[Cz-L] Re: Heim ins Reich / Back to the Reich Resettlement from Bukovina

From: Berti Glaubach <berti.glaubach_at_gmail.com_at_nowhere.org>
Date: Thu, 29 Dec 2016 09:51:01 +0200
To: Edgar Hauster <bconcept_at_hotmail.com>
Reply-To: Berti Glaubach <berti.glaubach_at_gmail.com>


Hi Edgar,

In primary school I had 2 colleagues who were Germans, Heinrich Kos
and Karl Erich Maria Hoffman.. They both left with their parents to
Germany in 1940. Some 10 years ago I started to look for old class
mates publishing their names and was contacted by a probably third
generation Kos who still lived in Cz.
It might well be that his family was mixed. Ukrainian German.
Still enjoying your work inclusive telephone lists finding for a
friend of my wife their grandparents on them.
One in Cz. and one in Suceava.

Ein gutes neues Jahr noch wünsche euch,
Berti.


On Wed, Dec 28, 2016 at 7:49 PM, Edgar Hauster <bconcept_at_hotmail.com> wrote:
> Czernowitzers...
>
> Following the Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact and the occuptaion of Northern Bukovina in June 1940, about 187,000 Bukovinians of German origin left Northern Bukovina during the so called "Heim ins Reich / Back to the Reich Resettlement" between September - December 1940. Among them was the Czernowitzer author Georg Drozdowski (1899-1987), like Gregor von Rezzori, a typical inhabitant of the imaginary land called "Maghrebinia", a bit bon vivant, a bit bohemian, a bit hedonist.
>
> A new German book by Günther F. Guggenberger "Georg Drozdowski in literarischen Feldern zwischen Czernowitz und Berlin (1920–1945)" is focussed on Georg Drozdowski's oeuvre and biography. Dr. Mariana Hausleitner, the historian and author of "The Romanization of Bukovina" and many other works, published a review on Günther F. Guggenberger's above mentioned book:
>
> https://goo.gl/Ozf2kH
>
> Both, Mariana's and my question is as follows: Is anybody out there, who is aware of Bukovinian Jews, who took the opportunity of the "Heim ins Reich / Back to the Reich Resettlement" to escape, hidden among the Bukovinians of German origin, from the Soviet occupation and the following deportations to Siberia? There are reports on some, of course, just very few of such cases, but unfortunately there is no evidence on their fate after WWII. Does that event ring a bell? Please let us know and thank you all in advance!
>
> Edgar Hauster
>

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Received on 2016-12-29 00:15:50

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