Category:SS Palestine May44 (subject)

From 4 Enoch: : The Online Encyclopedia of Second Temple Judaism, and Christian and Islamic Origins
Jump to navigation Jump to search

SS Palestine (May 1944)

Overview

In 1944 the Italian government authorized two transports to Palestine, one in May 1944, the other in July 1944. The transports were made mostly of former internees from Ferramonti or other camps who had been liberated in Southern and Central Italy.

In the same period, in July 1944, around 1000 Jewish refugees chose to go from Naples to the United States (Fort Ontario).

The Children

Among the 254 passengers were 43 children.

The Pentcho Ship (20)

These 20 children were part of a group of Jewish refugees who from Bratislava went to Rhodes and were deported to Ferramonti. All of them were liberated at Ferramonti in Sep 1943, except the Ehrlich Bros. who had been transferred with their parents to Monteroduni (near Campobasso), wento into hiding and reunited with the rest of the group only at a later stage.

  1. Chaviva Blumenfeld (1940)
  2. Josef Breuer (1928)
  3. Judith Breuer (1930)
  4. Ilse Breuer (1932)
  5. Liane Breuer (1934)
  6. Liselotte Breuer (1936)
  7. Walter Ehrlich (1930)
  8. Benito Ehrlich (1942)
  9. Karol Farkas (1929)
  10. Sulamit Friedmann (1943)
  11. Felicia Goldfinger (1941)
  12. Siegfrid Goldfinger (1927)
  13. Ernesto Lebovits (1942)
  14. Lewi Lebovits(1939)
  15. Adriana Lichtschein (1940)
  16. Leopold Spiegel (1929)
  17. Alessandro Wald (1943)
  18. Eva Weingarten (1943)
  19. Zewe Weingarten (1940)
  20. Giuseppe Wesel (1943)

Other Internees liberated at Ferramonti

  1. Margot Buckspan (1930) <Germany-Ferramonti>
  2. Mosè Isak Degen (1943) <Poland-Ferramonti>
  3. Helene Goldberger (1943) <Ferramonti>
  4. Alessandro Levi <Belgrag-Spalato-Ferramonti>
  5. Paolo Skopal (1936) Malaski, Czechia, <Ljubljana-Ferramonti>

From Curzola

These 13 children were part of a group of Yugoslavian Jews (from Croatia and Bosnia), who were interned on the island of Korcula under Italian occupation. In October 1943 they reached safely southern Italy.

  1. Leone Alcalaj (1939) <Bosnia-Curzola>
  2. Mordechai Gaon (1942) <Croatia-Curzola>
  3. Raffaele Gaon (1942) <Croatia-Curzola>
  4. Dagmar Klein (1938) <Zagreb-Curzola>
  5. Pietro Klein (1936) <Croatia-Curzola>
  6. Davide Maestro (1929) <Sarajevo-Curzola>
  7. Masalta Maestro (1929) <Sarajevo-Curzola>
  8. Isacco Maestro (1930) <Sarajevo-Curzola>
  9. Pietro Marberger (1938) <Croatia-Curzola>
  10. Ruth Milhofer (1938) <Zagreb-Curzola>
  11. Boris Njemirovski (1938) <Croatia-Curzola>
  12. Dragutin Polic (1943) <Sarajevo-Curzola>
  13. Miriam Polic (1936) <Sarajevo-Curzola>

From other camps

  1. Eleonora Dominitz (1933) <Poland-Acri>
  2. Ruben Fried (1933) <Zagabria-Spalato-Vicenza>
  3. Milan Hirschl (1928) <Spalato-Treviso> (???) or Ivan? Milan apparently fled to Switzerland
  4. Zelico Hirscler (1928) <Spalato-Parma>
  5. Velimir Sorger (1929) Spalato-Treviso

External links

Pages in category "SS Palestine May44 (subject)"

The following 34 pages are in this category, out of 34 total.

1