Overview
- Brief Narrative
- Small notebook of musical compositions transcribed by Terez Grunberger, a violinist, from 1937-1941 when she lived in Munkacs, Hungary. This and other family valuables were entrusted to a neighbor in Munkacs, Hungary (Mukecheve, Ukraine) before the family was deported to Auschwitz-Birkenau killing center. Terez lived with Roszi, Miriam, her maternal grandparents, Ludvik and Zeni Gruenberger, and her adopted brother, in Mukecheve when it was annexed by Hungary and renamed Munkacs. In March 1944, Germany occupied Hungary. In April, Terez and her family were moved into a Jewish ghetto. In May, they were deported to Auschwitz-Birkenau, where 23 year old Terez and 21 year old Miriam were selected for labor. Their mother, grandparents, and adopted brother Shmuel were killed in the gas chambers. In November, Terez and Miriam were deported to Torgau slave labor camp in Germany. Terez was assigned prisoner number 46077 and Miriam number 46076. In April 1945, Terez and Miriam were liberated by British forces. In 1946, Terez married a fellow survivor, Jakob Mermelstein, and Miriam married Geza Rozner,a survivor from Munkacs. They lived in Gabersee displaced persons camp in Germany. Terez and Jakob emigrated to the US in 1948. Miriam and Geza went to Israel.
- Date
-
creation:
1937-1941
recovered: approximately 1945 June
- Geography
-
creation:
Munkacs (Hungary) (historic);
Mukacheve (Ukraine)
- Credit Line
- United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Collection, Gift of Theresa Gruenberger Mermelstein
- Contributor
-
Subject:
Theresa Mermelstein
- Biography
-
Terez Gruenberger was born on June 5, 1921, in Mukacevo, Czechoslovakia (Mukacheve, Ukraine), to Zsigmund and Roszi (Roza) Gruenberger Schonfeld. Roza was born on September 18, 1893, in Brestovo, Czechoslovakia, to Ludvik and Zeni Neiman Gruenberger. She was a shoe designer. Zsigmund was born in 1887 in Kisvarda, Hungary. The couple owned a specialty shop for orthopedic shoes in Budafok, Hungary, and hand made all the shoes. Terez’s sister, Miriam, was born on February 26, 1923. Zsigmund died in 1928 and Terez, her mother, and sister moved back to Mukacevo to live with Terez’s maternal grandparents, Ludvik and Zeni Gruenberger. Roza supported the family by hand making specialty shoes. Terez attended public school, where she learned German. She also learned to play the violin. The family observed Shabbat every week and celebrated the holidays. In 1938, Mukacevo and the surrounding region of Czechoslovakia were annexed by Hungary and the name was changed to Munkacs. Terez finished school and began working as a cosmetician at a beauty school. The Hungarians were more anti-Semitic but their lives continued normally. Terez encouraged the family to adopt a child, and her grandmother Zeni adopted a Jewish orphan, six year old Shmuel.
Hungary had anti-Jewish laws similar to those of its ally, Nazi Germany. In 1940, Miriam went to Budapest to stay with her stepsister from their father’s first marriage. Roza later wrote to tell her to stay there, as it was safer. Hungary participated in the German invasion of the Soviet Union in June 1941. After the German retreat from Stalingrad In early 1943, Hungary sought a separate peace with the Allies. That year, Miriam sent to a labor camp in Csepel, near Budapest, where she worked in an ammunition factory. In March 1944, Germany occupied Hungary. Jews in the countryside were gathered into regional holding centers as the Germans, with Hungarian cooperation, prepared for mass deportations. In April, a Jewish ghetto was formed in Munkacs. Terez and her family were ordered to move there. Before they left, they gave some of their family valuables to a Christian neighbor. They stayed in the ghetto for a week with a family friend, but then were marched to a brick factory. It was very crowded and many people died from the poor living conditions. In May, the family was sent to Auschwitz-Birkenau killing center in cattle cars. Upon arrival on May 22, Terez was separated from Roza, their grandparents, and Shmuel. Her head was shaved and she was given old clothes. The following day, she was told by another inmate that her family had been gassed and burned.
Not long after this, someone told Tereza that they had seen Miriam. She found her block and asked the block elder Edith if Miriam could move and permission was granted. They had very little food and other women stole food from Terez. They had to stand outside for appell [roll call] for hours and when a prisoner was not there, they had to kneel on the ground for hours until she was found. Their work was to carry heavy stones back and forth. On November 8, 1944, Terez and Miriam were deported to Torgau slave labor camp, a subcamp of Buchenwald in Germany, arriving on November 19. Terez was assigned prisoner number 46077 and Miriam 46076. The sisters and eight other women were selected to work in the kitchens. The woman who ran the kitchens was kind to Terez and made sure that she had enough to eat. In January 1945, the Allies were bombing the area, but the labor camp was not hit. They were liberated in April 1945 by Allied forces.
