Overview
- Description
- Identification, biographical, and financial papers documenting the Holocaust experiences of Marek and Bronislawa Redner in Lwów, Poland (Lviv, Ukraine). Identification cards of Marek and Bronislawa include one that identifies Marek as a doctor in Lwów in 1942. The bulk of the collection consists of financial documents related to Marek’s property, its expropriation in 1941, and restitution claims in 1966. Also included is a postwar photograph of Bronislawa and a copy of a 1942 document issued to Benjamin-Hersch Lustig (donor Salomon Redner’s father-in-law) revoking his license to sell poultry.
- Date
-
inclusive:
1926-1966
bulk: 1931-1948
- Credit Line
- United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Collection, Gift of Salomon Redner
- Collection Creator
- Marek Redner
Bronislawa Redner - Biography
-
Marek Redner (1898-1984) was born on 3 July 1898 in Lwów, Poland (also referred to as Lvov or Lemberg, present day Lviv, Ukraine) to Berisch or Baruch (1871-1935) and Reize “Rosa” (née Findling, 1873-1942) Redner. Both of his parents were from Lwów, and his father owned a small furniture manufacturing factory. Marek was the oldest of ten siblings: Amalia (1897-1943), Mahla (1899-1942), Sylvia (1900-1988), Elka (b. 1901), Julia (1904-1988), Fydka (1905-1988), Bronislawa (1907-1942), Benjamin (1908-1996), Abraham, and Pozieba. He studied medicine in Lwów and also served in the Austro-Hungarian Army during World War I. He completed his studies in 1923. In 1924 he married Bronislawa Schrenzel (1903-1997), daughter of Izrael Schrenzel (1875-1942) and Sabina Pordes (b. 1880), and they had two children: Emilia (1926-1992) and Salomon (b. 1929).
After the German invasion of Poland in 1939, the Soviet Red Army occupied Eastern Poland as part of the German-Soviet Pact, including Lwów. In June 1941 the Germans broke the pact with Russia, and Lwów was occupied by the Nazis. In November 1941, Marek and his family were sent to the Lwów Ghetto where he continued to work as a doctor. In September 1942, Marek acquired a forged birth certificate for Salomon, and he went to live with Mr. Sochacki until December 1942. By January 1943, Marek’s wife and children went into hiding in Stare Sioło, a village approximately 20 miles south of Lwów. They hid in a coal cellar owned by Stefania Ciemiega. Marek joined them in May 1943, shortly before the liquidation of the ghetto. On 27 July 1944 Lwów was liberated by the Soviets.
After liberation, the Redners remained in Poland. Marek continued to practice medicine and Emilia and Salomon completed high school. In 1948, Marek and Bronislawa immigrated to Montevideo, Uruguay. They immigrated to the United States in 1963. Salomon and Emilia both moved to Paris in 1949. Salomon studied engineering at the Sorbonne and Emilia studied dentistry. While in Paris, Salomon met Lily Lustig (b. 1930) and they married 1952. They had four children: Isabel (b. 1953, later Isabel Alcoff), Sylvia (b. 1955), Barbara, and Francine. They moved to Montevideo in 1953. Salomon immigrated to the United States in 1958 and Lily, Isabel, and Sylvia joined him in 1959. They settled in Pennsylvania where Salomon worked as a mechanical engineer and Lily was a French teacher. Emilia married Kuba Polakiewicz and immigrated to Montevideo in 1951. They had three children.
Marek’s mother Reize, his siblings Mahla, Amalia, and Bronislawa, and Bronislaw’s father Izrael Schrenzel all perished in the Holocaust. Salomon’s wife Lily’s parents, Benjamin-Hersch (1900-1942) and Lea Elisabeth (née Klinger, 1907-1942) Lustig both perished at Auschwitz in 1942.
Bronislawa Redner (née Schrenzel, 1903-1997) was born on 13 April 1903 in Lwów, Poland (Lviv, Ukraine) to Izrael Schrenzel (1875-1942) and Sabina Pordes (b. 1880). She worked as a schoolteacher. She married Marek Redner (1898-1984) in 1924 and they had two children: Emilia (1926-1992) and Salomon (b. 1929).
After the German invasion of Poland in 1939, the Soviet Red Army occupied Eastern Poland as part of the German-Soviet Pact, including Lwów. In June 1941 the Germans broke the pact with Russia, and Lwów was occupied by the Nazis. In November 1941, the Redners were sent to the Lwów Ghetto where Marek continued to work as a doctor. In September 1942, Marek acquired a forged birth certificate for Salomon, and he went to live with Mr. Sochacki until December 1942. By January 1943, Bronislawa and her children went into hiding in Stare Sioło, a village approximately 20 miles south of Lwów. They hid in a coal cellar owned by Stefania Ciemiega. Marek joined them in May 1943, shortly before the liquidation of the ghetto. On 27 July 1944 Lwów was liberated by the Soviets.
After liberation, the Redners remained in Poland. Marek continued to practice medicine and Emilia and Salomon completed high school. In 1948, Marek and Bronislawa immigrated to Montevideo, Uruguay. They immigrated to the United States in 1963. Salomon and Emilia both moved to Paris in 1949. Salomon studied engineering at the Sorbonne and Emilia studied dentistry. While in Paris, Salomon met Lily Lustig (b. 1930) and they married 1952. They had four children: Isabel (b. 1953, later Isabel Alcoff), Sylvia (b. 1955), Barbara, and Francine. They moved to Montevideo in 1953. Salomon immigrated to the United States in 1958 and Lily, Isabel, and Sylvia joined him in 1959. They settled in Pennsylvania where Salomon worked as a mechanical engineer and Lily was a French teacher. Emilia married Kuba Polakiewicz and immigrated to Montevideo in 1951. They had three children.
Marek’s mother Reize, his siblings Mahla, Amalia, and Bronislawa, and Bronislaw’s father Izrael Schrenzel all perished in the Holocaust. Salomon’s wife Lily’s parents, Benjamin-Hersch (1900-1942) and Lea Elisabeth (née Klinger, 1907-1942) Lustig both perished at Auschwitz in 1942.
Physical Details
- Genre/Form
- Photographs. Identification cards.
- Extent
-
2 folders
- System of Arrangement
- The collection is arranged as two folders
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
- Topical Term
- Jews--Ukraine--L'viv. Jewish physicians. Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945)--Ukraine--Lʹviv. Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945)--Survivors.
- Geographic Name
- Lviv (Ukraine)
- Personal Name
- Redner, Marek, 1898-1984. Redner, Bronislawa, 1903-1997.
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 Salomon Redner, via his daughter Isabel Alcoff.
- Record last modified:
- 2023-02-24 14:36:36
- This page:
- http://collections.ushmm.org/search/catalog/irn671069
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-
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Also in Marek and Bronislawa Redner collection
Documents for Marek and Bronislawa Redner (nee Shrenzel); papers related to the ownership of property in Lvov; Marek Redner's armband from the Lvov Ghetto where he was a medical doctor; Marek Redner's "W" patch; photo of Bronislawa Redner; document for Benjamin-Hersch Lustig (copy).
Armband
Object
The armband was worn by Dr. Marek Redner who continued to take care of his patients after they were moved into the Lwow ghetto which was liquidated in 1943, It is inscribed ARZT (medical doctor).
Patch
Object
Marek Redner's "W" patch. This stood for Wehrmacht (army) and was worn by Jews employed in factories run by the German army in Lwow, Poland. It identifies the employee as "useful" to Germany and provided temporary protection from extermination.