Judiska församlingen i Göteborg, E 10

  • Handlingar ang Flyktingkontorets i Göteborg verksamhet
Identifier
Judiska församlingen i Göteborg, E 10
Language of Description
English
Dates
1949 - 1956
Level of Description
File
Languages
  • Swedish
Scripts
  • Latin
Source
EHRI

Extent and Medium

A folder (within file E 5) containing textual material.

Biographical History

In 1933, the Jewish Community of Gothenburg, like many of its counterparts elsewhere, formed a relief committee in order to raise funds and carry out relief work of different forms for refugees from Nazi Germany. Until 1936, the committee spent nearly all of its funds on so-called travel aid, i.e., grants given to refugees to assist in them leaving Sweden to emigrate further. However, since 1936, most funds were used to support refugees in Sweden. Individual members of the Jewish Community in Gothenburg also helped refugees privately and through organizations like the Refugee Office in Gothenburg (Flyktingkontoret i Göteborg). After the war, a joint local non-confessional committee was formed in order to carry out aid and help rehabilitate Holocaust survivors who had come to the Gothenburg area at the end of the war, and in July 1945, the Regional Committee for the Victims of the Nazi Concentration Camps (Göteborgs länskommitté för koncentrationslägrens offer). These local committees also received financial support from the Swedish government, the Gothenburg municipality, the Jewish community of Stockholm, and American organizations, not least the American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee, which had a branch office in Stockholm.

Scope and Content

File E10 (in fact, part of volume E 5) contains a few records, ten documents, concerning the activities of the Refugee Office of Gothenburg (Flyktingkontoret i Göteborg) between 1949 and 1956. Most of the documents are accounts of the office’s activities and calculations of how many refugees have emigrated to different countries, such as the USA. There is also documentation regarding the office (Stigbergstorget 4, Gothenburg) and the director (Dr Otto Schütz).

Conditions Governing Access

Permission is required and should be obtained in advance. Applications are made to the Jewish Community of Gothenburg.

Finding Aids

  • An index is available on request from the Regional State Archives in Gothenburg.

Rules and Conventions

EHRI Guidelines for Description v.1.0