RE: [Cz-L] Regiment 15

From: cornel fleming <cornel.fleming_at_virgin.net>
Date: Wed, 13 Jun 2012 22:17:22 +0100
To: 'Jim Wald' <jwald_at_hampshire.edu>, 'Irene Fishler' <irenef_at_netvision.net.il>
Reply-to: cornel fleming <cornel.fleming_at_virgin.net>

No,Jim! Not classic K&K mentality.....classic bureaucrat mentality! I
know,for just 1 example,a US unit in France was running out of ammo and the
junior officer who went to get some was refused on the grounds of missing
official requisitions..at which point he pointed a rifle at the supply
sargeant and told him he had a choice! He got his ammo! Cornel

-----Original Message-----
From: bounce-61060159-8441035_at_list.cornell.edu
[mailto:bounce-61060159-8441035_at_list.cornell.edu] On Behalf Of Jim Wald
Sent: 13 June 2012 07:09
To: Irene Fishler
Cc: 'Czernowitz-L_at_cornell.edu'
Subject: Re: [Cz-L] Regiment 15

Thanks, Irene.

Glad to know that I was not straying too far.

I went back to my father's recollections:

They actually left very early, soon after the war broke out in 1914, not
later, at the time of the famous Brusilov offensive. The exodus in this
case seems to have been more or less planned, for there was talk of
meeting up with his father's supervisor when they got to Hungary. The
refugees were allowed to take only one suitcase and traveled in boxcars.
(that nowadays has a much more sinister ring, of course; the more so,
as, after the War, when they returned home in 1919, they were briefly
interned in Auschwitz) . They went first to Sárospatak, arriving on Rosh
Hashanah (where they met with a very hostile reception from the
ultra-orthodox). Later, as the front advanced, they were evacuated to
Moravia. This part of the memoir always sticks in my mind because, as
the story has it, my grandfather was appointed Kommandant of the train,
but the paperwork erroneously listed my father instead. At one stop,
when my grandfather tried to obtain some food for the transport, the
stationmaster wanted the authorization of the Kommandant--as listed on
the paperwork. So, after long arguments, they finally had to go and wake
my father, a little boy, in order to resolve the issue.

Classic KuK mentality.

I have no direct information from other relatives. Those still or
recently alive were not around at the time and do not seem to have left
any information on the experience of the older generation in this situation.

I will be glad to search Jewish Chronicle (I can get access to it in
microform at the nearby University). Anything in German, which I can
read, is very welcome.

Jim

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Received on 2012-06-13 23:44:06

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