List of stumbling blocks in Venice

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Stumbling blocks in Venice

The list of stumbling blocks in Venice contains an overview of the stumbling blocks in the Italian city ​​of Venice . Stumbling blocks are supposed to remind of the fate of the people who were murdered, deported, expelled or driven to suicide by the National Socialists . The Stolpersteine ​​were laid by Gunter Demnig , whose name is in Italian: pietre d'inciampo . As a rule, the stumbling blocks are moved in front of the victim's last freely chosen place of residence. The first Stolperstein laid in Veneto is dedicated to engineer Bartolomeo Melone and is located on Campo SS. Apostoli in Venice.

Some of the tables can be sorted; the basic sorting is done alphabetically according to the family name.

Venice

Cannaregio

image translation Location Name, biography
Stumbling stone for Achille Aboaf 2 (Venice) .jpg
ACHILLE ABOAF
LIVED HERE
BORN 1891
ARRESTED 20.8.1944
DEPORTED
AUSCHWITZ
MURDERED 30.4.1945
BUCHENWALD
Cannaregio 1445
Erioll world.svg
Achille Aboaf was born in Venice on June 22, 1891. His parents were Giacomo Aboaf and Augusta Pighin. He had at least two sisters, Regina (1888) and Giuditta (1894). He became a plumber and married Rosa Lucia Mogno. The couple had four sons: Abramo Marco (1919), Umberto (1921), Guido (1924) and Gino (1925). He was arrested in Venice on August 20, 1944, two days after his youngest son, was first imprisoned in Venice prison and then transferred to the Risiera di San Sabba in Trieste. On September 2, 1944 Aboaf and his son were transported with Transport No. 37T deported from Trieste to the Auschwitz extermination camp . The train with the cattle wagons arrived at the camp after a five-day journey. Achille Aboaf was murdered there on April 30, 1945.

His sisters were also murdered in Auschwitz, as was a nephew who was also called Achille. All sons could survive. Abramo Marco, Umberto and Guido were liberated from Buchenwald concentration camp in April 1945 .

Stumbling block for Gino Aboaf (Venice) .jpg
GINO ABOAF
LIVED HERE
BORN 1925
ARRESTED 18.8.1944
DEPORTED
AUSCHWITZ
MAUTHAUSEN
LIBERATED
Cannaregio 1445
Erioll world.svg
Gino Aboaf was born in Venice on November 13, 1925 . He was the youngest of four sons, Rosa Lucia Mognos and Achille Aboaf. His brothers were Abramo Marco (1919), Umberto (1921) and Guido (1924).

Abramo Marco, Umberto and Guido were arrested in Rome between March and April 1944 . Gino as the last of the four brothers in Venice on August 18, 1944 . First Gino in prison was Venice in prison, then he was transferred to Trieste in the concentration camp San Sabba Risiera brought. From there he was deported to Auschwitz on September 2, 1944 with Transport N. 37T , where the convoy arrived on September 7. Gino Aboaf survived the horrors of the concentration camps and was liberated from Mauthausen on May 5, 1945 . One year after his arrest, on August 18, 1945, Gino Aboaf was finally able to return home.

His brothers Guido, Umberto and Abramo Marco were freed from Buchenwald in April 1945 and were also able to return home in September 1945.

Stumbling block for Giuditta Aboaf.jpg
GIUDITTA ABOAF
LIVED HERE
BORN 1894
ARRESTED 5.5.1944
DEPORTED
AUSCHWITZ
MURDERED
Calle Orto
Cannaregio 1215
Erioll world.svg
Giuditta Rita Aboaf was born in Venice on May 8, 1894. Her parents were Giacomo Aboaf and Augusta, née Pighin. She had two siblings: sister Regina and brother Achille. She was married to Attilio Navarro, who died in 1934. The couple had three children: Amalia (born 1917), Achille (born 1921) and Lina (born 1926). Giuditta Aboaf and her three children were arrested on May 5, 1944, were first taken to the Santa Maria Maggiore prison and then deported to the Fossoli transit camp on May 30, 1944 , from where they were taken to Auschwitz on June 26, 1944 on transport number 13 deported, where they arrived on June 30, 1944. In Auschwitz, Giuditta Rita Aboaf was immediately murdered in a gas chamber.

Achille died a few months after his mother. His two sisters were transferred to the Bergen-Belsen concentration camp on October 31, 1944 , from where they were transferred on February 7 to Raguhn , a subcamp of the Buchenwald concentration camp , where they had to work in an aircraft factory. In mid-April 1945 they were transferred to Theresienstadt due to the approaching Allied troops. Here they were finally freed. Lina married Mario Saba in 1950, the couple had a daughter. Lina died in 2000, her sister Amalia died in 2003.

Stumbling block for Salomone Aboaf.jpg
SALOMONE ABOAF
LIVED HERE
BORN 1868
ARRESTED 17.8.1944
DEPORTED
AUSCHWITZ
MURDERED 9.7.1944
Calle del Ghetto Vecchio 1223
Erioll world.svg
Salomone Girolamo Aboaf was born in Venice on May 3, 1868. His parents were Giacomo Aboaf and Stella, née Udine. He had a general store in the ghetto. He was arrested on August 17, 1944 and deported to the Risiera di San Sabba concentration camp . From here he was deported to Auschwitz on September 2, 1944 with Transport 37T. The train arrived there on September 7, 1944. On the day of his arrival he was murdered in a gas chamber.

ADA ANCONA LIVED HERE
BORN 1873
ARRESTED 5.12.1943
DEPORTED
AUSCHWITZ
MURDERED 26.2.1944
Campo di Ghetto Nuovo
Cannaregio 2874
Erioll world.svg
Ada Ancona was born in Venice on February 8, 1873 . Her parents were Fortunata Sacerdoti and Angelo Ancona, and Ada had an older sister, Ida (1871).

On December 5, 1943, Ada was arrested in Venice and held first in the city prison and then in the Fossoli transit camp . On February 22, 1944, she was deported from the Fossoli camp to Auschwitz in Transport No. 8 . When the transport arrived on February 26th, Ada was registered with the letter S and immediately murdered.


IDA ANCONA LIVED HERE
BORN 1871
ARRESTED 17.8.1944
DEPORTED
AUSCHWITZ
MURDERED 7.9.1944
Campo di Ghetto Nuovo
Cannaregio 2874
Erioll world.svg
Ida Ancona was born in Venice on August 30, 1871, the first child of the couple Fortunata Sacerdoti and Angelo Ancona.

