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Name
Born:
N/A
Place of Birth:
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Date of Interview:
23/05/04
Place of Interview:
Interviewed by:
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INTERVIEW:
<name>
Born:
00/00/0000
Place of Birth:
Riga
Institution:
<partnerName>
Collection:
Date of Interview:
23/05/04
Interviewed By:
Dr Rosalyn Livshin

Interview Summary
Waldemar Ginsburg was born in 1922 in Riga. His father, Michael Ginsburg, came from a secular Jewish family from Vilna. He became a sailor and sailed the world. He was based in Marseilles. His mother Pauline Strom, came from an Orthodox family in Kovno but she turned away from religion on attending University to study accountancy. She married Michael in 1919 and they went to live in Marseilles, where Michael worked as a clerk to a shipping company. Waldemar lived for 6 years in Marseilles but his parents separated and he and his mother came back to her parents in Kovno. Waldemar attended a German School there. He had no trouble at school until Hitler came to power in Germany and attitudes changed. The Jewish pupils left and he was sent to a Lithuanian School. So he spoke French, Yiddish to his grandparents, German, Lithuanian and later Russian. His mother remarried a man from Russia called Samuel Garzon and they lived together with her parents. Waldemar went to University after school but found a great deal of antisemitism amongst certain students there. He suffered verbal abuse.
In the summer of 1940 the Russians invaded. Property was confiscated, businesses nationalized and the middle class bourgeoisie were earmarked for deportation to Siberia. Waldemar remained at university and suffered less from anti-Semitism since the pro- Nazis went into hiding. His step-father remained in business but this was temporary. Just as transportation started to Siberia the following year, the Germans invaded on 22 June 1941. The family debated fleeing east but opted to stay. Life quickly deteriorated. The Germans introduced anti Jewish laws and on 15 Aug 1941 forced the Jews into a ghetto in the Slabodka district of the town. They shared a little house with 3 families. Food rations were meagre and the ghetto was run by the Jewish Council and Jewish police. The able bodied were sent to work and this enabled people to barter and obtain more food. Waldemar worked first in the airport, then for an army construction unit repairing buildings and then as a plumber's mate. This was the best job. On 4 Oct 1941 the hospital in the ghetto was burnt down and all those inside killed. On 28 Oct 1941 there was a big action and 10,000 Jews were deported from the ghetto and shot into a mass grave at a nearby fortification at Ninesfort. This reduced the numbers from 28,000 to 18,000. Many women and children were taken including a number of Waldemar's family.
Life continued more normally after this with groups going out to work and a ghetto infrastructure operating as best it could. People did not die of starvation but more of natural causes such as his grandmother. This changed in the Autumn of 1943 when the SS took over from the SM. The ghetto was renamed a concentration camp and work groups were taken out to other camps. Waldemar went to work for Heeresbau in Sanciai, a suburb of Kovno. He was there when the terrible Kinderaktion took place on 28 March 1944. This happened in all the camps. Children under 14, the elderly, weak and infirm were deported and killed. Those remaining became very despondent. In July 1944 Waldemar was transported to Stutthoff, where he was separated from his mother and sent on to Dachau Camp no 1. He worked as a plumber and then when camp 1 was quarantined, he was transferred to Camp 3, where he had to work constructing underground bunkers for the firm Moll. This was much harder work but those in charge of the camp were not as strict. In the Spring of 1945 they returned to Camp 1 and back to plumbing. He was then lucky to become a store keeper and did not have to leave the camp for work. He would read newspapers and they knew what was happening.
In April 1945 they were taken on a death march in groups of 100. They marched for a week and then were abandoned. They were liberated by the allies. Waldemar by now had contracted an infectious disease and was hospitalized for 6 months near Munich. He was the only member of his family to survive. He met Ibolya from Hungary and they married in 1946. Waldemar took a course in radio technology for 1 year and then became an assistant teacher on the course until Oct 1948. They lived in an apartment near Munich. In the meantime cousins in England had tracked him down and they sent a work permit for him to come to work in their textile mill in Elland, Yorkshire. This was Thornton Textiles. They came and stayed with the family until 1950 when they moved into their own home. Waldemar became a manager at the mill and was warmly welcomed by the workers. He later moved to Kagan textile mill until he retired.

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