Leonard and Edith Ehrlich research papers

Identifier
irn50648
Language of Description
English
Alt. Identifiers
  • 2014.537.1
Level of Description
Item
Languages
  • German
  • English
Source
EHRI Partner

Extent and Medium

boxes

oversize folders

17

3

Creator(s)

Biographical History

Leonard H. Ehrlich (1924-2011) was born Leonhard Ehrlich to Josef and Helene Ehrlich, on 2 April 1924 in Vienna. In addition to Leonard, the Ehrlichs had a daughter, Leonore. Following the annexation of Austria by Germany and the Nazi seizure of power in 1938, the Ehrlichs sought to emigrate, with Leonore being the first who was able to leave, travelling to Britain on a "Kindertransport." Although Leonard sought to immigrate illegally to Palestine with a Zionist youth group, when his parents obtained an affidavit and visa, the three of them traveled to the United States in November 1939, and the family was eventually reunited with Leonore and moved to Chicago. Eventually Leonard was inducted into the U.S. Army, but before being sent to Europe, he married Edith Schwarz, who he had known from his school in Vienna, and whose own family arrived in the United States a few months after the Ehrlichs. In 1944 Ehrlich was sent to Europe and served in the Army as a medic, earning a Purple Heart and a Silver Star. Upon demobilization and return to the United States, Ehrlich pursued his academic studies, eventually pursuing graduate studies in psychology in Switzerland, at the University of Basel, and earning a doctorate in philosophy from Yale University. Ehrlich accepted a position in the philosophy department of the Univesity of Massachusetts--Amherst in 1956, where he served as a professor of philosophy, and beginning in 1981, as head of the university's Judaic studies department. He was also a renowned scholar of the philosopher Karl Jaspers, under whom he and Edith had studied in Basel, and whose works he later translated into English. Ehrlich retired from the University of Massachusetts in 1991, and dedicated much time in his remaining years to researching and writing about the role of the leaders of the Jewish community in Vienna during the Nazi era, in a work that was to be titled "Choices Under Duress of the Holocaust," and for which he interviewed Benjamin Murmelstein. Ehrlich died in Hingham, Massachusetts on 8 June 2011.

Edith Ehrlich (1925-2015) was born Edith Schwarz in Vienna, Austria in 1925. Following the Nazi takeover of Austria in 1938, her parents were able to send her on a Kindertransport to Britain the following year, and she was reunited with her parents when they managed to immigrate to the United States later that same year. She had maintained close contact with her friend from school in Vienna, Leonard Ehrlich, who had also immigrated to the United States, and when he was inducted into the U.S. Army and was on the verge of being sent overseas, she traveled to Salina, Kansas in 1944 in order to marry him. After his return from the war, she obtained a bachelor's degree from Roosevelt College in Chicago in 1951, and then travelled with her husband to Basel, Switzerland, where they studied philosophy under Karl Jaspers. Returning to the United States, she pursued her graduate studies at Yale University, obtaining a doctorate in German language and literature. She was a collaborator with her husband on numerous projects, including the translation of a number of works by Jaspers into English, including volumes 4 and 5 of "Karl Jaspers: The Great Philosophers," and on the projected work about the leadership of the Jewish community of Vienna during the Holocaust, "Choices Under Duress of the Holocaust." Edith Ehrlich died in Hingham, Massachusetts on 11 November 2015.

Archival History

United States Holocaust Memorial Museum

Acquisition

United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Collection, Gift of Carl S. Ehrlich

The collection was donated to the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum by Carl S. Ehrlich in 2013.

Scope and Content

The Leonard and Edith Ehrlich research papers consist of correspondence, copied documents, interview transcripts, trial transcripts, notes, typescript texts, and other similar materials compiled during the research and writing of a book to be titled “Choices Under Duress of the Holocaust,” an examination of the leadership of the Israelitische Kultusgemeinde Wien (Jewish Congregation of Vienna, or IKG) and the Jewish Council of Theresienstadt, and in particular the roles of Benjamin Murmelstein and Josef Löwenherz, in response to Nazi persecution of the Jewish community following the annexation of Austria by Germany in 1938, and the reconstitution of that community after the deportation of many of its members to Theresienstadt. The Correspondence series of the collection is relatively small, and consists of correspondence that was filed separately as such by the Ehrlichs, in some cases with research institutions, in others with individuals with whom they were in contact during the course of their project. The largest segment of this series, however, is that of correspondence with Benjamin Murmelstein, between 1976 and 1984, following the period of time in which the Ehrlichs visited him and interviewed him in Rome, as well as with Murmelstein’s son, Wolf, in the years following. The Research Topics series comprises the bulk of this collection, and consists of copied archival documents, notes, transcripts, clippings, and other material arranged by topic. Some of these were already filed in folders labeled as such when the collection was received, others were loose documents that were grouped together and arranged by the processing archivist at the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. Included in this series are a complete set of the typed transcripts of the interviews conducted by Leonard and Edith Ehrlich with Benjamin Murmelstein in 1977, as well as a complete copied set of the Aktenvermerke, or memoranda to the files, maintained by Josef Löwenherz in his role as general director of the Israelitische Kultusgemeinde Wien, during the years when his position required him to interact with Adolf Eichmann’s Zentralstelle für Jüdische Auswanderung (or Central Office for Jewish Emigration). The Ehrlichs obtained copies of the Löwenherz Aktenvermerke while they were still in the possession of his family, prior to their donation of the Löwenherz papers to the Leo Baeck Institute. Another significant group of copied documents include the transcripts of the trial of Karl Rahm, the commandant of Theresienstadt, obtained from the Štatni Archiv v Litoměřice, as well as selected documents from the later trial of Adolf Eichmann in Israel in 1961. The remaining files in this series are largely those created by the Ehrlichs, containing copied documents from other archival repositories and accompanying notes. Three ways that the Ehrlichs tended to organize material copied from other repositories were to group photocopied documents in folders grouped by the source repository, in folders labeled by topic, and in packets or bundles grouped by projected chapters in the book, in which such sources would be cited. In the current arrangement, elements of the first two groupings were retained (with items grouped by topic in the “Research Topics” series, and those by repository in the “Archival Repositories” series), but the third grouping was not, since the documents grouped by book chapter were usually duplicates of items found in the first two groups. Such copied documents usually have an abbreviation for the source archive and fond or record group written on them, either on the top of the page or the verso. Although most items in the Research Topics series are photocopies, exceptions include a file related to the portrayal of Murmelstein in Herman Wouk’s novel War and Remembrance, which Leonard Ehrlich objected to as being historically inaccurate, as well as original documents from Theresienstadt collected by Rudolf Bunzel, and transferred to the Ehrlichs by Bunzel, which are kept in a file under Bunzel’s name. The series Archival Repositories contains copies of documents that were arranged by the Ehrlichs according to the repository from which they originated, as well as correspondence with staff of those archives relating to the Ehrlichs’ research requests, and the last series, Writings, contains editorial correspondence and fragments of the unpublished text of Choices Under Duress of the Holocaust, as well as an academic journal article about the Nisko Plan to transport Jews from Austria and Czechoslovakia to German occupied areas of Poland near Nisko and Lublin in 1939-1940.

System of Arrangement

The Leonard and Edith Ehrlich papers are arranged as four series: 1. Correspondence 2. Research topics 3. Archival repositories 4. Writings

People

Corporate Bodies

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.