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Tennenbaum family documents

Document | Digitized | Accession Number: 2013.119.1

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    Tennenbaum family documents
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    Overview

    Description
    Consists of a birth certificate for Edith Tennenbaum (later Ostern), who was born on November 12, 1936, in Vienna, Austria, which was issued by the Jewish community in Vienna. Also includes an identity card with photograph for Emil Tennebaum, originally of Zaleszyzyki, Poland (now Zalischyky, Ukraine), issued by the Bundesstaat Osterreich.
    Date
    inclusive:  1936-1936
    Credit Line
    United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Collection, Gift of Edith Ostern
    Collection Creator
    Edith Ostern
    Biography
    Edith Tennenbaum was born on November 12, 1936, in Vienna, Austria, to Emil and Dora Austein Tennenbaum. Emil was born on April 28, 1903, in Zaleszczyki, Poland (Zalishchyky, Ukraine), to Leib and Malka Tennenbaum. Leib was born on August 29, 1869 and Malka on October 8, 1869. They were a very religious family. Emil had six siblings, only Marcus (Mark), born February 27, 1901, and Mina, born June 7, 1906, lived past childhood. Dora was born on May 15, 1913, in Bobrka, Poland, to Elias and Sara Leiter Austein. Elias was born on January 1, 1879, and Sara circa 1886, both in Bobrka. Dora had two brothers: Max, born on April 26, 1909; and Moses (Morris), born on February 12, 1911. Both families immigrated to Austria in 1914 because of the outbreak of World War I (1914-1918.) Both families were affluent, with successful businesses and well educated children. Emil and Dora married in 1934. Emil owned a lumber business with his father and brother and opened a second store by himself. They attended synagogue occasionally. On March 12, 1938, Germany annexed Austria. Emil’s stores were confiscated by the government soon afterwards. There was a shortage of food and they had to use ration cards. Edith’s brother, George, was born August 2, 1938. Dora was not allowed to go to the regular hospital for the delivery because she was Jewish. Both the Tennenbaum and Austein families began planning to leave Austria for the US. They had relatives in America and were registered in the Polish quota. On November 9 and 10, 1938, the Kristallnacht pogrom occurred and Emil was arrested. The family’s apartment was sealed by the Gestapo, leaving Dora without diapers, food or drink for her young children. She travelled across town to stay her sister-in-law, Mina, her husband Leo Beller, and their son Paul. On November 16, Emil was deported to Dachau concentration camp, where he was assigned prisoner number 29183. On December 18, Dora received a postcard from Emil, telling her that he was all right, but needed a visa as soon as possible to be released. Dora knew it would take too long for his American visa to arrive, so she purchased an illegal visa and ship ticket to Paraguay and gave it to the SS. On December 20, Emil was released and he returned to Vienna. He had been tortured in both the jail in Vienna and in Dachau. He had to check in with the Gestapo every day and was desperate to leave Austria. Dora arranged for Emil to get a false passport which identified him as a Dutch national and Protestant. He used it to go into hiding in Antwerp, Belgium, where Dora’s parents and brother, Morris, were also in hiding, waiting for visas. Her other brother, Max, was already in New York. Emil’s brother, Marcus (Mark), his wife Ernestine, and their son Robert emigrated to the US in March 1939. Mina and Leo made arrangements for their son, Paul, to leave for the US in May 1939 where he stayed with a family in Pennsylvania. Dora’s maternal great aunt had been in the US for several years and sponsored Dora, Edith, and George’s immigration. In October 1939, Dora and the children fled Vienna for Italy, staying in Venice and then Genoa. Emil’s parents, Leib and Malka, arrived in Genoa later that month. They departed on the SS Rex on November 1. Dora became very ill and was put in the ship’s sick bay, and Edith feared that she would die. They arrived in New York on November 9. Dora did not have money or job prospects and did not speak English. Her relatives convinced her to place Edith and George in a children’s shelter so they could receive proper care while she found work. Edith and George were separated in the shelter and Edith became hysterical. She escaped one night wearing only pajamas, but was brought back. The shelter returned her to Dora, insisting that she take her back because she was so unhappy. Emil left Rotterdam on January 29, 1940, on the SS Zaandam, arriving in New York on January 29. He got a night job as a controller with a candy company at the World Fair. They retrieved George from the shelter and moved into an apartment. Emil Americanized their last name to Tanner.
    In February 1940, Emil’s sister Mina arrived in New York. Her husband Leo was denied a visa after failing a health exam. He attempted to emigrate to Palestine, but was caught by the British on November 25, 1940 and detained on Mauritius. In April 1940, Dora’s brother, Morris, arrived and moved in with Emil and Dora. On January 25, 1941, Dora’s parents, Sara and Elias, boarded the SS Exeter in Lisbon, Portugal, reaching New York on February 3. They had received US immigration visas to immigrate in 1940, but then Germany invaded Belgium in May 1940. They fled to France, where Sara was detained in Gurs internment camp and Elias was held in St. Cyprien. In July 1946, Emil’s brother-in-law, Leo, arrived in the US from Palestine, where he had been permitted to settle in August 1945. The extended Austein and Tennenbaum family members who remained in Poland perished. Edith married at the age of 17, received a degree from the University of Alabama, and attended graduate school at Rutgers University. She had three children. Elias, age 85, died in February 1964. Leib, age 97, died in December 1966, in New York. George got his undergraduate degree at Cornell and his PhD at Harvard. Marcus (Mark) and Ernestine moved to Santa Barbara, California, followed by Dora, Emil, Mina and Leo. Edith divorced and moved to Santa Barbara. On July 17, 1975, she married Stanley Ostern, M.D, who survived the Holocaust in hiding in Stryj, Poland. Emil, age 77, died in March 1981. Dora, age 94, died on June 9, 2007.

    Physical Details

    Language
    German
    Extent
    1 folder

    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
    The papers were donated to the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum in 2013 by Edith Ostern.
    Record last modified:
    2024-11-07 10:43:13
    This page:
    http:​/​/collections.ushmm.org​/search​/catalog​/irn61023