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Name

Born:

N/A

Place of Birth:

N/A

Date of Interview:

30/09/92

Place of Interview:

Interviewed by:

Name (Clickable)

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INTERVIEW:

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Born:

00/00/0000

Place of Birth:

Zagreb

<name>

Born:

00/00/0000

Place of Birth:

Institution:

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Collection:

Unrestricted - Fortunoff Video Archive

Date of Interview:

30/09/92

Interviewed By:

Joni-Sue Blinderman

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View Tape 19

Interview Summary

Videotape testimony of Mary L., who was born in Zagreb, Austro-Hungarian Monarchy (now Croatia) in 1910. She recalls the beginning of World War I; her father's military service; living in Vienna from 1916 to 1918; the family's move to Berlin in 1926; working for an insurance company; Hitler's ascent to power; losing her job due to anti-Jewish laws; the anti-Jewish boycott in April 1933; returning to Zagreb; studying English in Britain in 1935; marriage to a Catholic; German invasion in April 1941; moving to the United States Consulate where her husband worked; anti-Jewish measures; denunciation by a worker; evading arrest due to her husband's connections; obtaining a passport which identified her as Catholic; her husband bribing a police officer to conceal his Serbian nationality; obtaining safe passes from the Gestapo; traveling alone to Frankfurt (her husband accompanied the United States Consul), then Bern; driving with her husband and the Consul to Lisbon via France and Spain; boarding a United States ship; and arriving in New York in August 1941. Mrs. L. discusses her father's internment in Italy; his forging documents; his suicide when faced with deportation; and her mother's emigration to the United States after the war.
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