Kurz family papers

Identifier
irn44499
Language of Description
English
Alt. Identifiers
  • 2011.281.1
Dates
1 Jan 1903 - 31 Dec 1959
Level of Description
Item
Languages
  • Dutch
  • English
  • German
  • Polish
  • Hebrew
Source
EHRI Partner

Extent and Medium

boxes

2

Creator(s)

Biographical History

Meilech (Emil) Kurz (1897-1942) was born in Tarnow, Poland to Aron Kurz and Dora Weiss. He had three brothers, Benjamin (1902-1957), Charles, and Michael, and one sister, Lola. His family owned an optical frames business with branches in Austria, Italy, Yugoslavia, and Egypt among other places. By 1915 they had moved to Vienna, Austria to operate the branch there. By 1941, His father Aron, his brothers Benjamin and Charles, and his sister Lola had immigrated to the United States. Klara Biberstein (1908-1946) was born in Husiatyn, Poland (now Ukraine) to Abraham Josef and Sara Biberstein. Her father worked for a firm that exported eggs from Russia to Germany. She had one brother, Eliot, and one sister, Mary. Klara’s mother and brother immigrated to Palestine around 1936. Klara and Meilech married in Vienna in 1934, and had two children, Doriane (1936-2005) and Alfred (b. 1938). In 1939, they moved to Maastricht, Netherlands, where the Dutch branch of the business was located. They moved to another branch in Amsterdam, Netherlands, in 1940. In 1942, the Amsterdam branch was confiscated, and shortly after Meilech and Klara were arrested. On August 6 Meilech was sent to the Vught transit camp. In late October, he was sent to Amersfoort concentration camp and then to Westerbork transit camp on November 7, 1942. During this time, Meilech was able to correspond with his family. Klara contacted officials at the Jewish Committee in Amsterdam to try to keep him from being transported to a death camp. The last letter Klara received from Meilech was from November 10, 1942, written during his deportation to the Auschwitz concentration camp. He was killed on November 13th. Klara and the children hid in Amsterdam with the assistance of non-Jewish neighbors. She received certificates for her and the children to immigrate to Palestine, but was sent to Westerbork on October 19, 1943. Doriane and Alfred joined her there shortly. They were sent to Bergen-Belsen concentration camp on February 15, 1944. They were put on a train to Theresienstadt concentration camp in April 1945, but were liberated by Russian troops near Tröbitz, Germany. They were transferred to Leipzig, Germany and then a displaced persons camp in Maastricht. Klara was very ill with typhus by the time they were liberated. Benjamin and Charles Kurz assisted them to make arrangements to immigrate to the United States. Klara died in March 1946 from breast cancer, and Alfred and Doriane soon moved to Stockholm, Sweden. They emigrated from Goteborg, Sweden to the United States aboard the SS Gripsholm in July 1946, where they would live with their Uncle Benjamin.

Archival History

United States Holocaust Memorial Museum

Acquisition

United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Collection, Gift of Alfred Kurz

Alfred Kurz donated this collection to the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum in August, 2011.

Scope and Content

The Kurz family papers contain biographical materials, correspondence, immigration papers, business records, and photographs related to the lives of Meilech Kurz and his wife Klara Kurz-Biberstein in Vienna, Austria, and with their children Alfred and Doriane in Amsterdam, The Netherlands, Westerbork transit camp, and Bergen-Belsen concentration camp in Germany. The papers include letters Meilech wrote to Klara, birth and marriage certificates, identification cards, government registration papers, immigration papers for Palestine and the United States, papers related to Meilech’s optical frames family business, and family photographs. The biographical material primarily contains material related to Meilech Kurz and Klara Kurz-Biberstein. Included are birth certificates, Klara’s will and obituary, identification cards, government registration papers, and Meilech’s school report cards. Along with Klara’s will is some inheritance correspondence. Also included is a testimony by Klara describing her family’s experiences in Amsterdam from 1940-1945, including their internment in Westerbork transit camp and Bergen-Belsen concentration camp. The correspondence chiefly contains letters sent to Klara, along with small amounts of correspondence of Meilech, Doriane, and Alfred. The bulk of letters to Klara from Meilech are from 1932-1933, along with three from November 8-10, 1942, which were the last letters Klara received from him. Much of the correspondence of Doriane and Alfred relate to their immigration to the United States from Sweden on the SS Gripsholm. The emigration and immigration papers contain documents related to attempts for the family to emigrate from Amsterdam to the United States, and Klara’s planned immigration to Palestine in 1943. The A. Kurz & Company business records contain business correspondence and financial paper work. There is also substantial correspondence related to attempts by Charles and Benjamin Kurz to transfer Meilech’s dividends from the company to Alfred and Doriane. The photographs are primarily family pictures, including Meilech and Klara’s wedding day and a photo that is likely of Klara’s parents in Palestine. Also included is a photograph of Alfred and Doriane on the SS Gripsholm on their way to the United States from Sweden. The printed material consists of food stamps, postcards, a prayer book, and some receipts.

System of Arrangement

The Kurz family papers are arranged as six series: Series 1: Biographical material, 1903-circa 2011 Series 2: Correspondence, 1920-1955 Series 3: Emigration and Immigration papers, 1939-1947 Series 4: A. Kurz & Company business records, 1935-1959 Series 5: Photographs, circa 1900s-1946 Series 6: Printed material, 1917-1946

People

Corporate Bodies

Subjects

This description is derived directly from structured data provided to EHRI by a partner institution. This collection holding institution considers this description as an accurate reflection of the archival holdings to which it refers at the moment of data transfer.