Her younger sister Ada was arrested in December 1943 and deported to Auschwitz . Ida was arrested on August 17, 1944 in Venice . She was imprisoned in the Risiera di San Sabba camp in Trieste and was deported to Auschwitz on September 2 with Transport No. 37T . When the transport arrived on September 7th, Ida was registered with the letter S and immediately murdered.

Stumbling block for Riccardo Brandes.jpg
RICCARDO
BRANDES LIVED HERE BORN IN
1917
ARRESTED 7/27/1944
DEPORTED
AUSCHWITZ
MURDERED
Calle Ghetto Vecchio
Cannaregio 1150
Erioll world.svg
Riccardo Brandes was born in Venice on March 5, 1917. His parents were Giacomo Brandes and Alba, née Deathco. He had four sisters: Wanda, Amalia, Fausta and Carmen and one brother - Marco. Carmen died as a young child. Riccardo Brandes was arrested on July 27, 1944 in Padua and was sent to prison there. then he was deported to the Risiera di San Sabba concentration camp . From here he was deported to Auschwitz, where Riccardo Brandes was murdered.

His parents and brother survived the Shoah . Riccardo Brandes parents had fled to Fiesso. Marco Brandes escaped from the Fossoli transit camp and returned to Venice, where he hid with a Catholic family and joined the resistance.

Stumbling block for Moise Calimani.jpg
MOISÈ CALIMANI
LIVED HERE
BORN 1870
ARRESTED 17.8.1944
DEPORTED
AUSCHWITZ
MURDERED 7.9.1944
Calle Ghetto Vecchio
Cannaregio 1146
Erioll world.svg
Moisè Calimani was born in Venice on March 29, 1870. He was the son of Giacomo Calimari and Enrichetta, née Polacco. He had a sister named Rita Lea. He was an employee, married and had a son named Bruno. On August 17, 1944, he was arrested in Venice and taken to the Risiera di San Sabba concentration camp . From here he was deported to Auschwitz on September 2, 1944 with Transport 37T; the train arrived on September 7, 1944. Moisè Calimani was murdered in a gas chamber in Auschwitz.
Stumbling block for Gisella Campos.jpg
GISELLA CAMPOS
LIVED HERE
BORN 1873
ARRESTED 9.9.1944
DEPORTED
AUSCHWITZ
MURDERED
Calle della Misercordia
Cannaregio 386
Erioll world.svg
Gisella Campos was born in Split on January 5, 1873 . Her parents were Raffaello Campos and Giulia, née Levi. She had four siblings including her brother Emilio Campos. She was married to Edoardo Usigli. On September 9, 1944, she was arrested in Venice and taken to the Risiera di San Sabba concentration camp . From here she was deported to Auschwitz, where Gisella Campos was murdered in a gas chamber at the age of 71.

Her husband Edoardo Usigli was arrested on December 5, 1943 and murdered a few months before Gisella Campos, on February 26, 1944, the day he arrived in Auschwitz.

HERE LIVED
PIA CESANA
MARIANI
BORN 1922
ARRESTED 05/12/1943
deported
AUSCHWITZ
MURDERED
Calle Maggiore
Cannaregio 1600
Erioll world.svg
Pia Cesana Mariani was born in Venice on July 17, 1922 . Her parents were Lina Calimani and Vittorio Cesana. Pia was married to Enrico Mariani.

On December 5, 1943, Pia was arrested in Venice with her husband and in-laws, Francesco Isacco Mariani and Bellina Melli . At that time she was heavily pregnant with her first child. While in prison in the city, she gave birth to a son, Leo. A few weeks later the young family was transferred to the Fossoli transit camp and from there deported to Auschwitz on February 22, 1944 with Transport No. 8 . Upon arrival at Auschwitz concentration camp , Pia and the newborn Leo, as well as her husband's family, were immediately murdered.

Pia's husband Enrico Mariani died about a year later on one of the so-called death marches .

Stumbling block for Alba Clerle.jpg
HERE LIVED
ALBA CLERLE
BORN 1879
ARRESTED 05/12/1943
deported
AUSCHWITZ
MURDERED 02/26/1944
Calle del Ghetto Vecchio 1223
Erioll world.svg
Alba Clerle was born in Venice on September 6, 1879. Her parents were Anselmo Clerle and Giovanna Giuseppina, née Fistarol. She had two sisters: Emila (born 1872) and Cesira Amelia (born 1876). She was married to Attilio Grassini. The couple had a daughter and a son: Bruna Grassini (born 1904) and Raffaele Grassini (born 1906). She and her two sisters were arrested in Venice on December 8, 1943; her husband and two children were arrested on December 5, 1943. The family was first taken to a prison in Venice and from there they were deported to the Fossoli transit camp . On February 22, 1944, Alba was deported to Auschwitz with her husband and children as well as her two sisters on Transport 8. The train arrived here on February 26, 1944. Alba Clerle and her husband were murdered in Auschwitz on the day of their arrival, and their children did not survive the Shoah either.

Her two sisters were also murdered on February 26, 1944, the day they arrived in Auschwitz.

Stumbling block for Cesira Clerle.jpg
CESIRA CLERLE
LIVED HERE
BORN 1876
ARRESTED 5.12.1943
DEPORTED
AUSCHWITZ
MURDERED 26.2.1944
Calle del Ghetto Vecchio 1223
Erioll world.svg
Cesira Amelia Clerle was born in Venice on July 20, 1876. Her parents were Anselmo Clerle and Giovanna Giuseppina, née Fistarol. She had two sisters: Emila (born 1872) and Alba (born 1879). She was married to Leone Camerino. She and her two sisters were arrested in Venice on December 8, 1943; they were first deported to the Fossoli transit camp and from there on transport No. 8 to Auschwitz on February 22, 1944. The deportation train arrived in Auschwitz on February 26, 1944. Cesira Clerle was murdered on the day of arrival in Auschwitz.

Cesira Clerle's sisters were also murdered on the day of arrival in Auschwitz. Cesira and Leone Camerino must have had at least one child, the report to Yad Vashem was made by a granddaughter.

HERE LIVED
GUSTAVO CORIN ALDI
BORN 1881
ARRESTED 05/12/1943
deported
AUSCHWITZ
MURDERED 02/26/1944
Corte del Tagiapiera
Cannaregio 1771
Erioll world.svg
Gustavo Corinaldi was born on March 6, 1881 in Scandiano in the province of Reggio Emilia . He was the son of Rosa and Benedetto Corinaldis.

