If you wish to respond to a SEARCH, or if you would like to submit your own SEARCH, please send an e-mail with the relevant information to:  allgenerations@aol.com

att: serena woolrich, president, allgenerations

From Rosine De Dijn, an author (recent book, “Serpa Pinto”), in Bergisch Gladbach, Germany:

A friend of mine, a Survivor in Belgium, asked me to look into her family background. She was a baby in Belgium during the war and had been abandoned (she was left in her crib). My friend was adopted by a Belgium couple and grew up in this family. Her mother, Charlotte Enderlein, with two of her older children, fled to France (?) and never came back. Please see the two photographs which I have included below.

Is it possible that somebody knows this woman?

Charlotte Enderlein

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From Rose Berl, a 2g in Amsterdam, the Netherlands:

My aunt, Hilda Berl (maiden name) and her husband, Kurt Hirsh, were from the Czech Republic.

She lived in Krnov in Silesia and later in Prague. I believe that my Uncle Kurt (through marriage) also lived in Prague before being transported. They married in Terezin.

My aunt was murdered in Auschwitz and my Uncle Kurt died or was murdered in Dachau on January 24, 1945, I believe.

I have not been able to find out if any of my uncle`s family survived.

Further, I am looking for any relatives who were on the Kindertransport of Mr. Nicholas Winton. How can I find out if this is possible to do?

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Perl Farkasova (Freymowitz) was approximately 10 years old at the onset of WWII. She lived with her parents, Abraham and Kreindla, in Belovarec (near Khust), Czechoslovakia. She had 5 older sisters and 2 brothers (there are two pictures of Perl and her family).

It is believed that she may have survived, perhaps having been taken out of the Khust ghetto and

possibly adopted. She may still be living today under another identity.

Evelyne Haendel

Director, Family Tracing Services

Hidden Child Foundation/ADL

605 Third Avenue

New York, NY 10158-3560

212-885-7900

fax: 212-885-5869

hiddc@adl.org

**********************************

My father was Fenyves Gyula; he was born (July 1915) and raised in Budapest. He attended Piarista. He was a munkaszolgalatos and was also sent on the road to Russia. My mother was Antal Jutka (Csuti) before she married my father.She was also born in Budapest (September 1925). She had a sister, Antal Lili (b. 1923 approximately), who emigrated to Israel around 1948. Does anyone know my family, or by some miracle is related to us?

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From Betty Weiss, nee Fleischman, a 2g in Skokie, Illinois:

My mother, Sara Fleichmanova, z”l, nee Schulcz, survived both Auschwitz and Allendorf (she had been in a Hungarian transport). She had a brother, Jozsi Schulz, who lived in Budapest on Mazsa utca 10, Budapest X kerulet. He was married to Magda Fogel and they had a son named Laci Schulz, born April 1943 in Budapest. Before they were transported to Auschwitz, a nurse named Hilda Schulz (a cousin) made arrangements in Budapest with an opera singer for Laci’s safety. We know Laci was saved by an unknown woman, and possiblely was taken to Israel or the US under false papers, a different name, etc. – we do not know. The nurse passed away just last year and told the story to my brother in Galanta (Slovakia). (My mother, z”l was from Galanta and I was born there in 1957). My husband is from Bratislava, but lived in Galanta).

Since we escaped the Communists and immigrated to the US in 1981, I have been searching, but no luck – only dead ends. There are no records of a “Laci Schulcz.” but he might be also under the name, “Laci Fogel.”

Any one with any information, please contact me.

THE NETHERLANDS

From Esther Posner, a Survivor in Southfield, Michigan:

In Amsterdam in 1941-1943, my name was Marianne Rose and I lived in Amsterdam zuid, on the Scheldestraat.

I walked to kindergarten every day, about 3 short blocks from our apartment, and on the way picked up my friend, Suzanna. As I think about it, her last name may have been Eisner. She was a beautiful girl.

Her mother was an actress in Germany and I believe her name was Camila Shpero. There was also a brother.

I remember spending Yom Kippur with Suzanna in her play room while my parents attended synagogue. She had beautiful toys to play with.

One day Suzanna and I did not feel like going to school, and so when I picked her up to go back for the afternoon session, we decided to play hookey. We were 4 or 5 years old and roamed the streets of occupied Amsterdam with German soldiers everywhere.

When we saw a ring in a store window, we ran home to ask our parents to buy it for us. It was an hour before school let out and my mother was terribly upset by what we had done. It was so dangerous.

After the war I never heard anything of the family.

Can anyone tell me any information about Suzanna or her family?

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From Roxanne Dennis:

Below are as much details as I have:

Surname: Dudinskas or Dudinskaite

Given Name: Reiza

Prisoner Number: ?

Nationality: Lithuanian

Date of Birth: 18 September 1918

I am trying to find information about my great grandmother.

My family does not have much information about her, and what we do have leaves a lot of our past

shrouded in mystery.

I would love to be able to get into contact with any of our family members or their surviving relatives.

If you would be able to help in any way possible I would greatly appreciate it!

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From Deborah Ross, a 2g in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada:

If anyone knows the fate of my grandmother, Devora Baltupski Ramm, or my uncle, Israel Ramm (her son)

or my grandfather, Chaim Ramm from Vilna, Lithuania, I would LOVE to know.

