--089e0141a93c87c963051d1e7044
My family also came from Storozhinetz but before 1900.
Their last name was Merksamer.
I can not get any records or info about their lives there.
I only have their immigration records which showed passage on a ship from
Hamburg where they listed Storozhinetz as their home. Other records show
Czernowitz. Maybe they owned a condo there and lived there only during
summer months.
Lloyd
On Aug 11, 2015 8:51 PM, "alexander rosner" <alexanderrosner_at_yahoo.de>
wrote:
> On June 13 there have been several trains full with deported people from
> Czernowitz and also from other towns in Bukowina.
> My grandparents were deported from Storozhinetz.
> They all have been sent to different places in Siberia and elswhere, not
> all to the Komi Autonomous Republic.
> My grandparents were slated for the area of Komsomolsk on the Amur, which
> they never reached, as they have been dropped in Kazakhstan.
> Others were deported to the Vasiugan region in west Siberia or Tomsk,
> others to Vorkuta. Probably there have been other regions as well, where
> deportees from Bukovina ended.
>
> By the way, neither Komi nor Vorkuta are located in Siberia, both being
i=
n
> the European part of Russia.
>
> Alex
>
>
> ----- Urspr=C3=BCngliche Message -----
> > Von: M.Goldberger <marina778_at_bezeqint.net>
> > An: 'Czernowitz Genealogy and History' <czernowitz-l_at_list.cornell.edu>
> > CC:
> > Gesendet: 21:32 Sonntag, 9.August 2015
> > Betreff: [Cz-L] Siberia
> >
> > Dyuri...
> >
> > Deportations to Siberia began in the first weeks after the Soviet
> occupation in
> > 1940, at that time political activists, Zionists etc were detained.
Eac=
h
> group
> > was sent to a different place in Siberia.
> > There is little information about what happened on June 13,1941.
> According to
> > Yad Vashem, 10,000 Jews were deported during this night to Siberia by
> the NKVD
> > forces. Those were the Jews who had number 39 (meaning "bourgeois")
> > written in their ID card when they changed their Romanian ID card to
> Soviet one.
> > Few survived the winter of 1941-42. Recently I have found that they
wer=
e
> > deported on this day to labor camps in Siberia, situated in the "Komi
> > Republic".
> >
>
https://www.google.co.il/maps/place/Komi+Republic,+Russia/_at_63.8094889,55.=
828489,5z/data=3D!3m1!4b1!4m2!3m1!1s0x4475b8cd9d17ae4b:0x102a3a583f194c0
> >
> > Regards,
> >
> > Marc
> >
> > Subject: [Cz-L] Siberia
> > From: Jorge Gubitsch <dyurigub_at_gmail.com>
> > Date: Sat, 8 Aug 2015 13:40:23 +0200
> > X-Message-Number: 9
> >
> > Why is there almost no information about the life of Czernowitzers
> > during their Siberian deportation?
> >
> > Dyuri
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
--
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. As a result,
Messages sent to the list are available to the general public within days
of posting.
Please post in "Plain Text" (help available at:
<http://www.jewishgen.org/InfoFiles/PlainText.html>).
To remove your address from this e-list follow the directions at:
<http://www.it.cornell.edu/services/elist/howto/user/leave.cfm>
To receive assistance for this e-list send an e-mail message to:
<owner-Czernowitz-L_at_list.cornell.edu>
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
--
Received on 2015-08-12 07:57:37