Overview
- Description
- The collection consists of biographical and identification papers, immigration documents, correspondence, and photographs documenting the Holocaust-era experiences of Tibor Rubin, Emery Rubin and his wife Gloria Baker, Irene Rubin-Huntly and her husband Joseph Huntly. Included is material related to Tibor Rubin receiving the Medal of Honor in 2005 for his service and actions as a prisoner of war during the Korean War.
Tibor Rubin’s papers primarily relate to him receiving the Medal of Honor in 2005, including ceremony logistics and programs. Correspondence consists of photocopies of letters regarding his service and efforts by Representative Robert Dorman in 1991 to get Tibor the award as well as copies of letters and telegrams to his brother Emery regarding his capture in Korea. Other material includes clippings and programs from later events involving or honoring Tibor, and a copy of the program and eulogy transcript from his funeral.
Emery and Gloria Rubin’s correspondence consists of letters exchanged between them between 1947 and 1949, with the bulk of them exchanged after Gloria immigrated to the United States but Emery was still in Germany. The bulk of the letters are in German. There is a small amount of other letters written to Emery and Gloria from friends and family.
Irene Rubin Huntly’s papers include identification documents, immigration papers for Canada and the United States, marriage papers, and a wedding portrait of her with Joseph Huntly. The biographical papers include a typed testimonial document with false information used by Irene to assume the identity of a presumed dead Czech woman in order to immigrate to Canada under a Czech quota. Both the testimonial document and her death certificate display her false birthdate and location.
Joseph Huntly’s papers consist of identification papers including DP registration documents and birth certificates, employment papers from Germany and the United States, and immigration papers including ship newsletters from the USAT M.B. Stewart. The photographs consist of a prewar image of Joseph’s family and a postwar portrait of Joseph. - Date
-
inclusive:
circa 1928-2015
- Credit Line
- United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Collection, Gift of Debbie Rosa Huntly-Kessler
- Collection Creator
- Rubin family
Joseph Huntly - Biography
-
Ferenc Rubin was a veteran of World War I and worked as a shoemaker with his own store in Pásztó, Hungary. He had six children with three wives. His first wife left him while he was a prisoner of war during World War I and presumed dead. His second wife died of cancer. His third wife was Rosa Appel. His children were Tibor, Emery, Edith, Irene, Ilonka, and Miklós.
Emery and his friend Alex left Pásztó for Košice in early 1944 to avoid conscription into a forced-labor battalion. They were arrested after arriving at the Košice train station and sent to a forced-labor camp. Several months later they were deported to the Mauthausen concentration camp. Ferenc arranged for his son Tibor Rubin (1929-2015) to leave Pásztó for Switzerland in early March 1944 with several Polish men already on the run from the Nazis. After two weeks, they were arrested by German soldiers in Italy near the Swiss border. They were all deported to Mauthausen. During the winter, Tibor discovered that his brother Emery was also imprisoned there. They were liberated by the United States Army on 5 May 1945. Tibor and Emery returned to Pásztó where they were reunited with their sister Irene. The siblings decided that they needed to leave Hungary and went to the Pocking displaced persons camp in Germany.
Tibor immigrated to the United States in 1948 aboard the SS Marine Flasher and settled in New York. He enlisted with the United States Army in 1950, rising to the rank of corporal with 8th Calvary, Regiment, 1st Calvary Division. His unit was deployed to Korea and in October 1950 Tibor was wounded and captured by the Chinese Army. While he was a prisoner of war, he often snuck out of camp to steal food and supplies for his fellow captives despite the risk of getting caught. He also refused offers by the Chinese to be released back to Hungary. Tibor and the other prisoners were freed in late March 1953. He was discharged later that year.
Tibor became a naturalized citizen in 1954 and he worked at his brother Emery’s liquor store in Los Angeles. In 1963 Tibor married Yvonne Meijers and they had two children, Frank (b. 1964) and Rosalyn (Rosie, b. 1966). He was awarded the Medal of Honor by President George Bush in 2005 for his bravery and actions during his imprisonment in Korea.
While still in Germany waiting to emigrate, Emery (Imre, also went by Irwin, d. 1984) met Gloria Piekarek (nicknamed Gitta, she later took the name Gloria Baker). She was born in Poland to Hudes Korn-Piekarek and Izrok Piekarek and likely had seven siblings. Gloria was a survivor of Auschwitz. Both her parents perished in the camp. One of her sisters also survived Auschwitz but died shortly after liberation. She immigrated to the United States in 1948, coincidentally on the SS Marine Flasher with Tibor. Emery immigrated to the United States in 1949, and he and Gloria married in September of that year. Emery later opened a liquor store in Los Angeles which he ran with Tibor.
Irene (1924-1973) survived the Holocaust in Budapest. After the German occupation in March 1944, she had a relationship with a Hungarian officer who hid and protected her from persecution. She left him after Budapest was liberated and returned to Pásztó. After visiting with her brother Miklós in Prague, Irene learned about a Czech woman with the same name who likely perished during the war. She used forged papers with this woman’s identity to be eligible to immigrate to Canada as a Czech citizen. She immigrated to Canada aboard the SS Nea Hellas in November 1948 and settled in Montreal. She married Aron Goldberg (b. 1919 in present-day Khmelnytskyi, Ukraine) in January 1950. They immigrated to the United States in 1951. She and Aron divorced, and she married Joseph Huntly in 1955. They had two children, Debbie and Robert. Irene was killed in a car accident in 1973.