Gustavo Corinaldi lived in Venice , where he worked for the Assicurazioni Generali . Gustavo was often called a professor because he was considered very well-read and loved and collected books. He also had a teaching qualification for secondary schools - although he never did this in his life.

After the introduction of the Italian Racial Laws in 1938, Gustavo Corinaldi was forced to retire prematurely by the Assicurazioni Generali insurance company . A few days before the mass arrests of the Venetian Jews in December 1943, a friend of Corinaldi's, Giuseppe Turcato, came to the Jewish ghetto of Venice , which was already sealed off with barbed wire . He had already heard of the planned arrests and wanted to warn Gustavo Corinaldi. He had even organized a pass for his friend, which should enable him to free Corinaldi from the ghetto and to save him from arrest. When Turcato told him everything and offered him the opportunity to leave the Jewish ghetto with him, Gustavo Corinaldi declined with thanks. At that time he was with some of his cousins, who, like himself, were between 60 and 70 years old and did not want to leave his relatives alone. So Giuseppe Turcato left the Jewish ghetto alone again.

A few days later, on December 5, 1943, Gustavo Corinaldi was arrested by the Italian police in Venice and was then imprisoned in the city's prison. Later he was taken to a transit camp Fossoli brought from where he on 22 February 1944, the transport N. 8 to the Auschwitz concentration camp was deported. On his arrival in Auschwitz on February 26th, Gustavo Corinaldi was registered with the letter S and murdered immediately.

The stumbling block, newly laid on January 28, 2019, replaces the original one from 2018, which was stolen by strangers.

Stumbling block for Rosita Corinaldi.jpg
ROSITA
CORINALDI LIVED HERE BORN IN
1901
ARRESTED 14.12.1943
DEPORTED
AUSCHWITZ
MURDERED 26.2.1944
Campiello S. Maria Nova
Cannaregio 5999
Erioll world.svg
Rosita Corinaldi was born on November 2, 1901 in Scandiano . She was the only daughter of Salomone Corinaldi and Elena, née Fano. She was married to Mario Dina. The couple had two sons and two daughters: Guido (born 1929), Giorgia (born 1933), Anna (born 1936) and Leone (born 1942). Her husband and children were arrested on December 5, 1943. Rosita Corinaldi was arrested on December 14, 1943. The family was deported from a prison in Venice to the Fossoli transit camp . On February 22, 1944, the entire family was deported to Auschwitz on Transport 8; the deportation train arrived here on February 26. Rosita Corinaldi and three of her children (Giorgia, Anna and Leone) were immediately murdered in a gas chamber.

After her death, her mother and two of her brothers were also arrested, deported to Auschwitz and murdered in a gas chamber on August 6, 1944. Rosita Corinaldi's husband Mario Dina was murdered in Auschwitz on November 30, 1944, and her son Guido did not survive the Shoah either.

Stumbling block for Adele Dina.jpg
HERE LIVED
ADELE DINA
BORN 1890
ARRESTED 06/12/1943
deported
AUSCHWITZ
DIED
DAY OF DEATH UNKNOWN
Fondamenta dei Mori 3399 / a
Erioll world.svg
Adele Dina was born in Venice on June 26, 1890. She was the daughter of Leone Dina and Giuseppina, née Polaccota. She had a sister named Ida (born 1897) and was married to Marco Tedesco. The couple had a son, Alberto Leone Tedesco (born 1930). She was arrested on December 5, 1943, along with her husband and son in Venice. The family was deported from a prison in Venice to the Fossoli transit camp . On February 22, 1944, they were deported to Auschwitz on Transport 8; the deportation train arrived here on February 26. Adele Dina, her husband and their son did not survive the Shoah .

Her sister Ida was arrested on the same day, deported to Auschwitz on the same transport and did not survive the Shoah .

Stumbling block for Anna Dina.jpg

ANNA DINA LIVED HERE
BORN
IN 1936 ARRESTED December
5,
1943
DEPORTED AUSCHWITZ MURDERED February 26, 1944
Campiello S. Maria Nova
Cannaregio 5999
Erioll world.svg
Anna Dina was born in Venice on February 8, 1936. Her parents were Mario Dina and Rosita, née Corinaldi. She had 3 siblings: Guido (born 1929), Giorgia (born 1933) and Leone (born 1942). The entire family was arrested in December (Anna and her father and siblings on December 5, her mother on December 14). The family was deported from a prison in Venice to the Fossoli transit camp . On February 22, 1944, the entire family was deported to Auschwitz on Transport 8; the deportation train arrived here on February 26. Anna Dina, her mother and two of her siblings (Giorgia and Leone) were instantly murdered in a gas chamber.

Her father was murdered on November 30th, and her brother Guido and grandmother Elena Fano Corinaldi did not survive the Shoah either.

Stumbling block for Giorgia Dina.jpg

GIORGIA DINA LIVED HERE
BORN 1933
ARRESTED 5.12.1943
DEPORTED
AUSCHWITZ
MURDERED 26.2.1944
Campiello S. Maria Nova
Cannaregio 5999
Erioll world.svg
Giorgia Dina was born in Venice on May 25, 1933. Her parents were Mario Dina and Rosita, née Corinaldi. She had three siblings: Guido (born 1929), Anna (born 1936) and Leone (born 1942). The entire family was arrested in December (Giorgia and her father and siblings on December 5, her mother on December 14). The family was deported from a prison in Venice to the Fossoli transit camp . On February 22, 1944, the entire family was deported to Auschwitz on Transport 8; the deportation train arrived here on February 26. Giorgia Dina, her mother and two of her siblings (Anna and Leone) were instantly murdered in a gas chamber.

Her father was murdered on November 30th, and her brother Guido and grandmother Elena Fano Corinaldi did not survive the Shoah either.

Stumbling block for Guido Dina.jpg

GUIDO DINA LIVED HERE
BORN 1929
ARRESTED 5.12.1943
DEPORTED
AUSCHWITZ
MURDERED
Campiello S. Maria Nova
Cannaregio 5999
Erioll world.svg
Giudo Dina was born in Venice on December 21, 1929. His parents were Mario Dina and Rosita, née Corinaldi. He had three siblings: Giorgia (born 1933), Anna (born 1936) and brother Leone (born 1942). The entire family was arrested in December (Guido and his father and siblings on December 5, his mother on December 14). The family was deported from a prison in Venice to the Fossoli transit camp . On February 22, 1944, the entire family was deported to Auschwitz on Transport 8; the deportation train arrived here on February 26. His mother and three of his siblings (Giorgia, Anna and Leone) were immediately murdered in a gas chamber. Guido Dina did not survive the Shoah either, the circumstances of his death are not known.

