Czech Jewish families before the Holocaust; parade in Prague

Identifier
irn722898
Language of Description
English
Alt. Identifiers
  • 2021.89
  • RG-60.7180
Dates
1 Jan 1938 - 31 Dec 1938
Level of Description
Item
Languages
  • Silent
Source
EHRI Partner

Creator(s)

Biographical History

Franticek (Frantzi) Stein is the sister of Steffi (Stein) Guttmann. Frantzi and his wife Mitzi did not survive the Holocaust,

Zuzanna (Suzi) Guttmannova was born on August 4, 1925. She lived in Prague at Vězeňská 9 and was deported to Terezin on May 7, 1942. She was transported to Sobibor on Transport AAi on June 13, 1942 and murdered.

Sylvie Guttmannova was born on April 7, 1929. She lived in Prague at Vězeňská 9. Sylvie kept a diary in the years 1941-1942, when she was aged 12 - 13, until her deportation with her family to the Terezin ghetto on May 7, 1942. From there she was sent one month later to the Sobibor death camp, from which she did not return. Also on that transport were her sister, Zuzana, and their parents, Simon (b. 16 February 1888) and Stepanka (b. 10 June 1895).

Štěpánka (Steffi) Gutmann (nee Stein) was born on June 10, 1895. Steffi lived in Prague at Vězeňská 9 and was deported to Terezin on May 7, 1942. She was transported to Sobibor on Transport AAi on June 13, 1942 and murdered.

Simon Guttmann was born on February 6, 1888. He lived in Prague at Vězeňská 9 and was deported to Terezin on May 7, 1942. He was transported to Sobibor on Transport AAi on June 13, 1942 and murdered.

Pavel (Paul) Mahrer (1900-1985), a professional soccer player, represented Czechoslovakia on the national soccer team in the 1924 Olympic Games in Paris. He travelled with the Jewish 'HaKoach' soccer team. Paul was married to Betty Guttmann (1900-1990). They had two children, Peter (b.1926) and Jerry (b.1929). Paul was imprisoned by the Nazis in Terezin after the German occupation of the Sudetenland. Though already over 40 when he was brought to the ghetto, he was still a well-known sports figure and ended up playing in Liga Terezin (the camp's soccer team) with other Jewish workers. His “salary” as a player was the ability to obtain better food portions. He survived the war and ended up in the United States, where he died in 1985.

Baruch Guttman (1863-1950) was a cantor at the Pincas Synagogue in Prague. He had five children (Max, Simon, Julius, Willie, and Betty). Julius was an opera singer and well-known in Europe at the time. Betty married Paul Mahrer and is the mother of Peter and Jerry.

Jerome (Jerry) Mahrer was born in New York in 1929 to Betty (Guttmann) Mahrer and Paul Mahrer, a soccer star on Czechoslovakia’s Olympic team who was playing for American leagues. The family returned to Prague. When businesses stopped serving Jews, Jerry, as an American citizen, was still allowed to go to stores and to the movies. When the family was deported, his father Paul was sent to Terezin. Jerry was interned at Tittmoning camp in Germany where he shared a dank room on the medieval castle’s top floor with his older brother, Peter, and 20 other Jews. Jerry and Peter survived the Holocaust. Jerry, now a retired guidance counselor, lives in Manhattan with his wife Carolyn.

Scope and Content

Title card: “Rodina 1937” Steffi Guttmann and her daughters Zuzana (Suzi) and Sylvie get into a car in Prague. Shaky tracking shot in the city, tram, shops. Simon Guttmann strolls with daughters Suzi and Sylvie by the banks of the river. Other family and friends join, pose for the camera by the river. Mahrer and Guttmann children run in a park, castle in BG, joking around for the camera. Older man, Baruch Guttmann, cantor of the Pincas Synagogue, and Jerome Mahrer get out of the car, CUs with another man. The family again poses and walks with linked arms in a park, various views. CU their dog, Lady. Children pet and play with the dog. Baruch sits on a park bench with the children. CUs, man with dog. Baruch with the children. They take turns walking Lady. The family poses on the bench beside the river. 01:04:19 Pan of Charles Bridge to the castle. INTs, men playing cards at a dining table with challah bread in the middle. Women join at the table. CUs, they eat and laugh. Paul Mahrer dressed in costume, clowning for the camera (his “paperhanger” act). The girls dance. 01:06:40 Title card: “Schickovi” Still in Prague, tracking shot over Charles Bridge with pedestrians and automobile traffic, statues, castle. 01:07:10 Steffi Guttman and other extended family members exit the car on vacation in the resort village of Schickovi and walk in the wooded area. CU, dogs. Man does a hand-stand (quick); woman knits; the girls play with the dogs and a version of paddle ball. INTs, Suzi and Sylvia exercise and dance. EXTs, the Guttmans walk in a park taking photographs. The girls run and ride a pony pulling a small cart. Family in the park. Women with baby carriages. More paddle-ball outdoors. A young man greets the Guttman family on the street and they enter a shop/cafe together. 01:11:44 Title card: “Krasobruslařky 1937” Figure skaters at the tennis club in Prague. Skating rink. Girls/family ice skate. Title card: “Nouzov 1938” Fathers play ball with children in the forest of Nouzov, a village where the Guttmann family spent summers. VAR shots, some CUs. Man with a tie spins the ball on his finger. Another balances on a log. Teeter-totter. 01:15:21 Title card: “Slet 1938.” Urban parade in rain, spectators with umbrellas line the cobbled streets in Prague. People march with flags, wave for the massive festival [slet] in 1938, HAS. Logo: Foto-Kino Wachtl Praha.

Note(s)

  • The filmmaker alternated among turret lenses rendering different exposures. There were burn holes at the end of the final scene, serious scratches on both the film base and the emulsion, and a lot of embedded dirt that could not be removed through careful hand cleaning.

  • For more information about the Jewish-owned Foto-Kino Wachtl Praha, refer to https://www.holocaust.cz/dejiny/lide/obeti/od-cisel-k-pribehum/foto-kino-wachtl/ Sylvie kept a diary from the ages of 12-13 beginning on September 9, 1941 until her deportation with her family to the Terezin ghetto on May 7, 1942. From there she was sent one month later to the Sobibor death camp, from which she did not return. The diary was kept safe by a Krasnohorska school classmate of Sylvie's sister, Zuzana. The diary is now preserved by the Ghetto Fighters' House in Israel with translations in English available online and in the SSFVA files.

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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.