Soap from Bergen-Belsen concentration camp
http://lod.ehri-project-test.eu/instantiations/us-005578-irn508619-eng-irn508619_eng an entity of type: Instantiation
Soap from Bergen-Belsen concentration camp
Erwin Dankner was born December 1, 1928, in Budapest, Hungary. His parents were Catherina (nee Braun, 6/1/1897-10/24/1976) and Henry (10/7/1897-12-1/25/1971), who was born in Horodenka, Poland ( now Ukraine). Erwin had one younger brother, Anthony, born December 18, 1929). Henry was a prominent jeweler who had been honored for his craftsmanship. In 1939, one of their regular customers, whom Erwin assumed was Jewish because of the Star of David charm on her bracelet, gave them a name and phone number to call “if/when things got nasty.” In 1944, Erwin was conscripted to a forced labor camp but broke his collar bone and was sent home for 5 weeks to recover. At that point, the family retrieved the phone number from their safe. It turned out to be a contact at Gestapo headquarters. The contact helped the family join a group of Jews who were taken by train out of Budapest in June 1944. This was part of a transfer for money negotiated between the German SS and Rezső Kasztner of the Relief and Rescue Committee of Budapest. They were first taken to Bergen-Belsen concentration camp. In August 1944, the Dankner’s were part of a group who were transferred to safety in Switzerland. The family lived in Switzerland until 1948 when they emigrated to the United States. Their father was able to re-establish the family jewelry business, first in Switzerland, then in New York. Erwin married Helen Kallus, a Czech Jew who had survived the Munkac ghetto and Auschwitz, and emigrated to the US in 1949.
Soap from Bergen-Belsen concentration camp