His father was murdered on November 30th, and his grandmother Elena Fano Corinaldi did not survive the Shoah either.

Stumbling block for Leone Dina.jpg

LEONE DINA LIVED HERE
BORN 1942
ARRESTED 5.12.1943
DEPORTED
AUSCHWITZ
MURDERED 26.2.1944
Campiello S. Maria Nova
Cannaregio 5999
Erioll world.svg
Leone Dina was born in Venice on October 19, 1942. His parents were Mario Dina and Rosita, née Corinaldi. He had three older siblings: Anna (born 1936), Giorgia (born 1933) and brother Guido (born 1929). The entire family was arrested in December (Leone and his father and siblings on December 5, his mother on December 14). The family was deported from a prison in Venice to the Fossoli transit camp . On February 22, 1944, the entire family was deported to Auschwitz on Transport 8; the deportation train arrived here on February 26. Leone Dina, his mother and two of his siblings (Giorgia and Anna) were immediately murdered in a gas chamber.

His father was murdered on November 30th, and his brother Guido and grandmother Elena Fano Corinaldi also did not survive the Shoah .

Stumbling block for Mario Dina.jpg

MARIO DINA LIVED HERE
BORN
IN 1894 ARRESTED 5.12.1943
DEPORTED
AUSCHWITZ
MURDERED
Campiello S. Maria Nova
Cannaregio 5999
Erioll world.svg
Mario Dina was born in Venice on March 15, 1894. His parents were Leone Dina and Allegra, née Polacco. He was married to Rosita Corinaldi. The Parr had two sons and two daughters: Guido (born 1929), Giorgia (born 1933), Anna (born 1936) and Leone (born 1942). He and his children were arrested on December 5, 1943. His wife was arrested nine days later on December 14th. The family was deported from a prison in Venice to the Fossoli transit camp . On February 22, 1944, the entire family was deported to Auschwitz on Transport 8; the deportation train arrived here on February 26. Mario Dina's wife and three of his children (Giorgia, Anna and Leone) were murdered in a gas chamber on the day of their arrival. His son Guido did not survive the Shoah either, the circumstances of his death are not known. Mario Dina was murdered on November 30, 1943.

His sister Adele (born 1890) and Ida (born 1897), their husbands and children, were also murdered in Auschwitz.

Stumbling block for Elena Fano Corinaldi.jpg
HERE LIVED
ELENA FANO CORIN ALDI
BORN 1868
ARRESTED 05/06/1944
deported
AUSCHWITZ
MURDERED 06/08/1944
Campiello S. Maria Nova
Cannaregio 5999
Erioll world.svg
Elena Fano Corinaldi was born in Venice on August 18, 1868 . Her parents were Emanuele Fano and Eva, née Forti. She had two younger brothers: Giuseppe (born 1870) and Giulio (born 1874). She was married to Salomone Corinaldi. The couple had at least one child - daughter Rosita (born 1901). Elena Fano Corinaldi and her brothers were arrested on June 5, 1944. At the time of her arrest, her daughter and at least three of her grandchildren (Giorgia, Anna and Leone) had already been gassed in Auschwitz. The siblings were deported from a prison in Venice to the Fossoli transit camp . On August 2, 1944, Elena Fano Corinaldi and her brothers were deported to Auschwitz on Transport No. 14. The transport arrived in Auschwitz on August 6, 1944, and Elena Fano Corinaldi was murdered in a gas chamber on the same day.

Both brothers were also murdered in Auschwitz on August 6, 1944 , their son-in-law Mario Dina was also murdered in Auschwitz, and their grandson Guido Dina did not survive the Shoah either.

Stumbling block for Annina Foa Melli.jpg
ANNINA FOÀ
MELLI LIVED HERE
BORN 1863
ARRESTED 17.8.1944
DEPORTED
AUSCHWITZ
MURDERED 7.9.1944
Calle Ghetto Vecchio
Cannaregio 1232
Annina Foà Melli , daughter of Girolamo Foà and Enrichetta Silva, was born on June 15, 1863 in Venice . She was married to Luciano Melli and had five children with him: Amalia, Abramo, Enrichetta, Bellina and Ada.

Her daughter Bellina, her husband and the four children Ada, Elena, Luciano and Enrico were arrested in December 1943 and deported to Auschwitz in February 1944 . On August 17, 1944, Annina was finally arrested by Germans and Italians in Venice and held in the Risiera di San Sabba concentration camp in Trieste until she was deported to Auschwitz on September 2, 1944 on Transport N. 37T . Immediately after her arrival on September 7, 1944, she was registered with the letter S and she was instantly murdered.

Stumbling block for Attilio Grassini.jpg
ATTILIO GRASSINI
LIVED HERE
BORN 1879
ARRESTED December
5,
1943
DEPORTED AUSCHWITZ MURDERED February 26, 1944
Calle del Ghetto Vecchio 1223
Erioll world.svg
Attilio Grassini was born on July 30th, 1879 in Venice to Giuseppe Grassini and Anna Nacamulli. Attilio was married to Alba Clerle and had two children with her: Bruna (born 1904) and Raffaele (born 1906). Attilio was a merchant and lived in Venice , where he was arrested by the Italian police on December 5 1,943th His son Raffaele, daughter Bruna and their family were also arrested on the same day. His wife Anna only a few days later. Grassini was held in the Venetian prison for a few weeks. Starting from the Fossoli transit camp , he was deported to Auschwitz on February 22nd, 1944, on Transport No. 8 , where he was registered with the letter S on February 26th, and murdered immediately.

His wife, two children and grandchildren did not survive the Shoah either.

Stumbling block for Bruna Grassini.jpg
HERE LIVED
BRUNA GRASSINI
BORN 1904
ARRESTED 05/12/1943
deported
AUSCHWITZ
DIED
DAY OF DEATH UNKNOWN
Calle Ghetto Vecchio
Cannaregio 1156
Erioll world.svg
Bruna Grassini , daughter of Attilio Grassini and Alba Clerle, was born on November 26th, 1904 in Venice . She had seven children with her husband Ugo Beniamino Levi: Mario, Leonella, Alda Silvana, Lina, Vittorina, Aldo and Angelo. Together with her family, she was arrested by Italians in Venice on December 5, 1943 and held in the local prison. On February 22, 1944, she was deported from the Fossoli transit camp with Transport No. 8 to Auschwitz , where she arrived on February 26. The date and place of her murder are unknown.

No member of the Bruna and Ugo Levi family survived the Shoah .