My mother’s name was Nechama Baltupski Ramm and she was married (before she married my father) to

Yonia Fain, also from Vilna.

Would love to be connected with others from Vilna or anyone with either of those last names.

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From Ayelet Rubinstein, a 3g in Modi”in, Israel:

I am looking for my grandfather’s niece, Nina Bella Goltz (maiden name), born 5-4-1942 and her mother, Lea Goltz from the town of Kaunas, Lithuania.

My grandfather, Chaim Tzemach (Cemac/Semah/Zemach), now living in Israel, was born in Skidel, which is a town in Belarus today and was in Poland before World War II.

Lea Goltz also had a relative named Moshe Selz who lived in Skidel. Lea Goltz lost her first husband, Yitzak Tzemach, in 1941 when he was killed in front of her in the Vilnius ghetto. She was pregnant at the time.

After the war in Germany she married Mr. Goltz who adopted Nina-Bella. They emigrated from Germany

to New York in 1949. They initially resided in Manhattan and then in Brooklyn (1949).

My grandfather received a few letters from them from New York City in the early 1950′ s but then the

connection “disconnected.”

I would be thankful if you can help me with my searching.

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From Hannah Berliner Fischthal, a 2g in Jamaica, New York:

I am writing on behalf of my friend, Abe Rosenbaum, a Holocaust Survivor from Szydlowiec, Poland.

He survived Auschwitz by posing as a Polish political prisoner instead of a Jew.

In November or December 1944, a shipment of prisoners from Theresienstadt arrived at Auschwitz.

Abe witnessed five of them being led to freedom by a double agent kapo, who provided them with

uniforms to escape.

He would like to know if any of these five men survived. Does anybody know anything about these men?

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From Felicia Graber, a Survivor in St. Louis, Missouri:

My grandparents, Leib Israel and Sarah Lederberger; my parents, Shlomo and Tosia Fallmann -Lederberger,

and my maternal grandparents were Simcha and Fanny Blonder-Fallmann, were all from Tarnow, Poland.

I also had a great uncle, Jehuda Fallmann, an aunt Adele Fallmann and another aunt, Rachel Lederberger-Fresh.

also from Tarnow, except Rachel, who married Jacob Kresh and moved to Nowy Sancz.

If anyone knew them or heard of them, I would love to hear from you.

There is also some connection to the Feigenbaum family from Tarnow, but I do not know how.

My parents retained their Aryan papers’ names, Andrzeij and Sophia Bialecki after the war – long story why.

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Submitted on behalf of “Anna:”

Anna is still looking for Nusia Richter (Rechter), her half sister, born in 1937 in Chrzanow, Poland.

No information of Nusia’s death has been found, and there are reasons to believe she may have

survived by being taken in by a Polish family.

She could still be living somewhere under an assumed identity.

Her mother was in Plaszow and her father died soon after the war. Her parents were married in Krakow.

Some pictures may be available.

Evelyne Haendel

Director, Family Tracing Services

Hidden Child Foundation/ADL

605 Third Avenue

New York, NY 10158-3560

212-885-7900

fax: 212-885-5869

personal e-mail: evelyne.haendel@skynet.be

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From Elaine Landes, a 2g in Newton, Massachusetts:

I am looking for information on my mother’s family. My mother, Sala Kopel, was from Kielce, Poland

(the family name was Kopel). Her mother’s name was Eva.

According to most documents I have, she was born in 1915, although some say 1913.

My mother was the only one of her family to survive – she had 4 brothers/sisters (names unknown).

I would like to ask if anyone out there came from Kielce, Poland and might have known

our family or would have any information about them.

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From Pauline Rockman, a 2g in Melbourne, Australia:

This is a bit of a long shot, but perhaps someone knew my late grandfather, Akiva Frankel.

He would often tell me about his close friend (and first cousin), Akiva Weintraub, as they grew up

in Poland together – it could have been Lodz Bolimow or Lowicz.

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From Deanna Jonas Tachner, a 2g in Birmingham, Michigan:

I would like to ask if anyone from Nagyvarad (was Nagyvarad, Hungary; now Oradea, Romania), perhaps knew a Boobie Ungar?

He was a boy of 17 and had joined the Partisans and afterwards he worked in the Ministry of Health.

Many of my Jonas, Hoffman, Berkovits and Ungar relatives lived in Nagyvarad.

I just returned from there trying to get some records with no success.

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From Abraham Philip Leder, a Survivor in Baltimore, Maryland:

My parents, Schloma and Tobi Leder, escaped Poland, went to Russia and wound up in Kazakhstan.

I was born in 1943 in Kazakhstan, but I do not know the name of the town, village or city.

I have contacted the Kazakhstan embassy in Washington, but they cannot help

me. Does anyone out there have any suggestions?

I am also looking for people who may have known my parents and anyone who was born in

Kazakhstan around the same time as I was.

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From Betty Shiel, a Survivor in London, UK:

On behalf of 2 Survivors living in the shtetl of Chashniki, Vitebsk, Belarus, I am looking for

two brothers, Abel and Gessel (or Hessel) Ressin (sp?) who immigrated to the USA from Vitebsk, Belarus about 1914.

Their father’s name was Girsh. One of the brothers had a daughter, named Pesia (or Polina).