November-Brandeis family papers

Identifier
irn46971
Language of Description
English
Alt. Identifiers
  • 2012.143.11
Dates
1 Jan 1939 - 31 Dec 1946, 1 Jan 1939 - 31 Dec 1992
Level of Description
Item
Languages
  • Polish
  • Russian
Source
EHRI Partner

Extent and Medium

box

1

Creator(s)

Biographical History

Mendel November was born January 15, 1915, Košice, present-day Slovakia. His wife, Lea Brandel, also known as Bronka (née Brandeis), was originally from Dukla, a village approximately 70 kilometers southwest of Przemyśl, in Poland. The Novembers left Poland to flee to the Soviet Union, either prior to or during the German invasion, settling in Central Asia (Jambul, Kazakhstan). While in the Soviet Union, Mendel November worked as an electrician in a liquor distillery in Kazakhstan, and was mobilized to fight in the Red Army in the latter stages of the war. Following the war, the Novembers returned to Poland with their son Isak, settling in Łódż, and applied for a visa to immigrate to Israel, which they were eventually able to do around 1950.

Archival History

United States Holocaust Memorial Museum

Acquisition

United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Collection, The Abraham and Ruth Goldfarb Family Acquisition Fund

Funding Note: The acquisition of this collection was made possible by The Abraham and Ruth Goldfarb Family Acquisition Fund.

Acquired, March 2012.

Scope and Content

Correspondence, identification documents, immigration forms, and related documentation concerning the family of Mendel and Lea Brandel (Bronka) November, their exile in the Soviet Union during World War II, their correspondence with Mrs. November’s family in Poland during the German occupation, and their subsequent return to Poland after the war and immigration to Israel. The bulk of the correspondence and documents relate to the experiences of Mendel November and his wife, Lea Brandel (Bronka). The documents in this collection are arranged according to type and origin. One series of correspondence consists of postcards and letters that the family received from Bronka’s mother Adela, often with greetings from Hinda Findling and Regina Brandeis as well, all of whom remained in Dukla, after the German occupation of that region. Correspondence from the Brandeis family stopped in mid 1941, although Bronka’s brother Aron (Abraham?) sent several postcards written in Russian, from Berlin and Lublin in 1945, toward the end of World War II. A separate set of correspondence contains letters sent to and from Henry Hirschberg, of Bridgeport, Connecticut, who was related to the Brandeis family through marriage. Hirschberg, in a notarized statement of 1946, attested that “my wife Rachel G. Hirschberg née Findling” was “the late mother of” of Lea Brandel November (née Brandeis) and Abraham Brandeis, and that she was a sister of “Mrs. Ides Brandeis, née Findling,” presumably Adela Brandeis. Correspondence from the Hirschberg family (Henry, wife Gisela, son Julius Harris) includes cards seeking to establish contact—apparently unsuccessfully--with Adela Brandeis and her family in Poland after the war. Correspondence from other friends and family members is filed separately from the Hirschberg and Brandeis correspondence. The latter group of documents pertain to the Novembers’ experiences in the Soviet Union during the war, their return to Poland in 1946, and their attempts to emigrate after that. Included are letters attesting to Mendel November’s employment with various firms in the Soviet Union, documents pertaining to the search for any living Brandeis family members in Poland, and documents from the family’s early years in Israel during the 1950s.

System of Arrangement

The correspondence files are arranged in three series: Brandeis Family correspondence, Hirschberg Family correspondence, and Other correspondence. A fourth series titled “Biographical files” contains identification and immigration documents, and related items that can be used to establish places where the November family lived and worked, and a chronology of their lives. Each of these series is arranged in chronological order.

People

Subjects

Genre

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.