Ferenc, Rosa, and Ilonka all perished at Auschwitz. Edith survived Auschwitz and was among the prisoners freed in exchange for medical supplies with Sweden. She immigrated to Sweden after the war. Miklós was conscripted into a forced-labor battalion, but escaped and joined the Czech Resistance. He lived in Prague after the war, but soon immigrated to Israel and then the United States.
Joseph Huntly (born Jozsef Hugyecz, 1928-2016) was born in Nógrád, Hungary to a Christian family. His mother, Erzabet Kralik, was Lutheran and his father, Mihaly Hugyecz, was Catholic. He had three siblings, Andras, Mihaly, and Margit. When he was 17 he was sent to Poland, Austria, and Germany as a forced-laborer. After the war, he found work as a cook in the American Zone on several military bases and lived at one point in Wiesbaden, Germany. He immigrated to the United States aboard the USAT M.B. Stewart in October 1949 after getting sponsored by the Church World Service, Inc. Joseph settled in Canton, New York with his sponsor family the Huntleys on their dairy farm. After working on the farm for a year, Joseph briefly lived in Detroit before moving to Los Angeles where he studied to become an aerospace technician. When he became a naturalized citizen, he took the Huntley family’s name, shortening it to Huntly. Joseph later converted to Judaism after his marriage to Irene Rubin.
Physical Details
- Genre/Form
- Photographs.
- Extent
-
1 box
1 oversize folder
- System of Arrangement
- The collection is arranged as four series.
Series 1. Tibor Rubin, 1950-2015
Series 2. Emery and Gloria Rubin, 1947-1949
Series 3. Irene Rubin-Huntly, 1929-1976
Series 4. Joseph Huntly, circa 1928-2014
Rights & Restrictions
- Conditions on Access
- There are no known restrictions on access to this material.
- Conditions on Use
- The donor, source institution, or a third party has asserted copyright over some or all of the material(s) in this collection. 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.
- Copyright Holder
- Ms. Debbie R. Huntly-Kessler
Keywords & Subjects
- Topical Term
- Medal of Honor. Jews--Hungary--Pásztó--Biography. Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945)--Hungary. Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945)--Survivors. False personation.
- Geographic Name
- Pásztó (Hungary) United States--Emigration and immigration. Canada--Emigration and immigration.
- Personal Name
- Rubin, Tibor, 1929-2015. Rubin, Emery. Rubin-Huntly, Irene. Huntly, Joseph. Baker, Gloria.
- Corporate Name
- United States. Army
Administrative Notes
- Holder of Originals
-
United States Holocaust Memorial Museum
- Legal Status
- Permanent Collection
- Provenance
- Donated to the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum in 2018 by Debbie Rosa Huntly-Kessler.
- Record last modified:
- 2023-10-12 16:16:10
- This page:
- https://collections.ushmm.org/search/catalog/irn611783
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Also in Rubin and Huntly families collection
The collection consists of a commemorative pin-back button, commemorative materials, correspondence, documents, and photographs relating to the experiences of the Rubin and Huntly families in Hungary, Poland, and the United States before during, and after the Holocaust.
Date: 1928-2005
Pin commemorating a Hungarian Jewish Holocaust survivor’s receipt of the Congressional Medal of Honor
Object
Pin-backed button commemorating Tibor Rubin's receipt of the United States Congressional Medal of Honor on September 23, 2005. He received the award 55 years after first being nominated by fellow soldiers. Tibor earned the medal for extraordinary heroism in battle, and his efforts to help save the lives of 40 fellow prisoners of war during the Korean War (1950-1953). Tibor’s actions during four months of battle and 30 months of imprisonment were shaped, in part, by his experiences as a Holocaust survivor. In November 1940, when Hungary became an official German ally, 11-year-old Tibor lived in Pásztó, Hungary, with his parents, Ferenc and Rozsi, and siblings Imre, Irena, Edith, and Ilonka. A couple weeks before Germany occupied Hungary on March 19, 1944, Tibor’s father sent him with a group of Polish Jews that were heading to the Swiss border. They were all arrested, and later deported to Mauthausen concentration camp in Austria. While in the camp, Tibor gained many survival skills that later helped him survive imprisonment in Korea. Around February 1945, Tibor discovered that Imre was also in the camp. The US Army liberated Mauthausen in May 1945. Tibor and Imre returned to Pásztó, where they reunited with Irena, who had survived in Budapest. Tibor immigrated to the US in 1948, and his siblings later joined him. Their parents, Ferenc and Rozsi, and sisters, Edith and Ilonka, were deported to Auschwitz concentration camp in late spring 1944, where Rozsi and Ilonka were killed. Ferenc was deported to Buchenwald concentration camp in Germany, and died in December. Edith survived several concentration camps, and his half-brother, Miklós, survived in the Czech resistance.
Oral history interview with Joseph Huntly
Oral History