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Date of Interview:

28/06/23

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Place of Birth:

Vienna

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Date of Interview:

28/06/23

Interviewed By:

Dr Bea Lewkowicz

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Interview Summary

Kurt Wick, born Kurt Wickelholz in October 1937 in the 9th Bezirk of Vienna, was the second son of Moritz and Josefine Wickelholz. His father produced leather handbags with his brother. In 1938 his parents tried to emigrate. By chance a Jewish-Italian woman told Kurt's uncle about the possibility of going to Shanghai. She helped them get tickets for a ship departing from Trieste. On 28th August 1939 Kurt's family and his uncle's family arrived in Shanghai, where the local Jewish community had made provisions to help refugees, buying empty warehouses and schools in an area called Hongkew which were turned into housing for the refugees called 'Heime'. When more refugees arrived, American Jewish aid organisations like the Joint and HIAS gave additional support. Kurt remembers that he was never hungry. His father had brought a sewing machine from Vienna and started making handbags which he mainly sold to the Japanese forces who occupied Shanghai. The family managed to move out of the 'Heime' into their own house in an area called the 'restricted sector'. Kurt and his brother went to the Kadoorie School and in the afternoons they played sport or went to the Talmud Torah. After the end of the war, Kurt's maternal aunt arranged for his family to come to London in 1948. She had come to England on a domestic visa. Kurt started his own handbag business after graduating from Hasmonean High School. One of his proudest achievements is that the Queen Mother bought one of his handbags as a Christmas gift for Queen Elizabeth. He met his wife Carol in the late 1950s, they got married and settled with their two daughters in North London. Key words: Vienna. Wickelholz. Koslitschek. Trieste. Lloyd Triestino. Ship Giulio Cesare. Shanghai. Kadoorie School. Headmistress Lucie Hartwich. Heime. Hasmonean School. Sarah Klausner Synagogue. Mondaine handbags.
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