After two days, the camp was turned the camp over to Soviet forces. The Soviet soldiers attempted to have sex with the prisoners, so the women lied and told them they were sick. After a few days, Terez, Miriam, and the other women escaped from the soldiers and walked to the American zone. They were hospitalized, and after they recovered, were sent to Prague. Terez found a distant relative who they stayed with for a short while before moving in with a friend from Munkacs. Miriam returned to Budapest and Munkacs, but she was not welcome there and was told to leave. Before Miriam left, she was given their family valuables by their former neighbor in Munkacs. She met Geza Rozner, a fellow survivor, and they returned to Prague and married on December 2, 1945. Miriam introduced Terez to Jakob Mermelstein, who was born on November 4, 1911, in Cinadievo, Czechoslovakia (Chynadiyovo, Ukraine). Terez and Jacob married in February 1946. Because of Soviet control over Czechoslovakia, Terez insisted that they leave. In 1946, Terez and Jakob crossed illegally over the German border and went to Gabersee displaced persons camp, near Wasserburg. On December 13, 1948, they boarded the SS Marine Marlin, arriving in New York on December 24. They settled in New York and Americanized their names to Theresa and Jack. They had a daughter. Terez made bowties and the family eventually bought a store. Miriam and her family went to Israel in 1949, where they had a son. In 1959-1960, they moved to New York. Jack, age 85, died on October 22, 1997. Miriam, age 87, died on December 17, 2010.
Physical Details
- Classification
-
Information Forms
- Category
-
Manuscripts
- Object Type
-
Composition (artistic arrangement) (aat)
- Physical Description
- Small notebook with a brown faux leather cloth covered cardboard cover with a label with inscribed text. The interior pages are printed with 8 sets of musical staffs. Most of the originally blank interior pages, 30 pages, are covered with handwritten musical scores in black and blue ink and pencil. Most pages have 3 or 4 staffs, with notes and other musical notation symbols; textual information includes directions and the title and parts in different languages: It's been a long, long time; O Mia bella Napoli; Sioux City Sue; Split; Traumerei; Wiener Walzer. The transcriber's signature, Teru Grunberger, and the year are often written at the end. There is an amateur pencil drawing of a 3-masted sailing ship on the inside back cover and a loose page with a drawing of a similar ship, viewed from the back, both with a G in the lower right corner. The block is separating from the spine, and repaired with black tape.
- Dimensions
- overall: Height: 4.875 inches (12.383 cm) | Width: 6.625 inches (16.828 cm) | Depth: 0.375 inches (0.953 cm)
- Materials
- overall : paper, cardboard, cloth, pressure-sensitive tape, ink, graphite, metal
- Inscription
- front cover, label, handwritten, black ink : Te[ri] Grünberger / zeno / Könz[?] / 1937. / illegible
loose page, handwritten, ink and pencil : Grünberger / Hrom[?fo] Grünberger Grünberger Manés Munkaćs / Peter Landor 30.
Rights & Restrictions
- Conditions on Access
- No restrictions on access
- Conditions on Use
- Restrictions on use
Keywords & Subjects
- Topical Term
- Concentration camp inmates--Germany--Torgau--Biography. Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945)--Hungary--Personal narratives, Jewish. Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945)--Ukraine--Mukacheve--Personal narratives, Jewish. Jewish families--Hungary--Biography. Slave labor--Germany--Torgau--Biography. Women concentration camp inmates--Germany--Torgau--Biography.
Administrative Notes
- Legal Status
- Permanent Collection
- Provenance
- The musical composition book was donated to the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum in 2013 by Terez Gruenberger Mermelstein.
- Funding Note
- The cataloging of this artifact has been supported by a grant from the Conference on Jewish Material Claims Against Germany.
- Record last modified:
- 2022-08-15 08:40:39
- This page:
- https://collections.ushmm.org/search/catalog/irn76822
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Also in Theresa Gruenberger Mermelstein family collection
The collection consists of an armband, two pillow shams, a music composition book, and photographs relating to the experiences of Terez Gruenberger and her family in prewar and postwar Munkacs, Hungary, to Terez and her sister Miriam's experiences in Torgau slave labor camp during the Holocaust, and in Gabersee displaced persons camp in Germany after the Holocaust where she married Jakob Mermelstein.
