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Katherine A. Holocaust testimony (HVT-2024)

Title
Katherine A. Holocaust testimony (HVT-2024) [videorecording] / interviewed by Joni-Sue Blinderman, March 26, 1992.
Created
New York, N.Y. : A Living Memorial to the Holocaust-Museum of Jewish Heritage, 1992.
Physical Description
1 videorecording (1 hr., 42 min.) : col.
Language
English
Notes
Related publication: Carl Lutz und die Juden von Budapest / Theo Tschy ; Vorwort von Simon Wiesenthal. -- Zürich : Verlag Neue Zürcher Zeitung, c1995.
Related publication: Nur das Gerwissen : Carl Lutz und seine Budapester Aktion : Geschichte und Porträt / Alexander Grossmen. -- Wald : Im Waldgut, c1986.
Related publication: The man who stopped the trains to Auschwitz : George Mantello, El Salvador, and Switzerland's finest hour / David Kranzler; with a foreward by Joseph I. Lieberman. -- Syracuse, N.Y. : Syracuse University Press, c2000.
Associated material: Adler, Katherine. Interview 7804. Visual History Archive, USC Shoah Foundation. Access at https://vha.usc.edu.
Access and use
This testimony may not be used for commercial purposes without prior approval of the donor or her son and daughter until 2020.
Summary
Videotape testimony of Katherine A., who was born in Budapest, Hungary in 1915. She recalls attending college in Grenoble and Paris due to antisemitic restrictions in Hungary; returning to visit her parents on September 1, 1939; not being able to leave due to the outbreak of war; organizing a French culture club; participating in a theater troupe; marriage in 1941; her husband's service in a Hungarian slave labor battalion beginning in April 1942 (she never saw him again); teaching Hungarian to the Swiss ambassador and his family; German occupation in March 1944; receiving protection from the Swiss ambassador; the Swiss consul, Carl Lutz, inviting her to live at the consulate; Miklós Krausz, the Palestine representative, and his wife also living there; reproducing thousands of passports with assistance from George Mantello, first secretary of the El Salvador consulate, which were distributed to Jews by Zionists; a non-Jewish friend warning her in November of her parents' imminent deportation; Lutz allowing them to join her; liberation by Soviet troops; learning her husband was killed; emigration to Paris in 1947, then the United States in 1949; marriage; and her parents joining her in 1950. Mrs. A. shows photographs and documents.
Format
Archives or Manuscripts
Added to Catalog
June 01, 2002
References
Katherine A. Holocaust Testimony (HVT-2024). Fortunoff Video Archive for Holocaust Testimonies, Yale University Library.
Cite as
Katherine A. Holocaust Testimony (HVT-2024). Fortunoff Video Archive for Holocaust Testimonies, Yale University Library.
Genre/Form
Oral histories (document genres)
Citation

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