Category:DP Bari (subject)

From 4 Enoch: : The Online Encyclopedia of Second Temple Judaism, and Christian and Islamic Origins
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Bari DP camp, Italy (see Holocaust Children Studies)

Overview

At the end of WWII, Jewish refugees were temporarily hosted in transit camps in Apulia, which had been established under the aegis of the United Nations and the Allied Forces, with the support of International Jewish organizations. Many of them were Holocaust survivors who were directed from various European places to DP (Displaced Persons) camps established in Bari, Barletta and in several small villages on the Lecce sea coast (the most important ones being Santa Cesarea, Santa Maria al Bagno, Santa Maria di Leuca, Tricase Porto). Those refugees remained in Apulia for shorter or longer periods between 1944 and 1949.

Among the refugees were numerous children. Many babies were born there too.

Children

USHMM

Gail Gepsman Mermelstein is the daughter of Pinkus and Etta (Falakovics) Gipsman (later Gepsman). Pinkus was born in Kielce in 1927 and had seven brothers. On June 18, 1940, nine months after the German invasion of Poland, his family was taken to the ghetto. Pinkus later escaped by digging under the fence. He fled to a nearby farm where he hid briefly in exchange for tending the farmer's cattle. However, after the Germans threatened to kill any farmer who harbored Jews, Pinkus was forced to leave. He then went to Czestochowa, where he was put to work at the HASAG munitions factory, manufacturing shells and bullets. During the course of his forced labor, he was burned by hot oil which left permanent scars on his body. After a year-and-a-half in Czestochowa, Pinkus was deported to Buchenwald, where he first worked in a munitions factory, and later in a warehouse sorting the clothing of prisoners who had perished. Towards the end of the war Pinkus was transferred to Flossenbuerg for a brief period. He was then put on an evacuation transport for Mauthausen. After seventeen days aboard a freight train without adequate food or water, Pinkus was one the few prisoners who remained alive when the train arrived. He was finally liberated at Mauthausen by the American army on May 5, 1945. After several months of recuperation, he made his way to the displaced persons camp in Bari, Italy where he met and married Etta Falakovics.

Rachel Goldfarb (born Rachel Mutterperl) is the daughter of Chevel (Berel) and Dina Mutterperl (b. 1906). She was born on December 2, 1930, in Dokszyce, a small town near the border of Poland and Byelorussia. Rachel had a brother Shlomo born in July 1932. Rachel's mother, Dina owned a dry goods store, and her father sold meat and other foods to a Polish garrison stationed near the Russian border. The family was quite prosperous, Orthodox and Zionist; Rachel attended a Hebrew speaking school. However, she had a Catholic nurse who occasionally brought Rachel with her to church. Though her parents disapproved at the time, this helped save her life later on once she went into hiding. Following the start of World War II, the town came under Soviet occupation. The Soviets confiscated the Mutterperl's businesses, denounced them as capitalists and threatened to deport them to Siberia. However, their lives became much worse following the German occupation during the summer of 1941. They had to wear a Jewish star, and the following winter had to move into a ghetto. Rachel's family managed to escape and go into hiding before the final liquidation. In 1942 most of Dokszyce's 3000 Jews were taken outside the town and shot by the Nazis. Rachel's father was among those killed, but before he perished, he built a double wall in the warehouse attached to their house. This provided a hiding place a few feet wide, big enough for several people. Rachel, Dina and Shlomo remained hidden there for about a week and survived the killing action. Rachel's grandmother stepped out of the shelter to see what was happening and never returned. One day, the Mutterperls heard local townsfolk looting the apartment and planning to move in. Dina realized that she was no longer safe there, and that evening she left accompanied by her children. She left her children temporarily with two different non-Jewish friends while she made plans. However, someone recognized and denounced Shlomo. He was arrested and killed at the age of eight. Having lost one child, Dina feared for Rachel's safety as well. She picked up Rachel and they hid for one night in a tall wheat field and then went to the home of a Christian widow whom her husband had helped before the war. She and her daughter hid them for a few nights in their stove, and gave them new clothing and documents. In the fall of 1943, partisan groups began organizing in the area. Rachel's cousin was a photographer who had been allowed to work outside the ghetto in his studio. He knew members of the partisans and helped Dina contact them. They accepted her as their cook, and Rachel helped cook, clean and load weapons. Throughout the war, she and her mother hid their Jewish identity while at the same time refusing to eat pork. They remained in the woods for about a year. After liberation Dina dug up some valuables she had hidden so that she and Rachel could travel farther west to Poland. However after meeting a Soviet Jewish general who warned them to leave Poland as soon as possible, they proceeded south to Lublin and from there to Italy. They stayed in the Santa Cesarea displaced persons' camp. They originally planned to go to Israel, but after Rachel's aunt in America learned that they were alive, they immigrated to the United States instead, arriving on November 17, 1947.

Refugees