Gerhard Maschkowski collection

Identifier
irn69541
Language of Description
English
Alt. Identifiers
  • 2013.523.1
Dates
1 Jan 1938 - 31 Dec 2005
Level of Description
Item
Languages
  • German
  • English
Source
EHRI Partner

Extent and Medium

folders

2

Creator(s)

Biographical History

Gerhard Maschkowski was born on May 19, 1925 in Elbing, Germany, (now Elbląg, Poland) to Jewish parents, Arthur and Herta Imber Maschkowski. Arthur was born on January 5, 1895, in Gross-Statsin. He served in the German military during World War I (1914-1918), and was injured and lost both eyes. Herta was born on August 16, 1896, in Thorn, Germany. Arthur, and sometimes Herta, worked as a typist for a copy service. Gerhard had an older brother, Siegfried, born on August 23, 1922, in Danzig.. In 1933, the Nazi dictatorship took control of Germany. Policies to persecute the Jewish population were implemented across Germany. On November 9-10, 1938, Kristallnacht, Gerhard saw Jewish stores looted and burned. He was beaten up in school for being Jewish and then no longer allowed to attend. In 1939, Siegfried left for Palestine. Gerhard’s parents sent him to an agricultural school in Ahlem, supposedly to learn skills to emigrate. But soon after he arrived, Gerhard and the other students were taken to Jessen-Mühle labor camp near Sommerfeld (Lubsko, Poland) to do agricultural and civic forced labor. The farm work was hard but they were well fed. In May 1941, they were transferred to Neuendorf labor camp near Berlin where they dug ditches and graves and did road construction for the city. On April 8, 1943, Gerhard was taken by the Gestapo and sent to Auschwitz concentration camp, arriving there on April 20, 1943. He was shaved, tattooed, and given five items: prisoner uniform cap, jacket, pants, a bowl, and a spoon. Gerhard was selected for forced labor and sent to Auschwitz III - Monowitz (Buna) concentration camp. He was assigned to a work detail for an IG Farben factory, first digging ditches and laying cement. With assistance from kapos, who helped fellow Zionists like Gerhard, he got into the electrician detail, laying cable. He learned to ignore the atrocities such as hangings that were normal parts of camp life. Speaking German was an advantage, which helped keep him on the factory detail. As people died, new ones arrived to take their place. Gerhard was able to earn extra food for cleaning the block leader's area. He sometimes had items to trade with other inmates and he formed a friendship with a fellow prisoner Freddy Diamant, who got food for Gerhard and two friends, Benjamin Fengersch and Elie Hyman. In late 1944, the bombings began near the camp. In January 1945, Soviet forces were approaching and the Germans emptied the camp, sending the prisoners on a four month long death march. Except for a brief stay circa late January in Gleiwitz concentration camp, his group was led from place to place throughout Germany and Czechoslovakia. They were kept moving, either on foot or on a coal train. If you stumbled, you were shot. At one point when it was snowing, they were put in a mine shaft. As the air ran out, people would run outside and were shot. Gerhard and his friends stayed in the back, mouths to the ground, pulling oxygen from the earth. Gerhard became numb with cold, but his friends kept him from freezing to death. In late April 1945, he was liberated during the march by the Red Army near Breslau (now Wrocław, Poland). Gerhard weighed only seventy pounds and could not walk. He was placed in a Catholic hospital and cared for by nuns. During the several months long recovery, Gerhard befriended a Russian soldier, who showed him stores of food the German occupying forces of Breslau had gathered. Gerhard arranged for much of the food to be transferred to the hospital. After his recovery, Gerhard got a letter telling him that his parents had survived. They had been deported in December 1942 to Theresienstadt ghetto-labor camp in German occupied Czechoslovakia because of Arthur’s special status as a wounded war veteran. The camp was liberated in May 1945. The family reunited and lived in Deggendorf displaced persons camp in Germany. While at Deggendorf, Gerhard met his future wife, Ursula Naumann. Ursula was born in Berlin on December 26, 1925, to a Catholic father and a Jewish mother, Margarete. The whole family was considered Jewish. Margarete, Ursula, and Ursula’s sister Hannelore were interned in Theresienstadt. Their father was deported to Auschwitz, where he perished. In March 1947, Gerhard and Ursula emigrated to the United States aboard the Marine Marlin. They married on May 27, 1947, in the morning before going to work. Margarete and Hannelore joined them in September. Gerhard's parents remained in Germany. Gerhard and Ursula moved to Florida, where Gerhard opened an auto repair shop. They had a daughter and two sons. In 1979, the couple settled in California. Ursula, 80, passed away in April 2005.

Archival History

United States Holocaust Memorial Museum

Acquisition

United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Collection, Gift of Gerhard Maschkowski

Gerhard Maschkowski donated this collection to the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum in 2013.

Scope and Content

Consists of documents and copies related to the Holocaust experiences of Gerhard Maschkowski, originally of Elbing, Germany. Includes a poem written on the occasion of his 1938 bar mitzvah, identity cards, and information about his experiences in Neuendorf and in Auschwitz. Also includes documents related to Ursula Naumann Maschkowski, including photographic postcards of Theresienstadt and postcards sent to the Naumann family while they were imprisoned there. Also includes material related to the Deggendorf displaced persons camp, where Gerhard and Ursula met; photographic print: black and white image of men and women standing in front of and inside boxcar; captioned on verso: "February 1947 on the way from Munich to Bremerhave to the U.S."; in English; donor is one of the men standing in the doorway (he thinks he is on the far right).

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.