Stumbling block for Anna Jarach Cesana.jpg
HERE LIVED
ANNA Jarach CESANA
BORN 1881
ARRESTED 06/10/1944
deported
AUSCHWITZ
MURDERED ON YOUR ARRIVAL
Calle Emo 1543
Erioll world.svg
Anna Jarach Cesana was born on January 28, 1881 in Venice as the daughter of Aronne Jarach and Evina Grego. She was married to Umberto Cesana and the couple had a daughter, Rita.

On October 6, 1944, Anna Jarach Cesana was arrested by the German and Italian police in Venice and held at the Ospedale Civile there. She was then transferred to the Risiera di San Sabba concentration camp in Trieste . On October 18, 1944, Anna was deported to Auschwitz on Transport No. 39T . On the day of her arrival at Auschwitz , October 23, 1944, she was registered with the letter S and Anna Jarach Cesana was murdered on the same day.

Nothing is known about her husband Umberto and her daughter Rita.

HERE LIVED
GIUSEPPE JONA
BORN 1866
ESCAPE
IN DEATH
17/09/1943
Calle Fontana
Cannaregio 3826
Erioll world.svg
Giuseppe Jona was born on October 22nd, 1866 as son Moshe Jonas in Venice .

He studied medicine in Padua and after completing his studies worked at the Ospedale Civile , the hospital in Venice . Giuseppe Jona was often referred to as the medico dei poveri , the doctor of the poor, and was very respected and popular. Up until 1938 Giuseppe Jona was a member of the Ateneo Veneto and worked as a freelance lecturer. After the Italian Racial Laws were introduced in 1938, he and all other Jews, who made up 15% of the members, had to stay away from the Ateneo Veneto .

From June 1940 he was the head of the Comunità Israelitica di Venezia , the Jewish community in Venice . After September 8, 1943, the fascist authorities asked him to list all members of the Jewish community in Venice . Giuseppe Jona then warned his fellow believers and sisters and urged them to get to safety as soon as possible. In order not to have to hand over the requested list to the fascists, Giuseppe Jona burned all documents that contained the names and addresses of his Jewish community and ended his life himself on September 17, 1943.

Only after the end of the war could Giuseppe Jona be properly buried and his honorable deed recognized.

Stumbling block for Angelo Levi.jpg

ANGELO LEVI LIVED HERE BORN IN
1931
ARRESTED December
5,
1943
DEPORTED AUSCHWITZ MURDERED February 26, 1944
Calle Ghetto Vecchio
Cannaregio 1156
Erioll world.svg
Angelo Levi was born in Venice on December 11, 1931 . His parents were the couple Bruna Grassini and Ugo Beniamino Levi. On December 5, 1943, Angelo, who was just under 12, was arrested by Italians with his siblings and parents and held for weeks in Venice prison . On February 22, 1944, the family was taken from the Fossoli transit camp to the Auschwitz concentration camp on Transport No. 8 , where the boy was registered with the letter S on his arrival on February 26 and immediately murdered.
Stumbling block for Leonella Levi.jpg

LEONELLA LEVI LIVED HERE
BORN 1934
ARRESTED 5.12.1943
DEPORTED
AUSCHWITZ
MURDERED 26.2.1944
Calle Ghetto Vecchio
Cannaregio 1156
Erioll world.svg
Leonella Levi was born in Venice on March 5, 1934 . Her parents were Bruna Grassini and Ugo Beniamino Levi. Together with her parents and siblings, she was arrested by Italians in Venice on December 5, 1943 and taken to the prison there. The family was imprisoned there until February 22, 1944, when they were taken from the Fossoli transit camp to the Auschwitz concentration camp on Transport No. 8 . Like her siblings Angelo, Lina and Mario, Leonella was registered with the matriculation number S on her arrival on February 26th and murdered immediately.
Stumbling block for Lina Levi.jpg

LINA LEVI LIVED HERE
BORN
IN 1937 ARRESTED December
5,
1943
DEPORTED AUSCHWITZ MURDERED February 26, 1944
Calle Ghetto Vecchio
Cannaregio 1156
Erioll world.svg
Lina Levi , born in Venice on November 24, 1937 , was the youngest daughter of the couple Bruna Grassini and Ugo Beniamino Levi. Together with members of her family, she was arrested by the Italian police in Venice on December 5, 1943 and held in prison for weeks. On February 22, 1944, the family was with the transport N. 8 from the transit camp Fossoli to Auschwitz brought. After her arrival at the concentration camp on February 26th, Lina and her siblings Angelo, Mario and Leonella were registered with the matriculation number S and murdered on the same day.
Stumbling stone for Maria Ester Anna Levi Muggia (Venice) .jpg

MARIA ESTER LIVED HERE ANNA
LEVI MUGGIA
BORN
IN 1884 ARRESTED 5.12.1943
DEPORTED
AUSCHWITZ
MURDERED 26.2.1944
Fondamenta S. Giobbe
Cannaregio 506
Erioll world.svg
Maria Ester Anna Levi Muggia was born on June 8, 1884 in Treviso as the daughter of the couple Giuseppina Coen and Perfetto Levi. She was married to Giuseppe Muggia and had two children with him: Giulio (1907) and Franca (1909).

Maria Ester Anna Levi was arrested in Venice on December 5, 1943, together with her daughter and her husband . The family was then held in the city prison and then in the Fossoli transit camp . On February 22, 1944, they were deported to Auschwitz on Transport No. 8 .

When she arrived in Auschwitz on February 26th, Maria Ester Anna Levi Muggia was registered with the letter S and murdered immediately.

Stumbling block for Mario Levi.jpg

MARIO LEVI LIVED HERE
BORN
IN 1940 ARRESTED 5.12.1943
DEPORTED
AUSCHWITZ
MURDERED 26.2.1944
Calle Ghetto Vecchio
Cannaregio 1156
Erioll world.svg
Mario Levi , son of Bruna Grassini and Ugo Beniamino Levi, was born on February 4, 1940 in Venice . Together with members of his family, Mario was arrested by the Italian police in Venice on December 5, 1943 , and spent his fourth birthday in the city's prison. On February 22, 1944, the family was taken from the Fossoli transit camp to Auschwitz in Transport No. 8 . After the Levi family arrived at the concentration camp on February 26, the 4-year-old was registered with matriculation number S and murdered on the same day.
Stumbling block for Silvana Alda Levi.jpg

SILVANA ALDA LEVI LIVED HERE
BORN 1928
ARRESTED 5.12.1943
DEPORTED
AUSCHWITZ
MURDERED 7.2.1945
BERGEN-BELSEN
Calle Ghetto Vecchio
Cannaregio 1156
Erioll world.svg
Silvana Alda Levi was born on January 11, 1928 in Venice as the second daughter of Bruna Grassini and Ugo Beniamino Levi. She and her parents and siblings were arrested on December 5, 1943 in Venice . After weeks of imprisonment in the city's prison, the family was deported on February 22, 1944 from the Fossoli transit camp with Transport No. 8 to Auschwitz , where they arrived on February 26.

