Jews like all Romanian citizens did serve in the army.
During WW2 ,it made absolutely no difference.
I know only of one Jewish person in Czernowitz,
Who during the war was treated well and had greater privileges
And that was because he had previously been an elected delegate
to the Romanian parliament.
Mimi
Sent from my iPad
On Jul 6, 2015, at 6:41 PM, "Lloyd Marksamer" <longislanderl_at_aol.com> wrote:
> Very interesting story.
> He was saved by his paperwork.
> I do have a question....
> Did Jews serve in the Romanian military between 1918 and 1945?
> What was the status and outcome for those Jews in the military during WWII?
>
> Lloyd
>
>> On Jul 6, 2015, at 3:38 PM, Mark Wiznitzer <markwiznitzer_at_gmail.com> wrote:
>>
>>
>>
>> My father was born in Washkoutz, Bukovina in 1910, which was
>> then Austro-Hungary. When he left in the mid 1920s it was Romania, but
>> because he did not perform military service, he was later unable to get a
>> passport and became stateless. He was able to travel however on a
>> LaIssaz-Passer issued in Cura=C3=A7ao, which essentially indicated he had a=
>> home
>> there to return to. When he was stuck in Japan during WWII, he was treated
>> as a "friendly" nation because of his birth in Romania, an Axis country,
>> rather than as a Dutch resident. The Japanese wanted to trade my mother
>> for four Japanese in Colombia, as she had a Colombian passport, acquired
>> through her father's naturalization there. But she chose to remain with my
>> father in Kobe. My father's status helped them to avoid internment and
>> suffering. Then In the early 1950's, my father's Romanian origin again
>> served him as the Romanian visa quota to the U.S. was undersubscribed.
>> However, he returned to Cura=C3=A7ao after briefly immigrating and shortly
>> thereafter acquired Panamanian citizenship and a Panamanian passport.
> [Mark Wiznitzer]
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Received on 2015-07-07 19:15:53