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Theodora Basch Vrančić Klayman photographs

Document | Digitized | Accession Number: 2002.432.1

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    Theodora Basch Vrančić Klayman photographs
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    Overview

    Description
    The Theodora Basch Vrančić Klayman photographs consist of photographs of the Apler family, the Deutsch family, and the Basch families in Yugslavia, dating from 1924-1959. The photographs include candid and group photographs of various family members as well as Jewish children in hiding.
    Date
    inclusive:  1924-1959
    Credit Line
    United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Collection, Gift of Theodora Klayman
    Collection Creator
    Theodora Basch Vrančić Klayman
    Biography
    Teodora (Dorica) Rachela Basch (later Theodora Basch Vrančić Klayman, b. 1938) was born in Zagreb, Yugoslavia (now Croatia), to Silva (nee Deutsch, 1912-1942) and Salamon (Shlomo, 1907-1945) Basch. Silva was born to Josef Leopold (1871-1942) and Katarina (1872-1942) Deutsch, and had three siblings: Giza (1895-1943), Blanka (1905-1942), and Erne (1910-?). Salamon’s parents, Jakob (1879-1932) and Charlotta (1875-1942), immigrated to Zagreb from Bosnia. Salamon had several siblings, including Lina, Josef (1910-?), Arnold (1913-1945), and Bernard (Dov, 1915-?). Silva’s father was a rabbi for the town of Ludbreg. During the holidays, he hosted Salamon, who was working as a traveling cantor.

    Silva and Salamon married in 1936, and settled in Zagreb. They lived in an apartment near Salamon’s brush-making workshop, which employed about a dozen people. Silva had been an elementary school teacher, but she became a stay-at-home mother to raise Dorica and her younger brother, Zdravko (1941-1946).

    On March 25, 1941, Yugoslavia joined the Axis powers, which deeply divided the Yugoslav government. After a military coup, the country’s leadership denounced the Axis, prompting Germany to invade on April 6, 1941. The country was partitioned and Croatia became an independent state under the rule of the pro-Nazi, fascist Ustaša party, whose regime created a state of chaos and terror.

    Around that time, Dorica was visiting her maternal grandparents in Ludbreg. Leopold and Katarina lived in a house attached to the synagogue, and were at the center of the Jewish community that was largely integrated with the gentile population. Dorica spent a lot of time with her cousins, Zdenka and Vera, and their parents, Blanka and Rudi Apler, who owned a large fabric store in Ludbreg. She also became close with her aunt Giza, who had married Ljudevit Vrancic (1885-1970), a Catholic and the unofficial mayor of Ludbreg. Dorica had no real understanding of the beginning of the war. Although she did not experience the rampant antisemitism as in other towns, there was a general sense of uneasiness.

    In June 1941, Dorica’s parents and infant brother were arrested in Zagreb. Their housekeeper was able to visit them in jail and was permitted to take the baby, Zdravko. Giza’s Catholic husband was able to travel to Zagreb to retrieve him. Dorica’s parents were soon deported to the Jasenovac camp complex, a group of five camps located roughly 60 miles south of Zagreb. Silva was sent to the Stara Gradiška subcamp for women (Jasenovac V) on January 4, 1942. She was likely among the 1,161 women who were transferred to the Đakovo concentration camp on February 24. While there, she likely contracted typhus and died before the camp was dissolved in June 1942. Salamon was sent to the Kozara camp (Jasenovac IV, a tannery work detail), which was established in late January 1942.

    Dorica’s aunt, Blanka, and her family escaped south to Italian-occupied zone, which was safer for Jews. They returned to Ludbreg after a decree was issued stating that Jewish refugees could safely return to Croatia. The Ustaša and German forces controlling the countryside ignored the decree and by 1942, nearly the entire Jewish community of Ludbreg had been deported, including Dorica’s grandparents, Blanka, and her family. Since Dorica and Zdravko were from Zagreb, they had no records in Ludbreg, and therefore were not placed on the deportation lists. They were taken in by their aunt Giza and uncle Ljudevit.

