Difference between revisions of "Category:Holocaust Refugee Children, China (subject)"

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== Overview ==
== Overview ==


[[File:Jewish School China.jpg|700px]]
[[File:Jewish School China.jpg|700px]]


A school class of Jewish refugee children, including [[Hannelore Mansbacher]] (seated 2nd row, on the end at far right), at Transition Upper school on Kinchow Road in Shanghai, China. (USHMM)
A school class of Jewish refugee children, including [[Hannelore Mansbacher]] (seated 2nd row, on the end at far right), at Transition Upper school on Kinchow Road in Shanghai, China. (Source: USHMM)




[[File:Boy Scouts China.jpg|700px]]
[[File:Boy Scouts China.jpg|700px]]


A troop of boy scouts stands at attention during a gathering in Shanghai.
A troop of boy scouts stands at attention during a gathering in Shanghai. (Source: USHMM)


== The Children ==
== The Children ==

Revision as of 20:10, 20 July 2021

Holocaust Refugee Children, China

Overview

Jewish School China.jpg

A school class of Jewish refugee children, including Hannelore Mansbacher (seated 2nd row, on the end at far right), at Transition Upper school on Kinchow Road in Shanghai, China. (Source: USHMM)


Boy Scouts China.jpg

A troop of boy scouts stands at attention during a gathering in Shanghai. (Source: USHMM)

The Children

Memoirs by John G. Stoessinger (1978)

Lorie Bellak came to China in 1939, when she was ten, from the Silesian city of Ratibor, Germany (modern-day Racibórz, Poland)

Lorie Bellak, born March 17, 1929 in Ratibor, Germany (Raciborz, Poland), describes her childhood in Ratibor; the growing antisemitism she experienced; her memories of Kristallnacht; her father's arrest and imprisonment in Buchenwald; her family's decision to leave Germany; their sea journey to Shanghai, China; her first impressions of Shanghai; her experiences in the Hong Kew ghetto; her experiences with the Jewish community there; her memories of attacks by United States airplanes; meeting her husband; working at the US Army post exchange after the war ended; immigrating to the United States in 1948 with her husband; and her family life in Cleveland, OH and San Francisco, CA.


  • Sigmund Tobias (M / Germany, 1932) -- <Memoirs> "Strange Haven: A Jewish Childhood in Wartime Shanghai" (2009).

BIBLIOGRAPHY :

  • David Kranzler, Japanese, Nazis & Jews: The Jewish refugee community of Shanghai, 1938-1945 (1976)
  • Guang Pan, A Study of Jewish Refugees in China, 1933–1945

FILMOGRAPHY :

Media in category "Holocaust Refugee Children, China (subject)"

The following 6 files are in this category, out of 6 total.