Erich Kulka

Identifier
000451
Dates
1911-1995
Type of Entity
Person

History

Erich Schon, born in the village of Vsetin, Moravia (today in the Czech Republic), 18 February 1911, and died in Jerusalem, 12 July 1995, was the son of Malvina and Siegbert Schon. After World War II Schon changed his last name to Kulka, the last name of his first wife, Elly Kulka, who did not survive the Holocaust. A history of the arrests of Erich Kulka begins in July 1939, first with arrest by the Gestapo in Brno and afterwards with imprisonment in the Dachau, Sachsenhausen and Neuengamme camps until November 1942, when he was transferred to Auschwitz. Kulka was given the number 73043 and sent to work on the maintenance and repair of machinery and machines in Auschwitz II (Birkenau). In January 1945 with the approach of the Red Army, during the evacuation of the inmates by train from Auschwitz, Erich and his son Otto reached the Moravská Ostrava station and escaped, finding a hiding place in the homes of Czech friends in the Moravia area. Erich Kulka's experiences during the war are described in his book, "From Suffering to Resistance".

Immediately after the end of the war, Erich Kulka and his friend Ota Kraus wrote "Death Factory", the first book about Auschwitz-Birkenau. Their book was first published in the Czech language in 1946, and since then it has been translated into many languages. Additionally, Kulka appeared as a witness in trials against war criminals conducted in Poland in 1946-1947. During the 1960s Kulka continued to testify at the trials of SS personnel who committed crimes in Auschwitz.

After the Soviet occupation of Czechoslovakia in 1968, Erich Kulka made aliya to Israel and continued his research activity at Hebrew University and at Yad Vashem.

Places

  • Theresienstadt, Auschwitz camp, Prague

General Context

Persecution of the Czech Jews during the Holocaust

Rules and Conventions

EHRI Guidelines for Description v.1.0

Dates of Creation and Deletion

2014-06-10

Sources

  • YV archives sselected by JL