca
>>
>> Even though I was not born in Czernowitz, I consider myself a
>> Czernowitzer, and your blog brought back such both sweet and
>> painful memories.
>>
>> I was born in Lipcani, Bessarabia. My mother, however, considered
>> herself a Czernowitzer (even though she was born in Roznov,
>> Galizia) who "married down" to Bessarabia. We, therefore, spent
>> much time with my uncle, Dr Salo Koffler, in Czernowits, where,
>> before the war, my mother had her favorite dressmaker as well as
>> her favorite children's dressmaker where most of my dresses were
>> made. All important shopping was done in Czernowitz.
>>
>> In 1940 we were "liberated" by Soviets from the increasing
>> antisemitic Roumanian regime. It took just a few weeks before our
>> "liberators" "freed" us of all our possessions. My parents, they
>> said, were capitalists. They confiscated our house and everything
>> within it and we fled to Czernowitz where my uncle allowed us a
>> room in his apartment at Stefaniegasse #5.
>>
>> We were among the very fortunate to have escaped Transnistria and
>> so I consider Czernowitz my home. I have been wanting to go back,
>> yet, every time I am about ready to go, something is holding me
>> back. Your blog ha rekidled that yearning. Thanks.
>>
>> Frieda Weinschenker Tabak
>>
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Received on 2010-11-02 08:25:18

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