List of stumbling blocks in Croatia

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The list of stumbling blocks in Croatia contains the stumbling blocks in Croatia , which remind of the fate of people from the area of ​​today's Croatia, who were murdered, deported, expelled or driven to suicide by the National Socialists . The stumbling blocks were laid by Gunter Demnig .

Stumbling blocks are usually placed in front of the victim's last self-chosen place of residence. The transfers in Rijeka took place on May 21, 2013, for each victim one stumbling block in Croatian and a second in Italian. The name of the Stolpersteine ​​is in Croatian: Kamen spoticanja , in Italian: pietre d'inciampo .

Rijeka

image Surname Location Life
Stumbling block for Eugenio Lipschitz (Romanian) .jpgStumbling block for Eugenio Lipschitz (Italian) .jpg

EUGENIO LIPSCHITZ GEB. LIVED HERE IN
1883
IN MARCH 1944
INTERNED IN RISIERA
DI SAN SABBA
DEPORTED IN 1944
AUSCHWITZ
MURDERED AT AN UNKNOWN TIME
Ante Starčevića 5
Erioll world.svg
Eugenio Lipschitz , actually Jeremus Eugenio Lipschitz, was born on May 5, 1883 in Sümeg ,western Hungary. He lived with his family in Fiume / Rijeka from 1894, established himself as a retailer of haberdashery and jewelry and married Zseni Zipszer, also known as Giannetta. The couple had three children, the sons Arturo (1914–1980) and Efraim (born 1919) and the daughter Magda (also Maddalena), who married Enrico Heimler and took his name. Both sons were able to emigrate to Palestine in time. Daughter Magda fled with her husband, her in-laws and sister-in-law to Italy in September 1943 and to Switzerland the following year, where shesurvivedthe Holocaust . Jeremus Eugenio Lipschitz was interned by the Mussolini regime from July 28, 1940 to December 22 of the same year in the Campagna internment camp. Then he was able to return to Fiume. He and his wife were arrested by German forces in Fiume in March 1944, firstdeportedto Risiera di San Sabba , a German concentration camp in Trieste, and later to Auschwitz-Birkenau . Both were murdered there at an unknown date. His sister Giuseppina and her husband Adolfo Simkovits were also murdered in Auschwitz. His report on the internment in Campagna was translated from Hungarian into Italian by his daughter and published in book form in 2001.
Stumbling block for Giannetta Zipszer Lipschitz (Romanian) .jpgStumbling stone for Giannetta Zipszer Lipschitz (Italian) .jpg
HERE LIVED
Giannetta ZIPSER
LIPSCHITZ
GEB. 1893
ARRESTED MARCH 1944
INTERNED IN RISIERA
DI SAN SABBA
DEPORTED IN 1944
AUSCHWITZ
MURDERED AT AN UNKNOWN TIME
Ante Starčevića 5
Erioll world.svg
Giannetta Zipszer Lipschitz was born on June 18, 1893 in Mád in northeast Hungary as the daughter of the merchant's assistant Albert Zipszer (born 1843) and the housewife Rozaliá Altmann (born 1848) . She had at least one brother, Herman, born in Mad in 1868. She lived in Fiume / Rijeka, was married to Jeremus Eugenio Lipschitz and worked as a housewife.

She and her husband were arrested in Fiume in March 1944, deported to Risiera di San Sabba and later to Auschwitz-Birkenau, where - like her husband - they were murdered by the Nazi regime at an unknown date.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. http://www.novilist.hr/Vijesti/Rijeka/Rijeka-dobila-Kamen-spoticanja
  2. ^ I Nomi della Shoah Italiana (Memoriale delle vittime della persecuzione antiebraica 1943-45): Scheda Eugenio Lipschitz , accessed on December 11, 2016.
  3. ^ Claims Resolution Tribunal : In re Holocaust Victim Assets Litigation Case No. CV96-4849 <, accessed December 29, 2016.
  4. CDEC Digital Collection: Lipschitz, Giuseppina , accessed on May 6, 2017.
  5. ^ I Nomi della Shoah Italiana (Memoriale delle vittime della persecuzione antiebraica 1943-45): Scheda Gianetta Zipser , accessed on December 11, 2016.
  6. Digital Collection: ZIPSZER ALBERT , accessed on December 29, 2016.
  7. CDEC Digital Collection: ALTMANN ROZÁLIA , accessed on December 29, 2016.
  8. Digital Collection: ZIPSZER HERMAN , accessed on December 29, 2016.