Sewing case with six ornate gold mending tools
Extent and Medium
a.: Height: 2.620 inches (6.655 cm) | Width: 5.000 inches (12.7 cm) | Depth: 0.630 inches (1.6 cm)
b.: Height: 3.120 inches (7.925 cm) | Width: 0.630 inches (1.6 cm) | Depth: 0.380 inches (0.965 cm)
c.: Height: 0.880 inches (2.235 cm) | Width: 0.630 inches (1.6 cm) | Depth: 0.630 inches (1.6 cm)
d.: Height: 3.620 inches (9.195 cm) | Width: 1.500 inches (3.81 cm) | Depth: 0.120 inches (0.305 cm)
e.: Height: 3.370 inches (8.56 cm) | Width: 0.630 inches (1.6 cm) | Depth: 0.250 inches (0.635 cm)
f.: Height: 2.250 inches (5.715 cm) | Width: 0.120 inches (0.305 cm)
g.: Height: 1.750 inches (4.445 cm)
Creator(s)
- Sarah Kirsch (Subject)
- Bernice Kirsch (Subject)
- Morris Kirsch (Subject)
Biographical History
Bronia Bergman was born in Poland in 1917 or 1918. In 1945, following the end of World War II, she was a displaced person in Feldafing, Germany, where she met and married Morris Kirsch, who was also a displaced person born in Poland. They were then housed as displaced persons in Ansbach, Germany. They had a daughter, Sarah, in 1946. In 1950, the family emigrated to the United States. The Kirches had two more children, Albert and Rosalie. Bronia, who had Americanized her name to Bernice, died, age 56, July 23, 1973.
Moshe Kirsch was born on March 28, 1913, in Rachowa, a town of approximately 500 in the Kielce Gubernia district of Poland. A close-knit community of about 100 Jews lived in a separate section of town. Moshe’s parents were Sarah and Zadic. Moshe was the middle child of five. He had two brothers, Isaac and Naftoli, and two sisters, Tova and Rachel. Aunts, uncles, and cousins also lived in the town. Moshe’s father was a third-generation tailor. The family did piecework for a local garment mill. They lived in one room, which also served as their work room. The family was poor and struggled to have enough food. They saved all week to have a Sabbath meal on Friday night of challah and fish. A public school was available, but Moshe’s father wanted him to have a religious education in a Jewish heder instead. When Moshe became Bar Mitzvah at age 13, his education ended. In 1938, the family moved to Łódź but had trouble finding work and lived in one room there as well. Moshe was active in political organizations, including a Socialist group. He moved to Oberschlesien near the German border to try to make his own living, but soon returned to Łódź. In 1939, Germany invaded Poland. Moshe went to Warsaw to help defend the city. He helped dig trenches and build barricades. After the city fell and Germany occupied Poland, the Polish men who had come to Warsaw from Łódź to defend the city were marched by German soldiers back to Łódź. Moshe was not recognized as a Jew, so he was marched with them. The anti-Semitism that was already common in Poland was becoming more extreme. On his way back to Łódź from Warsaw, Moshe witnessed a Jewish man, distinctive because of his orthodox religious garb, beaten to death by a Polish mob. In 1940, the Germans established the Łódź ghetto in the poor Jewish neighborhood on the north side of the city, where Moshe’s family already lived. By this time, Moshe’s brother, Isaac, had married and had a daughter. Moshe’s sister, Tova, was also married and had two daughters. Moshe and other family members worked for the Germans in a factory making military uniforms. They received ration cards that provided them with more food than they had been able to afford before the ghetto was established. Moshe’s brother Naftoli got married in the ghetto and had one child who was born there. In 1943, Moshe was deported from the Łódź ghetto to the Skarzysko-Kamienna forced labor camp, where he worked in a factory making bullets. He never saw his family again. Morris was housed a mile from the factory. 50 inmates lived in a barrack with hard platforms for sleeping and no blankets. Food rations consisted of a watery vegetable soup and a quarter pound of bread. Jewish guards known as kapos treated the inmates with cruelty and withheld food capriciously. In 1944, as the Soviet army moved across Poland, the Germans evacuated the Skarzysko-Kamienna camp westward to the Czestochowa forced labor camp, where Moshe was again put to work in an ammunitions factory. Here, the kapos withheld food from the inmates to supplement their own food rations, allowing some inmates to starve to death. In January 1945, the Germans packed thousands of the laborers, including Moshe, into railroad freight cars, and transported them to the Buchenwald concentration camp in Germany. The transport took two weeks and many on board perished. At the camp, many inmates died of the cold each night, and more fell dead from the cold each day while standing outdoors in rows during long roll calls. Moshe was among the inmates who were put to work in the nearby city of Weimar, clearing rubble from Allied bombings. It seemed to Moshe that the German guards were demoralized by the course of the war, and thus did not stop the workers from salvaging food and other items to take back to the camp. On April 6, 1945, the Germans took Moshe and other inmates on a death march that lasted 22 days. They arrived at Dachau concentration camp on April 28, only hours before the camp was liberated by the United States Army. Moshe initially recuperated in Saint Ottilien near Munich. From May to December, 1945, he lived in the displaced persons camp in Feldafing, Germany, where he met and married Bronia Bergman, also a displaced person from Poland. During that time, he learned that his family had perished in the Auschwitz concentration camp. He and Bronia were housed as displaced persons in Ansbach, Germany. Instead of living in a DP camp, they were given rooms in the home of a German family. In 1946, Morris and Bronia had a daughter, Sarah. In 1950, the family emigrated to the United States, sponsored by the Congregation of Moses in Kalamazoo, Michigan. The Kirsches had two more children, born in the 1950s, Albert and Rosalie. Moshe, who had Americanized his name to Morris, died, age 89, March 22, 2002.
