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Julius and Fanny Goldstein pose with their son, Bohus, and members of his family.

Photograph | Digitized | Photograph Number: 26130

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    Julius and Fanny Goldstein pose with their son, Bohus, and members of his family.
    Julius and Fanny Goldstein pose with their son, Bohus, and members of his family.  

Pictured from left to right are Fanny, Wilma Goldstein, Michael, Max Redlich (Wilma's father), Julius and Bohus.  Bohus and Wilma (Redlich) Goldstein had two children, Eva and Michael.  The family lived in Olomouc, where Bohus worked for the Prague autoworks.  They all perished during the war.

    Overview

    Caption
    Julius and Fanny Goldstein pose with their son, Bohus, and members of his family.

    Pictured from left to right are Fanny, Wilma Goldstein, Michael, Max Redlich (Wilma's father), Julius and Bohus. Bohus and Wilma (Redlich) Goldstein had two children, Eva and Michael. The family lived in Olomouc, where Bohus worked for the Prague autoworks. They all perished during the war.
    Date
    1940
    Locale
    Benesov, [Bohemia] Czechoslovakia
    Variant Locale
    Beneschau
    Czech Republic
    Photo Credit
    United States Holocaust Memorial Museum, courtesy of Ruth Wottitzky Binder

    Rights & Restrictions

    Photo Source
    United States Holocaust Memorial Museum
    Copyright: United States Holocaust Memorial Museum
    Provenance: Ruth Wottitzky Binder

    Keywords & Subjects

    Administrative Notes

    Biography
    Ruth Binder (born Ruth Wottitzky) is the daughter of Richard and Jozi (Goldstein) Wottitzky. She was born January 17, 1926 in Windigsteig, Austria, where her parents ran the Wottitzky family general store. At the urging of an acquaintance, Ruth's father applied for American visas in the spring of 1938. With the escalation of the Sudeten crisis in September of that year, the German authorities forced the Wottitzkys to leave Windigsteig. The family went to Vienna, where after six months they received their American visas. From Vienna they travelled through Switzerland to France. On April 15, 1939 they set sail aboard the SS Queen Mary for New York. Upon their arrival in the United States the family settled in Washington, DC. Ruth's maternal grandparents, Julius and Fanny Goldstein, lived in Sevetin, Czechoslovakia, where they owned a general store and raised eight children: Bohus, Ruzena, Klara, Marie, Jozi (Ruth's mother), Olga, Rudolf and Anna. By 1941 all of the children but Rudolf had married, and all but Jozi lived in or around Sevetin. During the German occupation of Bohemia and Moravia, Ruth's aunts, uncles and grandparents were deported to Theresienstadt, and from there, most were sent to Auschwitz. Three survived the war: Fanny, Anna and Rudolf. However, Rudolf succumbed to illness and malnutrition shortly after the liberation at a hospital in Dachau. Fanny and Anna subsequently returned to their hometown, where Fanny died in 1951.
    Record last modified:
    2004-05-05 00:00:00
    This page:
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