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Wedding of Czech Jewish survivors in Podmokly, Czechoslovakia.

Photograph | Digitized | Photograph Number: 64673

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    Wedding of Czech Jewish survivors in Podmokly, Czechoslovakia.
    Wedding of Czech Jewish survivors in Podmokly, Czechoslovakia.

Pictured (left to right) are Matilda (nee Scheiner) and her husband Beila, Bella (nee Scheiner) and her husband David Perl, and Manci Scheiner.

    Overview

    Caption
    Wedding of Czech Jewish survivors in Podmokly, Czechoslovakia.

    Pictured (left to right) are Matilda (nee Scheiner) and her husband Beila, Bella (nee Scheiner) and her husband David Perl, and Manci Scheiner.
    Date
    1946 February 16
    Locale
    Podmokly, Czechoslovakia
    Photo Credit
    United States Holocaust Memorial Museum, courtesy of Rachel Pearl Bitan

    Rights & Restrictions

    Photo Source
    United States Holocaust Memorial Museum
    Copyright: United States Holocaust Memorial Museum
    Provenance: Rachel Pearl Bitan

    Keywords & Subjects

    Administrative Notes

    Biography
    Bella Scheiner (later Pearl) was born on August 16, 1920 in Khust, Czechoslovakia to Jewish parents Eliezer (Lazar) Scheiner (b. Sighet) and Czerna (Sharona) Bronstein (b. Bustyahauza[?], Austria). She had seven siblings: Sidi, Berta, Flora, Manci, Shmilu, Mathilda (Mati), and Emil. Sidi had four daughters: Tuti, Etu, Dvora, and Malka. Bella and her sisters attended a public school until Jews were no longer allowed to attend, while her brothers attended cheder (religious school). Lazar and Sharona owned a large property which included a store and several apartments.

    In 1944, Bella and her family were sent to the ghetto in Khust, where they stayed for a month before being deported to Auschwitz. Bella spent two months in Auschwitz. Then she, her sisters Manci and Matie, and Sidi’s daughters Tuti and Malka were all sent to the labor camp Reichenbach (a sub-camp of Gross Rosen). There, Bella worked for seven months in the Telefunken electronics factory. From there, they were sent to Porta, an underground military factory. Finally they were transported by cattle car toward Zalswiegel, where they were liberated by American forces in April 1945. The three sisters and two nieces had managed to stay together through the entire period. They returned to Teplice-Shanov in the Czech Republic. Matie married Beilu Grunberger. Beilu opened a photography studio, and they shared their apartment with Bella and Mancie. Tuti and Malka left for Sighet to look for family members and found that their mother; siblings Sidi, Berta, Flora, and Emil; and their Aunt Berta had not survived.

    While working at Beilu’s photography studio, Bella met David (Hersh David) Perl (b. November 3, 1922 in Slotvina, Czechoslovakia). He had been married previously, but had lost both his wife and child during the war. Bella and David married on February 16, 1946, in Teplice Shanhou. They travelled to the Gabersee D.P. camp, where their daughter Rachel was born on March 24, 1947. After nearly three years in Gabersee, they immigrated to the United States and settled in New York, where their last name was changed to Pearl. After working as a watchmaker and salesman, David opened his own home improvement store, called P+Z. They had two more children, Lawrence and Menachem. Rachel grew up in New York City and came to Israel in 1967 as a volunteer, where she met her future husband. They were married in 1971 and have three children. Bella and David eventually came to Israel as well. Bella Scheiner died in Jerusalem on March 2012.

    David (Hersh Duvid) Perl was born November 3, 1922 in Solotvina, Czechoslovakia), the son of Menachem Perl and Rahel Golda Beck. He had seven siblings: Chaya Ita, Rivka, Nissel Susya, Alexander (Sender), Nachum, and Chana. He married and had a child before the start of the war. Around 1942, David was sent to forced labor in Hungary, possibly in a salt mine. When he was captured by the Russian army, he volunteered to join them. While he was serving, his wife and child were sent to Auschwitz, where they were killed. David remained with the army until the end of the war. Of his siblings, only Rivka , Alexander, and Chana survived. His brother Nahum was sent to the coal mines to work in Komaron. Later, he went to Budapest and infiltrated the Nazi party as a member of the Jewish underground, but his Jewish identity was discovered and he was drowned in the Danube River.

    On February 16, 1946, David married Bella Scheiner inTeplice Shanhou, Czechoslovakia. They travelled to the Gabersee displaced persons camp, where their daughter Rachel was born on March 24, 1947. After nearly three years in Gabersee, they immigrated to the United States and settled in New York, where their last name was changed to Pearl. After working as a watchmaker and salesman, David opened his own home improvement store, called P+Z. They had two more children, Lawrence and Menachem.
    Record last modified:
    2022-04-06 00:00:00
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