Sarah Kirsch was born in 1946 in Ansbach, Germany. Her parents were Bronia (Bernice, nee Bergman, b. 1918) and Moshe (Morris, b. 1913). Sarah’s parents had met in 1945 in the Feldafing displaced persons camp, and had married there. At the time of Sarah’s birth, the Kirsches were being housed as displaced persons in the home of a German family in Ansbach. The Kirsches emigrated to the United States in 1950. Sarah has two siblings, Albert and Rosalie, both born in America in the 1950s.
Archival History
The sewing kit was donated to the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum in 2008 by Sarah Kirsch, the daughter of Bernice and Morris Kirsch.
Acquisition
United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Collection, Gift of Sarah Kirsch
Scope and Content
Sewing case, with a Parisian jeweler's plate, with a needle case, sewing needle, thimble, scissors, seam ripper, and darning needle received by Morris Kirsch while he was living in the displaced persons camp in Ansbach, Germany, after World War II. The kit was originally from France. In 1939, when the Germans occupied Łódź, Poland, Morris was assigned as forced labor in the ghetto making uniforms for the German army. In 1943, the Germans transferred him through a series of forced labor and concentration camps. He was liberated by American troops in April 1945. He was sent to the Feldafing displaced persons camp, where he met and married Bronia Bergman. The couple was then housed in Ansbach. They had a daughter, Sarah, in 1946. The family emigrated to the United States in 1950.
Conditions Governing Access
No restrictions on access
Conditions Governing Reproduction
No restrictions on use
Physical Characteristics and Technical Requirements
a. Oval, black/green, dense plastic case with gold-colored, metal hinges and a push clasp for the clamshell opening. Exterior top center has gold-colored, impressed metal inlay of a crown. Interior is molded on lid and case body to fit the individual items. The interior hinges are engraved with a botanical design. Attached to the interior lower front edge is a gold-colored metal plate engraved with French text. b. Elongated, gold-colored, metal cylinder with cap. The bulbous ends are designed to look like a crown, so that when the needle case is closed it resembles a crown and scepter. There are intricate, engraved designs: botanical on ends, geometric along shaft. There is a band around the shaft near the middle where the cap end rests when joined. The area on the shaft that gets covered by the cap is smooth. c. Gold-colored, metal thimble with geometric design etched around the open end. d. Small, metal, sewing scissors with oval, gold-colored finger holes and silver-colored blades.There is an engraved botanical design on the shanks and an engraved geometric design on the joint. e. Elongated, gold-colored metal needle with a gold-colored, bulbous handle resembling a crown at one end, and a silver-colored, pointed shaft at the other. Handle has engraved design: geometric on widest part, botanical where it narrows to meet the shaft. Shaft has an engraved, diamond-shaped design at the top before it meets the handle. f. Elongated, gold-colored metal shaft with a narrow slot along one half, two small bands at the middle, and a small knob at the end opposite the slot. g. Slender, silver-colored needle with a narrow slot at one end and a point at the other.
a. interior, bottom front, engraved on clasp lock plate : Le Cointe 26 Place Vendôme
Subjects
- Jewish refugees--Germany.
- World War War, 1939-1945--Refugees--Germany.
- Jewish families--Germany.
- Refugee camps--Germany--Ansbach (Mittelfranken)
Genre
- Object
- Tools and Equipment