In contrast to her younger siblings Angelo, Mario, Leonella and Lina, Silvana Alda was not murdered immediately after her arrival in Auschwitz , but about a year later, on February 7, 1945 in the Bergen-Belsen concentration camp .

Stumbling block for Ugo Beniamino Levi.jpg
HERE LIVED
UGO BENIAMINO LEVI
BORN 1897
ARRESTED 05/12/1943
deported
AUSCHWITZ
DIED
DAY OF DEATH UNKNOWN
Calle Ghetto Vecchio
Cannaregio 1156
Erioll world.svg
Ugo Beniamino Levi , son of Aronne Levi and Carolina Pesaro, was born in Venice on July 3, 1897 . He was married to Bruna Grassini and they had seven children.

On December 5, 1943, Ugo Beniamino was arrested by Italians in Venice with his children and his wife Bruna and, after being imprisoned for weeks in the city prison, deported from the Fossoli transit camp to the Auschwitz concentration camp on Transport No. 8 . It is not documented what happened to Ugo Beniamino after the family's arrival in Auschwitz on February 26th. The place and date of his murder are unknown.

Neither he nor his children or his wife Bruna survived the Shoah .

Stumbling block for Ada Elena Mariani.jpg
HERE LIVED
ADA ELENA MARIANI
BORN 1927
ARRESTED 05/12/1943
deported
AUSCHWITZ
MURDERED 02/26/1944
Rio Terà de la Madalena 2337
Erioll world.svg
Ada Elena Mariani was born on June 6, 1927 in Venice . She was the youngest of the four children of Francesco Isacco Mariani and Bellina Melli (in turn daughter of Annina Foà Melli). On December 5, 1943, Ada was arrested together with her parents and her siblings Elena, Enrico and Luciano in Venice and held in the local prison. On February 22, 1944, the family was deported from the Fossoli transit camp to Auschwitz in Transport No. 8 . Just like her sister Elena, Ada, who was only 16 years old, was registered with the letter S when she arrived at the concentration camp on February 26, 1944 and was immediately murdered.
Stumbling block for Elena Mariani.jpg
HERE LIVED
ELENA MARIANI
BORN 1920
ARRESTED 05/12/1943
deported
AUSCHWITZ
MURDERED 02/26/1944
Rio Terà de la Madalena 2337
Erioll world.svg
Elena Mariani was born on March 6, 1920 in Venice to Francesco Isacco Mariani and Bellina Melli. On December 5, 1943, Elena was arrested by Italians in Venice, along with her parents and siblings , and held in the city jail for weeks. On February 22, 1944, Elena and her family were deported from the Fossoli transit camp to Auschwitz in Transport No. 8 . When Elena and her sister Ada arrived at the concentration camp on February 26, 1944, they were registered with the letter S and murdered immediately.
Stumbling block for Enrico Mariani.jpg
ENRICO MARIANI
LIVED HERE
BORN 1912
ARRESTED 5.12.1943
DEPORTED
AUSCHWITZ
MURDERED 18.1.1945
Rio Terà de la Madalena 2337
Erioll world.svg
Enrico Mariani was born in Venice on June 9, 1912 . His parents were Francesco Isacco Mariani and Bellina Melli. Enrico was married to Pia Cesana.

On December 5, 1943, Enrico Mariani was arrested by Italians in Venice , as were his parents, his siblings and his heavily pregnant wife Pia. He and his family were detained in the city jail. His wife Pia gave birth to their son Leo on December 18, 1943 in captivity.

On February 22, 1944, Enrico and his family were deported from the Fossoli transit camp to the Auschwitz concentration camp on Transport No. 8 . After his arrival on February 26th, Enrico was registered with the matriculation number 174531. His sisters, parents, wife and newborn son were murdered immediately upon arrival. Enrico and his brother Luciano were initially left alive and held in Auschwitz concentration camp . About a year later, on January 18, 1945, Enrico was murdered during the evacuation of Auschwitz , one of the so-called death marches .

His brother Luciano was the only family member who survived the Shoah .

Stumbling stone for Francesco Isacco Mariani.jpg
HERE LIVED
FRANCESCO ISACCO MARIANI
BORN 1888
ARRESTED 05/12/1943
deported
AUSCHWITZ
MURDERED 02/26/1944
Cannaregio 2337
Erioll world.svg
Francesco Isacco Mariani was born in Venice on July 14, 1888 . His parents were Zaira Forti and Enrico Mariani. With his wife Bellina Melli (daughter of Annina Foà Melli), Francesco had four children: Luciano, Ada, Elena and Enrico.

Together with his wife, children and the wife of his son Enrico, Francesco Mariani was arrested by the Italian police in Venice on December 5, 1943 and held in the city prison. After weeks of imprisonment, during which his grandson Leo was born, the family was deported from the Fossoli transit camp to Auschwitz on February 22, 1944 . Upon their arrival on February 26th, Francesco Isacco, his wife, two daughters, daughter-in-law and newborn grandson were registered with the letter S and immediately murdered.

His son Enrico was murdered in Auschwitz a year later .

Francesco Isacco's son Luciano Mariani survived the Shoah as the only member of the family.

HERE LIVED
LEO MARIANI
BORN 1943
ARRESTED 12/18/1943
deported
AUSCHWITZ
MURDERED 02/26/1944
Calle Maggiore
Cannaregio 1600
Erioll world.svg
Leo Mariani was born in captivity in Venice on December 18, 1943 . His parents, Pia Cesana and Enrico Mariani, were arrested in Venice on December 5, 1943 and were held in the city's prison at the time of his birth. After a short time, the newborn Leo was brought to the Fossoli transit camp with his parents, grandparents (Francesco Isacco Mariani and Bellina Melli), aunts (Ada and Elena) and his uncle (Luciano) and deported to Auschwitz on February 22, 1944 . Upon his arrival, Leo and the rest of the family, except for his father and uncle, were murdered immediately.

His father Enrico started about a year later, in January 1945. His uncle Luciano survived the Shoah as the only family member.

