Ephemeride de la Shoah 24 Juin

Publié le par 6 millions de mes freres

24 Juin
1940 250 jeunes juifs de Checiny (Pologne) meurent après leur déportation au camp de travail forcé de Ciezanow. Après l’occupation de Checiny par les Allemands, 3 000 juifs avaient été enfermés dans un ghetto.
1941 170 juifs sont conduits au village de Patryki et tués après que les troupes allemandes eurent occupé Kobryn (Biélorussie).
- Après l’occupation de Kobryn par les troupes soviétiques le 20 septembre 1939, de nombreux juifs provenant des provinces polonaises occupées par les Allemands s’y sont réfugiés. Lors de l’invasion allemande, 8 000 juifs y habitent.
- Les Allemands occupent Kaunas (Lituanie), peuplé de 30 000 juifs. Des nationalistes lituaniens tuent 1 000 d’entre eux, 10 000 autres sont arrêtés et internés au « fort n° 7 ».
1942 Adam Czerniakov, président du conseil juif de Varsovie, est arrêté pour avoir refusé de collaborer avec les Allemands à la déportation des juifs du ghetto.
1943 151 juifs de Vienne (Autriche) sont déportés au camp de concentration de Theresienstadt.

Miksa Deutsch, Bistrita, Romania
June 24, 1897

Miksa was the youngest of four children born to religious Jewish parents. The Deutches lived in the town of Bistrita in Transylvania, a region of Romania that belonged to Hungary until 1918. After 1910, the family lived in nearby Viseu de Sus. In 1922 Miksa moved to Budapest, Hungary, where he and his older brother, Pal, opened a business selling matches. In 1928 Miksa married Kornelia Mahrer.

1933-39: Miksa and Kornelia had three children, whom they raised with a religious education. Miksa and his brother were the sole distributors in Hungary of Swedish-made matches, and the business prospered. In May 1939 the Hungarian government enacted a law that limited the number of Jews who could be employed in Hungarian businesses, forcing Miksa to fire some of his Jewish employees.

1940-44: In 1940 Miksa was conscripted into the Hungarian army's labor service. Two years later, he was forced to surrender control of his business to a brother of the Hungarian prime minister. In October 1944 Miksa began to fear deportation, and he briefly left his labor unit to visit his wife, who gave him a Swedish safe-conduct pass she had received from a friend. When Miksa returned to the factory on October 31, a Hungarian officer tore up his pass and ordered him deported along with the others.

On November 10, 1944, Miksa wrote to his wife that he was being force-marched from Hungary to Austria. He died in the Mauthausen concentration camp in Austria at the age of 47.

Source: www.ushmm.org

Publié dans Politique

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