Dear Diana
Thank you very much for sharing your memory of your family. It was very moving to read it and to see the photograph. Your report reminded me strongly of my family.
My mother’s family (Gottesmann) were also railroad employees. Luckily my mother was already in Bucharest by 1941 and was able to help her parents survive for some years in the Czernowitz Ghetto. It was extremely fortunate that my grandparents were not deported (although my uncle was deported and survived – but that is another story). Their survival was only possible due to the food and help my mother was able to send them with the assistance of a Mrs. Schen, then smuggled into the Ghetto by my grandmother’s trusted long term Ukrainian maid who had worked for her since about 1917. Many other relatives were deported to Transnistria, never to be heard of again. My grandfather died in the ghetto but my grandmother, known as Omi, survived and managed to make her way to Bucharest and eventually to freedom with us.
With very best wishes to you and your family wherever they may be.
Karin Perrin (nee Hellmann), London
From: bounce-125952865-87608252_at_list.cornell.edu <bounce-125952865-87608252_at_list.cornell.edu> On Behalf Of diana shulman
Sent: 28 September 2021 18:35
To: Czernowitz-L_at_cornell.edu
Subject: [czernowitz-l] 80th anniversary of the deportation from Czernowitz to Transnistria
Dear Group,
I want to thank the members of the group for all the information and all the priceless content published in the group.
Thanks to Bruce and Edgar Hauster I found and contacted Czernowitz GeneaSearch and asked for some records of my family.
Thanks to the group I came to learn from Arthur Rindner about the memorial service marking the 80th anniversary of the deportation of Bukovina Jews that will be held in Kiryat Shaul – a kilometer and a half from my home…
I would like to share with you some thoughts about the 80th anniversary of the deportation from Czernowitz to Transnistria.
According to the Jewish calendar today is the date of the first transport.
Simchat Torah 5752, 1941. Eighty years ago.
My mother and her family: her parents, sister and grandmother are deported on a cattle train from Czernowitz to Transnistria. The first transport that left Czernowitz. They know it will not be good, but do not know how bad it will be.
They waited in the train station all Simchat Tora day, and at night the train begins to move.
The train reached Mărculești and from there, a month of a death march - in rain and snow, hungry and thirsty, running out of strength, they reached the Ghetto of Verkhivka.
Within two months my mother and sister are orphaned. My mother becomes the head of the family. Responsible for hers and her sister's lives.
They survived two and a half years in the hell of Transnistria.
The attached photo is pre-war.
1935. The family gathers for a festive photo at the eve of the separation from the eldest son who immigrates to Israel.
Standing in the top row - my grandfather Pinkas Schärf, my uncle - Yoel Aloni, hugging my mother's younger sister - Yona Malleyron, next to him my grandmother - Diana (Esther Dina) Schärf.
Seated below: My mother, Bella Schulman, hugging her beloved grandmother Bunia (Bertha) Horowitz nee Koren, next to them: her second grandmother Malka Schärf.
At that time, my grandfather is a senior worker in the Czernowitz train company, and is also a Zionist activist i. My grandmother volonteers as secretary of WIZO in Czernowitz. Grandma Bunya owns a very large estate in Schypynzi, - a village close to Czernowitz.
may they rest in peace.
In Hebrew we add: Land do not cover their blood.
ארץ אל תכסי דמם.
Diana
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This moderated discussion group is for information exchange on the subject of
Czernowitz and Sadagora Jewish History and Genealogy. The opinions expressed
in these posts are the opinions of the original poster only and not necessarily
the opinions of the List Owner, the Webmaster or any other members
or entities connected with this mailing list. The Czernowitz-L list has
an associated web site at
http://czernowitz.ehpes.com that includes a
searchable archive of all messages posted to this list. Beginning in 2021,
archived messages can be found at:
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Received on 2021-09-29 22:40:35