Stumbling block for Bartolomeo Meloni.jpg
BARTOLOMEO MELONI
LIVED HERE
BORN 1900
POLITICAL PRISONER
October
4,
1943 DEPORTED DACHAU DIED July 9,
1944
Campo SS. Apostoli 4470
Erioll world.svg
Bartolomeo Meloni , born in 1900, was inspector general of the Italian railways. Immediately after Italy left the war on September 8, 1943 and the subsequent German occupation, he joined the Venetian Resistance Command (CLN). After only a few weeks of resistance, he was arrested by the German SS on October 4, 1943 and interrogated in the Santa Maria Maggiore prison. This was followed by deportation via Verona to the Dachau concentration camp , where he died.

A memorial column on platform 8 of Venice train station is dedicated to the resistance of the railway workers, including Meloni. The stumbling block dedicated to him was the first in Venice.

Stumbling block for Giuseppe Modena.jpg
GIUSEPPE MODENA
LIVED HERE
BORN 1898
POLITICAL PRISONER
18.1.1944
DEPORTED
MAUTHAUSEN
MURDERED 13.1.1945
Campo della Maddalena
Cannaregio 2115
Erioll world.svg
Giuseppe Modena was a Catholic underground printer who was murdered in Mauthausen
Stumbling block for Franca Muggia (Venice) .jpg
FRANCA
MUGGIA LIVED HERE BORN IN
1909
ARRESTED 5.12.1943
DEPORTED
AUSCHWITZ
MURDERED
Fondamenta S. Giobbe
Cannaregio 506
Erioll world.svg
Franca Muggia was born on April 15, 1909 in Venice as the daughter of Maria Ester Anna Levi and Giuseppe Muggia.

On December 5, 1943, Franca and her parents were arrested in Venice and then held first in the city's prison and then in the Fossoli transit camp . On February 22, 1944, the family was deported to Auschwitz in Transport No. 8 . The matriculation number given to her on arrival is not known.

Franca Muggia did not survive the Shoah . The date and place of her death are unknown.

Stumbling block for Giuseppe Muggia (Venice) .jpg
GIUSEPPE MUGGIA
LIVED HERE
BORN 1877
ARRESTED 5.12.1943
DEPORTED
AUSCHWITZ
MURDERED 26.2.1944
Fondamenta S. Giobbe
Cannaregio 506
Erioll world.svg
Giuseppe Muggia was born on April 25, 1877 in Busseto , in the province of Parma . His parents were Cesira Basola and Emilio Muggia. Giuseppe was married to Maria Ester Anna Levi and had two children with her: Giulio (1907) and Franca (1909).

Together with his daughter and his wife, he was arrested in Venice on December 5, 1943 . The family was then held in the city prison and then in the Fossoli transit camp . On February 22, 1944, they were deported to Auschwitz on Transport No. 8 .

Upon his arrival in Auschwitz on February 26th, Giuseppe Muggia was registered with the letter S and immediately murdered.

Stumbling block for Achille Navarro.jpg
ACHILLE NAVARRO
LIVED HERE
BORN 1921
ARRESTED 5.5.1944
DEPORTED
AUSCHWITZ
MURDERED
Calle Orto
Cannaregio 1215
Erioll world.svg
Achille Navarro , son of Attilio Navarro and Giuditta Rita Aboaf, was born on July 19, 1921 in Venice . He had two sisters, Amalia (1917) and Lina (1926), and a brother, Bruno (1916). The father Attilio died of a serious illness in 1934. During the German occupation of Venice , Amalia, Lina and Achille stayed with their mother in the city, while Bruno found shelter in a monastery in Rome .

On May 5, 1944, Achille, his mother and sisters were arrested by German officials in Venice and held in the Santa Maria Maggiore city prison. On May 30th they were transferred to the Fossoli transit camp , from where they were deported to Auschwitz on June 26th with Transport No. 13 . Upon her arrival on June 30th, Achilles mother Giuditta was immediately murdered in one of the gas chambers. A few months later, on October 31, 1944, Achille Navarro was also murdered in Auschwitz . His sisters Lina and Amalia survived and were liberated in May 1945.

Stumbling block for Amalia Navarro.jpg
HERE LIVED
AMALIA NAVARRO
BORN 1917
ARRESTED 05/05/1944
deported
AUSCHWITZ
THERESIENSTADT
FREED
Calle Orto
Cannaregio 1215
Erioll world.svg
Amalia Navarro was born in Venice on September 27, 1917 as the daughter of Attilio Navarro and Giuditta Rita Aboaf . On May 5, 1944, she and her mother and siblings Achille and Lina were arrested by Germans in Venice and held in the prison there. On May 30, the family was transferred to Fossoli transit camp , where they stayed until June 26. She was then deported to Auschwitz on Transport No. 13 . When she arrived on June 30, Amalia was registered with matriculation number A-8483. Her sister Lina and her brother Achille were also admitted to the camp. Her mother was murdered immediately, Achille a few months later, at the end of October 1944.

On October 31, 1944, Amalia and Lina were taken to the Bergen-Belsen concentration camp, where they stayed for about 2.5 months. On February 7, 1945, the sisters were transferred to Raguhn , where a subcamp of the Buchenwald concentration camp was located. There they worked like hundreds of other female prisoners in an aircraft factory. As the Allies approached in mid-April, Amalia and Lina were brought to Theresienstadt. By the time she arrived on May 9, 1945, Theresienstadt had already been liberated and was under the direction of the Red Cross. The sisters were thus also free. After a few months of staying in the “Casa d'Italia” in Prague and in a collection camp in Wiener Neustadt , the sisters were finally able to return home after making a detour via Hungary and Austria . They returned to Venice on August 20, 1945 and were able to move back into the house where they were born. Amalia found work in a company, Lina in a hotel. In 2004, Amalia died four years after her sister Lina.

Stumbling block for Lina Navarro.jpg
HERE LIVED
LINA NAVARRO
BORN 1926
ARRESTED 05/05/1944
deported
AUSCHWITZ
THERESIENSTADT
FREED
Calle Orto
Cannaregio 1215
Erioll world.svg
Lina Navarro was born in Venice on February 7, 1926, the last of three children of Attilio Navarro and Giuditta Rita Aboaf . Together with her mother Giuditta and her siblings Amalia and Achille, Lina was arrested on May 5, 1944 and in the Santa Maria Maggiore prison held in Venice . On May 30th, the family was transferred to Fossoli transit camp , where they were detained for several weeks. On June 26, 1944, the siblings and their mother were deported to Auschwitz on Transport No. 13 . When she arrived on June 30th, Lina was registered with matriculation number A-8484. Achille and Amalia were also admitted to the camp, while their mother Giuditta was immediately murdered. Together with her sister Amalia Lina was on 31 October 1944 to Bergen-Belsen transferred. They stayed there until they were brought to Raguhn on February 7, 1945 , where they had to work in a Buchenwald satellite camp with hundreds of other female prisoners in an aircraft factory. When the Allies approached in mid-April, the sisters were transferred to Theresienstadt, which at that time was already under the direction of the Red Cross. The sisters were liberated there on their arrival on May 9, 1945.