    Although the Ustaša controlled Ludbreg, there was a large group of organized partisans actively resisting their influence. Battles between the Ustaša and partisans took place in the streets, and bullets would shatter the windows of homes. The children had to stay indoors, often hiding in the cellar. One night, the local mill was set on fire, burning the stockpile set aside for winter. Giza and Ljudevit owned a local vineyard, and their ability to barter saved them from starvation

    Ljudevit was arrested on suspicion of supporting the partisan resistance. He was sent to Jasenovac, where he saw Salamon, who was still alive despite having little food and being forced to perform heavy labor. As a banker, Ljudevit was assigned to work in the administrative offices, and he was released after about one year with other political prisoners. Shortly after Ljudevit’s release, Giza was denounced as a Jew and deported. Ljudevit searched for Giza in several cities, but he was unable to find her. Giza was deported to Auschwitz, where she died of intestinal illness on December 24, 1943. During Ljudevit’s search, Dorica and Zdravko hid with their neighbors, the Runjaks, and pretended to be their children.

    Around 1944, 6-year-old Dorica started school early, helped by a family friend who was a teacher in the local elementary school. When Ustaša troops were in Ludbreg, they used the school as sleeping quarters, so the children had class in their teacher’s backyard. The school included children from the surrounding villages, and Dorica was the only Jew in her school. Dorica wanted to fit in with her classmates, so she attended church and assimilated into the Catholic culture because the Ustaša regime was aligned with the Catholic Church.

    In May 1945, Yugoslavia was liberated, and the Ustaša fled to Austria. After liberation, Ljudevit learned the fate of the children’s family members. Salamon escaped from Jasenovac in 1945 with a group of Jewish prisoners, and they went into hiding in the mountains. While seeking food in a local village, they were caught by a patrol and shot. In the Jasenovac camp system, Dorica’s maternal grandparents, aunt Blanka, and her family were killed in 1942. Her uncle, Arnold, was killed in 1945. Their uncle, Bernard, and uncle, Erne, had been in the Yugoslav army and survived as prisoners of war, but Erne’s wife and daughter were killed. Their uncle, Josef, had fled to Budapest, Hungary, was briefly in Bergen-Belsen, and then immigrated to Switzerland in 1944. Their aunt, Lina Weesler, hid with her two children in the mountains with Yugoslav partisans. Both Bernard and Lina later immigrated to Israel with their families

    Ljudevit legally adopted Dorica and Zdravko. In the fall of 1946, Zdravko, age 5, died of scarlet fever. Dorica attended a boarding high school in Varazdin, and then the University of Zagreb in 1956, where she studied languages and music. In 1957, Dorica was invited to live in Switzerland with her uncle, Josef, and his family, so that she could study at the University of Lausanne. On her way, Dorica met Daniel Klayman (1929-1992), a Jewish American research chemist, who was returning to New York after a year as a postdoctoral Fulbright scholar in India. They courted via correspondence for a year before Daniel returned to Switzerland, and the two married in an Orthodox ceremony during the fall of 1958. They moved to the United States, where Dorica changed her name to Theodora (Dora). They settled for a time in New York before moving to the Washington DC area, where they raised two children. Dora earned college degrees in French and teaching English as a second language and became a teacher. Dora is also a longtime volunteer at the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum.

    Physical Details

    Language
    Croatian
    Genre/Form
    Photographs.
    Extent
    1 folder
    System of Arrangement
    The Theodora Basch Vrančić Klayman photographs are arranged in a single series.

    Rights & Restrictions

    Conditions on Access
    There are no known restrictions on access to this material.
    Conditions on Use
    Material(s) in this collection may be protected by copyright and/or related rights. You do not require further permission from the Museum to use this material. The user is solely responsible for making a determination as to if and how the material may be used.

    Keywords & Subjects

    Administrative Notes

    Provenance
    Theodora Basch Vrančić Klayman donated the Theodora Basch Vrančić Klayman photographs to the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum in 2002.
    Funding Note
    The cataloging of this collection has been supported by a grant from the Conference on Jewish Material Claims Against Germany.
    Record last modified:
    2023-05-22 14:38:46
    This page:
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