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Luggage tag owned by the Miodownik family

Object | Accession Number: 2022.24.2

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    Overview

    Brief Narrative
    Luggage tag from the SS Ernie Pyle during the donor's family's voyage to the United States. Ani Miodownik (donor), along with her parents and sister, were sent from Sosonoweic to the Srodula ghetto, where they went into hiding. Ani's father was killed while out trying to get water, and Bina made multiple attempts to escape the ghetto with her two small children. She found a hiding place with a Polish family, but Ani's younger sister Ruth who was 2.5 years old was placed in an Catholic orphanage. Bina and Ani remained in hiding until the war ended. Their attempts to find Ruth were unsuccesful. Eventually they left Poland and moved to the Zeilsheim DP camp, where Bina remarried. They immigrated to the United States in 1947.
    Date
    use:  1947
    Credit Line
    United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Collection, Gift of Anne Miodownik Fried
    Markings
    front, top, printed, white : UNITED / STATES / LINES / BAGGAGE SHOULD ARRIVE / AT PIER DAY BEFORE SAILING

    front, bottom, printed, white and dark blue ink : STATEROOM
    Contributor
    Owner: Anne Fried
    Issuer: United States Lines Company
    Biography
    Anni Miodownik (later Anne Miodownik Fried) was born on 2 December 1938 in Sosnowiec, Poland to Bina and Abraham Salomon Miodownik. Her mother Bina Miodownik (later Bina Szereszewski and then Betty Scherr) was born Bina Studenberg on 2 February 1916 in Sosnowiec to Jakob and Liba (née Goldberg) Studenberg. Her father Abraham Salomon Miodownik was born on 10 November 1908 in Sosnowiec, and his mother’s name was Perla. Anne had one sister, Ruth Christine Miodownik (b. 6 April 1941). The family lived in Sosnowiec prior to the war.

    By 1940, Anne, her family, and her paternal grandmother Perla were forced into the Sosnowiec ghetto. In June 1943 the ghetto was moved to the Srodula district of Sosnowiec. To evade deportation, the family hid on the top floor of a building where they constructed a hiding place with a false wall. Anne’s father was shot and killed one night when he went out to search for water. The rest of the family fled the hiding space the same day. Bina obtained false-identification papers and bribed a guard to let them escape the ghetto. Her goal was to join a partisan group, but after failing to do so, they returned to the ghetto.

    Bina then befriended a Polish conscript guard, Erich Siodmok, whom she persuaded to help her escape the ghetto. He also agreed to hide the family in the attic on his farm. Perla declined to leave the ghetto with the rest of Anne’s family this time. Erich’s wife Gertruda, their children Alfred and Lucia, and his parents all lived on the farm during the war. Erich worried that hiding two small children posed too great a threat, and it was decided that Bina would put Ruth in a nearby Catholic orphanage. In late 1943 or early 1944 Erich was sent to the front line and was likely killed.

    After liberation, Bina went to the orphanage to get Ruth, but discovered that she was no longer there, and the nuns did not know where she was. Ruth’s last known whereabouts were a children’s home in the Rybnik district of Katowice, but her family never learned her fate.

    Anne and her mother went to Katowice where they lived in an apartment with several other survivors, including Moses Szereszewski (Misha, later Morris Scherr, b. 1911), a survivor of Majdanek and Auschwitz. Bina found work in the black market smuggling alcohol. Anne, Bina, and Misha then went to Zeilsheim displaced persons camp in Frankfurt am Main around January 1947. Bina and Misha married while in the camp, in part to improve their chances of getting visas to immigrate to the United States. The three of them immigrated to the United States in April aboard the SS Ernie Pyle. The ship broke down and they were transferred to the SS Marine Marlin for the rest of the journey. They settled in New York, and Anne began taking piano lessons and later attended Barnard College.

    Physical Details

    Language
    English
    Classification
    Identifying Artifacts
    Category
    Labels
    Object Type
    Luggage tags (aat)
    Physical Description
    Rectangular, blue and white cardstock luggage tag with angled top corners and a circular punch hole centered along the top edge. The hole is lined with a metal and white paper grommet. The top third of the tag has a dark blue background, with the company name and flag logo, as well as instructions printed in white. The central portion of the tag is white with dark blue printed words and lines. Identifying information is handwritten in uppercase letters and faded on the lines in dark ink. There are creases throughout.
    Dimensions
    overall: Height: 6.250 inches (15.875 cm) | Width: 3.130 inches (7.95 cm)
    Materials
    overall : paper, ink, metal

    Rights & Restrictions

    Conditions on Access
    No restrictions on access
    Conditions on Use
    No restrictions on use

    Keywords & Subjects

    Corporate Name
    Ernie Pyle (Ship)

    Administrative Notes

    Provenance
    The luggage tag was donated to the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum in 2022 by Anne Miodownik Fried.
    Record last modified:
    2024-01-23 11:27:42
    This page:
    https:​/​/collections.ushmm.org​/search​/catalog​/irn735990

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