Klein, Kurt, 1920-
Gerda Weissmann was born to Julius and Helene (Mueckenbrunn) Weissmann in Bielsko, Poland on May 28, 1924. She had one sibling, an older brother named Arthur (b. 1919). Prior to the German invasion of Poland, Gerda Weissmann attended Notre Dame Gymnasium in Bielsko. The German army entered Bielsko on September 3, 1939 and Arthur Weissmann was deported soon thereafter. The family received a few letters from him, but the correspondence soon stopped and Arthur was presumed murdered. The Weissmann family was then forced to move into their basement so the Aryan family who had been living there could live in the house. They were subsequently confined in the Bielsko ghetto, where both Julius and Helene Weissmann were killed prior to the ghetto's liquidation in 1942.
When the ghetto was liquidated, Gerda Weissmann was sent to a textile mill in Bolkenhain, Silesia. She was later confined in slave labor camps in Marzdorf, Landshut, and Gruenberg. When the camps were liquidated at the end of the war, Weissmann became part of a 350-mile death march. She and the march's other 120 survivors were liberated on May 7, 1945 in Volary, Czechoslovakia by a group of American soldiers including Kurt Klein (1920-2002). Klein, a German Jew from Waldorf, had been sent to the United States with his siblings (Max and Gerdi Klein) in 1937 when their parents (Ludwig and Alice Klein) felt that they were no longer safe in Germany. The Klein home was vandalized during Kristallnact and Kurt Klein's parents were deported to Eastern Europe. They were eventually killed in Auschwitz. Kurt Klein and Gerda Weissmann married in Paris on June 18, 1946.
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2016-08-15 01:08:17 am |
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