Steven N. Montrose papers

Identifier
irn592589
Language of Description
English
Alt. Identifiers
  • 2005.167.2
  • 2012.434.1
  • 2005.167.1
Level of Description
Item
Languages
  • English
  • Polish
  • German
Source
EHRI Partner

Extent and Medium

folders

8

Creator(s)

Biographical History

Steven N. Montrose was born Stefan Joachim Natan “Natek” Rozenberg in Łódź, Poland, in 1938 to Marcel Rozenberg and Stefania Fajner Rozenberg. Stefania died from lung disease while he was an infant. Bernard Fayner, Stefania’s brother, his wife Yetta, and daughter Helenka, moved in with the Rozenbergs to help raise Natek, and Natek believed that his aunt Yetta was his mother. The families were very wealthy and owned several textile factories and pieces of real estate in and around Łódź. They managed to delay their forced resettlement in the Łódź ghetto through bribery until March 1940, and Marcel continued to operate his textile factory. They lived in a small apartment, hiding in a family factory attic, in a small hospital, and in various bombed out buildings until they were evacuated. Natek was sent with his aunt Yetta to the Ravensbruck concentration camp where Natek’s job was carrying the soup pots back to the kitchen after meals. Natek and Yetta were transferred to Königs Wusterhausen, a sub-camp of Sachsenhausen, where they were reunited with Marcel and Bernard through a barbed wire fence. Natek was transferred without his family to Sachsenhausen, where he went into hiding under the barracks and scavenged for food at night. Natek’s uncles Bernard and Dudek arrived at Sachsenhausen during the week after its liberation in April 1945 and found him starving. They reunited him with his aunt Yetta in Königs Wusterhausen. The family returned to Łódź to find their home occupied by a Polish family, so they stayed in a family textile factory. His father, who had been sent on a death march and was presumed dead, also returned to Łódź weeks later. Marcel and Natek were relocated to a displaced persons camp in Berlin and then to an apartment in Hanover. Marcel changed their last name to Montrose and Natek’s name to Steven, and he sent his son to live with the family of his brother Joseph Mountrose, a respected heart specialist, in London. Marcel met and married a German concentration camp survivor and immigrated with her to the United States in 1950; Natek joined them a couple of years later.

Archival History

United States Holocaust Memorial Museum

Acquisition

United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Collection, Gift of Steven Nathan Montrose

Funding Note: The cataloging of this collection has been supported by a grant from the Conference on Jewish Material Claims Against Germany.

Steven N. Montrose donated the Steven N. Montrose papers to the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum in 2005 and added a photograph in 2012.

Scope and Content

The Steven N. Montrose papers consist of photographs depicting Montrose (born Nathan Rozenberg) and his parents and other relatives in prewar and wartime Łódź and postwar Germany. The collection also includes birth and naturalization certificates for Montrose and his father and a book proposal for an autobiography by Montrose describing his prewar and wartime life in Łódź, the Łódź ghetto, concentration camps, postwar Germany, immigration to the United States, and new life in America.

System of Arrangement

The Steven N. Montrose papers are arranged as a single series.

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.