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Black silk taffeta bodice with handmade lace brought to the US by a Jewish family fleeing German occupied Poland

Object | Accession Number: 2009.376.4

Black silk taffeta bodice with handmade floral lace and embroidered appliques detached from a ball gown that Nadzieja Klein took with her when she, her husband, Jerzy, 3 year old daughter, Joanna, and her aunt, Elizawieta Palcew, escaped Warsaw, Poland, after living under German occupation since September 1939. Jerzy had applied for US visas in 1936 following Hitler’s remilitarization of the Rhineland, but was unsuccessful because of restrictive US entry quotas. Jerzy acquired false travel papers for roundtrip travel to Peru via Italy. The family traveled by train to Trieste where they obtained transit permits through Yugoslavia and Greece to Turkey. Up to this point, they had been accompanied by Nadzieja’s brother, wife, and child. But in Istanbul, Nadzieja’s family obtained US visas, valid for 3 months; her brother’s family had not applied previously and continued onto Palestine. Jerzy Klein's family and Elizawieta Palcew were evacuated by the British by train to Baghdad, and then Basra, in Iraq. From there, they sailed to Karachi and Bombay (Mumbai), India, where, in January 1941, they boarded an American cruise liner, the USS President Harrison, and arrived in New York on February 17.

Date
emigration:  1940 April 20-1941 February 17
Geography
received: Warsaw (Poland)
Classification
Clothing and Dress
Category
Women's clothing
Object Type
Bodices (lcsh)
Credit Line
United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Collection, Gift of Joan Kent Finkelstein
 
Record last modified: 2023-03-02 14:17:04
This page: https://collections.ushmm.org/search/catalog/irn41391