Schwalbe children send greetings to their father

Identifier
irn708181
Language of Description
English
Alt. Identifiers
  • 2019.367
  • RG-91.0164
Dates
1 Jan 1934 - 31 Dec 1934
Level of Description
Item
Source
EHRI Partner

Creator(s)

Biographical History

Ilse Flora Korant (1904-1992) was the only child of her parents, Margarete (Greta) Korant nee Apt (1881-1942), and Georg Korant (1874-1937) of Berlin, Germany. Ilse married Herbert H. Schwalbe (1899–1963). At age 17, Herbert volunteered and served in the Germany military in WWI. He earned the German Iron Cross for his service. He became a dentist, and after marriage, established a practice in Berlin. There, Ilse and Herbert had their son, Reiner (Max) (1928-2007) and daughter, Steffi (1931-2018). In April 1933, Hitler decreed an economic boycott of all Jews. While many thought this aberration would be fleeting, Herbert believed otherwise. Ilse and Herbert decided that he would emigrate (October 1933) to Persia (now Iran) where he had been promised permission to open a dental practice. [The Jewish Museum of Berlin acquired Herbert’s documents in 2008.] Herbert and Ilse did not have the sufficient money required to bring the entire family into the country, so Herbert left Berlin on his own. They sold their Berlin apartment and Ilse and the children moved in with her parents. Ilse worked for a Jewish organization that arranged for immigration of Jewish children (Youth Aliyah) into Palestine. Herbert’s practice did not succeed and he moved to Palestine. There he saw that the kibbutz in which he lived could not support the additional three people in his family. In 1937, with the help of his younger brother, Ludwig Schwalbe (1901-1980) who had immigrated to the U.S. in 1927, and a distant cousin, Richard Simon, Herbert immigrated to California.. In 1937, Ilse’s father died. While Herbert was able to arrange for the requirements to send for Ilse and the children, no papers could be gotten for Ilse’s mother, Greta. In 1939, Ilse, Reiner and Steffi flew to Holland, then took a Dutch freighter for six weeks, arriving in San Francisco, and there greeted by Herbert. Ilse and Herbert worked hard to get papers for Greta. Included in this effort was a proposal of marriage from Emilio Brizio, who resided in Detroit. In 1941, they were able to obtain a ticket for Greta to come by ship to Cuba and then to the U.S. in January 1942. In anticipation of emigrating, Greta shipped her belongings to the U.S. In December 1941, war was declared on Germany, and no passenger ships were allowed to sail. In January 1942 Greta was deported to Riga and murdered. Herbert was unable to meet the requirements to practice as a dentist in the U.S. He worked a variety of jobs, mostly as a lab technician at a university. Ilse was a secretary for a Judge. Reiner and Steffi each married and had children. Now, all are deceased..

Scope and Content

Two (2) Schneideplatte lacquer-coated metal discs, each single sided, containing recordings of German-Jewish children, Max (Reiner) and Steffi Schwalbe, singing and speaking in German with their mother, Ilse (Korant) Schwalbe. Recording 1: Ilse, Reiner, and Steffi record a message to husband/father Herbert in Persia in 1934. The children repeat after the mother phrases like: How are you doing? Is the weather nice? Kisses from Reiner, Steffi, and mother. They tell him a little about their plans (a holiday and a visit with grandparents) and tell him to stay healthy and keep them in his thoughts. Recording 2: The two children sing a medley of 2 folksongs accompanied by an instrument (although not with the traditional lyrics): 1) "Kommt ein Vogel geflogen" --19th c German children's song, still popular (0:05-0:20; repeats after 0:38) 2) "Brüderchen, komm tanz mit mir" --19th c German children's song, famously adapted in "Hänsel und Gretel" (0:20-0:38)

Note(s)

  • These discs were rescued at Northeast Documentation Conservation Center with an experimental tool, IRENE, which uses a non-contact approach, which eliminates the possibility of damage caused by mechanical contact of a stylus on fragile media. The process creates ultra-high resolution images of the audio groove structures in either 2D or 3D, as required. The resulting image files are then processed through software that translates them into an audio file. If properly cared for, the image files serve as a digital surrogate of the physical object, “virtually” preserving the object’s condition at the time of scanning while the object continues to physically degrade over time. A handwritten note on the original paper sleeve states: "These two 78 records were taken in Berlin, one in 1934, and the other abt a year later (I think), for Opa's birthdays, and then sent to Persia. The first one had Max, Steffi, and me speak extemporaneously; for the other I had prepared a text. Mother Oma 6/26/88" The note was probably written by Ilse Korant Schwalbe ("Mother Oma") to her granddaughter Karen Gilovich (the donor and daughter of Steffi).

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.