Advanced Search

Learn About The Holocaust

Special Collections

My Saved Research

Login

Register

Help

Skip to main content

Sledding in Brno

Film | Digitized | Accession Number: 2020.177 | RG Number: RG-60.7094 | Film ID: 4462

Search this record's additional resources, such as finding aids, documents, or transcripts.

No results match this search term.
Check spelling and try again.

results are loading

0 results found for “keyward

    Sledding in Brno

    Overview

    Description
    January 1939. Sledding in the snow near home in Brno on the street v Hlinkách (Hlínky 35). 01:00:11 CU Antonín bundled up in the sled with nanny in a checkered jacket. They pass a wine cellar, she waves to the camera, both children pulled in sleds. Poster; restaurant. A lady skis by the family. 01:00:47 Michael Eckstein looks at the camera walking in the snowy streets of Brno, he watches the children race down the street and play in the snow. Snowballs. Quick view of sign for Vystaviště. End 01:02:05

    01:02:10 HAS, Playing in the snow at the empty fairground / exhibition area in Brno (Vystaviště). The children take turns sledding down snowy hills, waving to the camera. 01:03:47 Packard automobile with M-1034 plate. MS, quick pan of snowy fairgrounds without people. End 01:04:19
    Duration
    00:04:19
    Date
    Event:  1939 January 04
    Locale
    Brno, Czechoslovakia
    Credit
    United States Holocaust Memorial Museum, courtesy of Michaela Kilianová and Jaroslav Kilian
    Contributor
    Camera Operator: Antonie Eckstein-Bloch
    Subject: Michaela Kilianová
    Subject: Michael Eckstein
    Subject: Antonín Eckstein
    Biography
    Antonie (Toni) Eckstein-Bloch was adopted by Františka Kapoun (1873–1931), a Catholic housekeeper for the Bloch family. Toni’s first husband Emerich Schmeer (married in 1917) was killed in WW1 when he had to return to the battlefields. After the death of her step-father, Leopold Bloch, in March 1933, Toni became the successor of the Bloch properties in Brno and Veverská Bítýška. She married Leopold's close friend, Dr. Michael Eckstein, a Jew who was nearly 20 years her senior in March 1934. Toni and Michael lived primarily in two homes: Hlínky 35 (a prestigious boulevard with tram connections to the center of Brno in a bourgeois neighborhood) and the summer residence at Veverská Bítýška [Eichhorn-Bitischka] 238. Both properties are prominently pictured in Toni's films. Toni and Michael had two children, Michaela (born April 27, 1935) and Antonín (born October 19, 1936). Michael chose to move away from his Catholic wife, Toni, and the children on August 14, 1940 in order to protect the family. They officially divorced on September 19, 1940. In the last years of war Toni and the children stayed in Veverska Bityska, where they survived.
    Michael Ekstein was born in Galicia in 1873 and moved to Brno (Brünn) as a child. He was a lawyer. He and his wife, Antonie (Toni) Eckstein-Bloch (married in 1934) lived in Brno at Hlínky 35. In an effort to save his Catholic wife and children, Michaela (b. 1935) and Antonín (b. 1936), After the German occupation of Czechoslovakia, Michael divorced Toni in September 1940 and relocated to their home in Brno at Zeile 12. He maintained correspondence with his wife and children. Michael was deported to Terezin in April 1942 on transport Ai, č. 226 (08. 04. 1942, Brno -> Terezín https://www.holocaust.cz/databaze-obeti/obet/81503-michal-eckstein/) and died there on August 12, 1942. Toni and the children survived in Veverská Bítýška.

    Physical Details

    Language
    Silent
    Genre/Form
    Amateur.
    B&W / Color
    Black & White
    Image Quality
    Excellent
    Film Format
    • Master
    • Master 4456 Film: positive - 8 mm - b&w - reversal
      Master 4462 Film: positive - 8 mm - b&w - reversal
      Master 4464 Film: positive - 8 mm - b&w - reversal
      Master 4466 Film: positive - 8 mm - b&w - reversal
      Master 4467 Film: positive - 8 mm - b&w - reversal
      Master 4468 Film: positive - 8 mm - b&w - reversal
      Master 4469 Film: positive - 8 mm - b&w - reversal
      Master 4470 Film: positive - 8 mm - b&w - reversal
      Master 4456 Film: positive - 8 mm - b&w - reversal
      Master 4462 Film: positive - 8 mm - b&w - reversal
      Master 4464 Film: positive - 8 mm - b&w - reversal
      Master 4466 Film: positive - 8 mm - b&w - reversal
      Master 4467 Film: positive - 8 mm - b&w - reversal
      Master 4468 Film: positive - 8 mm - b&w - reversal
      Master 4469 Film: positive - 8 mm - b&w - reversal
      Master 4470 Film: positive - 8 mm - b&w - reversal
      Master 4456 Film: positive - 8 mm - b&w - reversal
      Master 4462 Film: positive - 8 mm - b&w - reversal
      Master 4464 Film: positive - 8 mm - b&w - reversal
      Master 4466 Film: positive - 8 mm - b&w - reversal
      Master 4467 Film: positive - 8 mm - b&w - reversal
      Master 4468 Film: positive - 8 mm - b&w - reversal
      Master 4469 Film: positive - 8 mm - b&w - reversal
      Master 4470 Film: positive - 8 mm - b&w - reversal
      Master 4456 Film: positive - 8 mm - b&w - reversal
      Master 4462 Film: positive - 8 mm - b&w - reversal
      Master 4464 Film: positive - 8 mm - b&w - reversal
      Master 4466 Film: positive - 8 mm - b&w - reversal
      Master 4467 Film: positive - 8 mm - b&w - reversal
      Master 4468 Film: positive - 8 mm - b&w - reversal
      Master 4469 Film: positive - 8 mm - b&w - reversal
      Master 4470 Film: positive - 8 mm - b&w - reversal

    Rights & Restrictions

    Conditions on Access
    You do not require further permission from the Museum to access this archival media.
    Copyright
    Jaroslav Kilian
    Conditions on Use
    The Museum does not own the copyright for this material and does not have authority to authorize third party use. For permission, please contact the rights holder, Jaroslav Kilian.

    Keywords & Subjects

    Administrative Notes

    Film Provenance
    Michaela Kilianová deposited her family's 8mm films with the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum in May 2019 via an introduction from Ines Koeltzsch, a German historian working in Vienna on the Bloch family, another Jewish family from Brno.
    Note
    Note about the film reel from Antonin (made in the 1990s): the first strip is the second, second the first

    Refer to the files for digital copies of the tragic correspondence and diary entries written by Michael Eckstein after he separated from his wife and children in August 1940 and moved into the apartment at Zeile 12,
    Copied From
    8mm
    Film Source
    Jaroslav Kilian
    File Number
    Source Archive Number: Reel 6
    Record last modified:
    2024-02-21 08:07:49
    This page:
    https:​/​/collections.ushmm.org​/search​/catalog​/irn718918

    Download & Licensing

    In-Person Research

    Contact Us