Date: 1932-1946
Terez Gruenberger Mermelstein photographs
Document
Photographs (131) that illustrate Terez Gruenberger Mermelstein’s pre-war life in Munkacs, Hungary, and post-war life in the Gabersee displaced persons camp in Wasserburg, Germany, with spouse Jakob.
White armband embroidered with prisoner number worn by a Hungarian slave laborer
Object
White cloth armband owned by Terez Gruenberger, which was worn by her younger sister Miriam, 21, when both were imprisoned in Torgau slave labor camp from November 1944 to April 1945. It is embroidered with Ung H. for Hungarian and 46076, Miriam's prisoner number; Terez was 46077. In November 1938, Hungary annexed part of Czechoslovakia, including Munkacs (Mukacheve, Ukraine) where Terez and Miriam lived with their mother, Roszi and their maternal grandparents, Ludvik and Zeni Gruenberger. Miriam went to Budapest in 1940 and, in 1943, was sent to Csepel labor camp. In March 1944, Germany occupied Hungary. In May, Terez and her family were deported to Auschwitz-Birkenau, where 23 year old Terez was selected for labor. Their mother, grandparents, and adopted brother Shmuel were killed in the gas chambers. Miriam had been deported from Csepel to Birkenau in May and the sisters were reunited in the camp. In November, they were deported to Torgau slave labor camp in Germany. In April 1945, Terez and Miriam were liberated by Allied forces. They were repatriated to Czechoslovakia. Miriam returned to Munkacs and was able to recover some family belongings, but was told she was not welcome. Terez and her husband emigrated to New York in 1948. Miriam and her husband left for Israel in 1949.
Damask pillow sham with a pink monogram and eyelet whitework recovered postwar by Hungarian Jewish sisters
Object
Embroidered pillowcase owned by Terez Gruenberger, that was recovered by her sister Miriam after the war. It was made by their mother Roszi and has the initials AL. This and other family valuables were entrusted to a neighbor in Munkacs, Hungary (Mukecheve, Ukraine) before the family was deported to Auschwitz-Birkenau killing center. Terez lived with Roszi, Miriam, her maternal grandparents, Ludvik and Zeni Gruenberger, and her adopted brother, in Mukecheve when it was annexed by Hungary and renamed Munkacs. In March 1944, Germany occupied Hungary. In April, Terez and her family were moved into a Jewish ghetto. In May, they were deported to Auschwitz-Birkenau, where 23 year old Terez and 21 year old Miriam were selected for labor. Their mother, grandparents, and adopted brother Shmuel were killed in the gas chambers. In November, Terez and Miriam were deported to Torgau slave labor camp in Germany. Terez was assigned prisoner number 46077 and Miriam number 46076. In April 1945, Terez and Miriam were liberated by British forces. In 1946, Terez married a fellow survivor, Jakob Mermelstein, and Miriam married Geza Rozner,a survivor from Munkacs. They lived in Gabersee displaced persons camp in Germany. Terez and Jakob emigrated to the US in 1948. Miriam and Geza went to Israel.
Cutwork pillow sham with scalloped trim and embroidered Roszi recovered postwar by a Hungarian Jewish woman
Object
Scallop edged pillow sham Embroidered pillowcase owned by Terez Gruenberger, that was recovered by her sister Miriam after the war. It was made by their mother Roszi and is embroidered Roszi. This and other family valuables were entrusted to a neighbor in Munkacs, Hungary (Mukecheve, Ukraine) before the family was deported to Auschwitz-Birkenau killing center. Terez lived with Roszi, Miriam, her maternal grandparents, Ludvik and Zeni Gruenberger, and her adopted brother, in Mukecheve when it was annexed by Hungary and renamed Munkacs. In March 1944, Germany occupied Hungary. In April, Terez and her family were moved into a Jewish ghetto. In May, they were deported to Auschwitz-Birkenau, where 23 year old Terez and 21 year old Miriam were selected for labor. Their mother, grandparents, and adopted brother Shmuel were killed in the gas chambers. In November, Terez and Miriam were deported to Torgau slave labor camp in Germany. Terez was assigned prisoner number 46077 and Miriam number 46076. In April 1945, Terez and Miriam were liberated by British forces. In 1946, Terez married a fellow survivor, Jakob Mermelstein, and Miriam married Geza Rozner,a survivor from Munkacs. They lived in Gabersee displaced persons camp in Germany. Terez and Jakob emigrated to the US in 1948. Miriam and Geza went to Israel.