After a few months of staying in the “Casa d'Italia” in Prague and a collection camp in Wiener Neustadt , the sisters were finally able to return home after a detour via Hungary and Austria . On August 20, 1945, they returned to Venice and were able to move back to the house where they were born. Lina found work as a cloakroom clerk in a hotel. In 1950 she married Mario Saba and the two had a daughter. Lina Navarro died in 2000, her sister Amalia in 2004.

Stumbling block for Adolfo Ottolenghi.jpg
HERE LIVED
ADOLFO OTTOLENGHI
BORN 1885
ARRESTED 08/17/1944
deported
AUSCHWITZ
DAY OF DEATH UNKNOWN
Strada Nuova al civico 2346 / b di Cannaregio
Erioll world.svg
Adolfo Ottolenghi was born on July 30, 1885 in Livorno . His parents were Amalia Ventura and Abramo Ottolenghi. He was married to Regina Tedeschi and had two sons with her: Carlo and Eugenio.

In 1907, Adolfo Ottolenghi completed his training at the rabbinical college in Livorno and his law studies at the University of Pisa . In 1911 he was appointed rabbi of the city of Venice . A year later he also took over the position of secretary of the Fraterna Generale di Culto e Beneficienza of Venice . Ottolenghi was rabbi from 1911 to 1919. From May 18, 1919 until his death, Adolfo Ottolenghi was the city's chief rabbi. He led the congregation with full devotion and looked after the most important institutions. Aside from faith, Adolfo Ottolenghi was engaged in organizing charity events and educating young people. He also devotes himself intensively to the study of the history of Venice's Jews and was interested in the person of Leone da Modena . When the mass deportations of the Jewish community in Venice began in November 1943 , Regina Ottolenghi fled to Treviso , and the couple's youngest son, Eugenio, was brought to safety in Genoa . Adolfo Ottolenghi was a part of his community after Como been abducted and was established in December 1943, after Fossoli transferred. The older inmates (over 70 years of age), including Adolfo Ottolenghi , were then allowed to return to Venice , where they were held in the Casa di ricovero israelitica. Adolfo Ottolenghi was finally arrested on August 17, 1944 and taken to the San Sabba camp in Trieste . After a few weeks imprisonment in Trieste , he was deported to Auschwitz on September 2nd with transport No. 37T , where he arrived on September 7th.

The exact date of Adolfo Ottolenghi's murder is unknown.

Stumbling block for Giorgio Ottolenghi.jpg
GIORGIO
OTTOLENGHI LIVED HERE, BORN IN
1869
ARRESTED 6.12.1943
DEPORTED
AUSCHWITZ
MURDERED
Cannaregio 2006
Erioll world.svg
Giacomo Giorgio Ottolenghi was born in Venice on February 28, 1869 . His parents were Sara Jesi and Lazzaro Ottolenghi. He was married to Emilia Clerle.

There are various details about the time of his arrest. Giacomo Giorgio Ottolenghi was murdered by the Nazi regime.

Stumbling block for Elsa Romanelli.jpg
HERE LIVED
ELSA ROMANELLI
BORN 1889
ARRESTED 05/12/1943
deported
AUSCHWITZ
MURDERED
Calle larga Giacinto Gallina 5401 / a
Erioll world.svg
Elsa Romanelli was born in Venice on October 12, 1889. * She was the daughter of Elena Cuzzi and Alessandro Romanelli.

On December 5, 1943, Elsa and her sister were arrested by Italians in Venice and were subsequently held in the city's prison. She was then transferred to the Fossoli transit camp and deported to Auschwitz on February 22, 1944 with Transport No. 8 . No specific information is known about what happened after she arrived at the camp on February 26, only that she did not survive the Shoah . Elsa Romanelli's death date and place are unknown. (*) Note: various sources give the year 1899 as the year of your birth.

Stumbling block for Raffaella Romanelli.jpg
HERE LIVED
RAFFAELLA ROMANELLI
BORN 1897
ARRESTED 05/12/1943
deported
AUSCHWITZ
MURDERED
Calle larga Giacinto Gallina 5401 / a
Erioll world.svg
Raffaella Romanelli was born in Venice on December 6, 1897 . Her parents were Elena Cuzzi and Alessandro Romanelli.

One day before her 46th birthday, on December 5, 1943, Raffaella and her sister Elsa were arrested by Italians in Venice . After weeks of imprisonment in the city's prison, the sisters were transferred to the Fossoli transit camp and deported from there on February 22, 1944 with Transport No. 8 to Auschwitz , where they arrived on February 26. Raffaella was murdered during the Shoah . The exact date and place of death are unknown.

HERE LIVED
EUGENIO Saraval
BORN 1898
ARRESTED 30.10.1944
deported
RAVENSBRÜCK
MURDERED
Campiello Santa Maria Nova
Cannaregio 6042
Erioll world.svg
Eugenio Saraval was born in Milan on September 25, 1898 . He was the son of Elisa Errera and Benedetto Saraval. His wife was Rosa Sartori.

On October 30, 1944, Eugenio was arrested in Venice and imprisoned in the city prison. He was then taken to the Risiera di San Sabba concentration camp in Trieste and deported to the Ravensbrück concentration camp on November 28 with Transport No. 41T . The date of his arrival in the Ravensbrück concentration camp and that of his murder are not known.

Stumbling block for Alberto Leone Todesco.jpg
HERE LIVED
ALBERTO LEONE
TODESCO
BORN 1930
ARRESTED 06/12/1943
deported
AUSCHWITZ
DIED
DAY OF DEATH UNKNOWN
Fondamenta dei Mori 3399 / a
Erioll world.svg
Alberto Leone Todesco , son of Adele Dina and Marco Todesco, was born in Venice on October 22, 1930 .

On December 5, 1943, 13-year-old Alberto and his parents were arrested by Italians in Venice . He was held first in the city prison and then in Fossoli transit camp . On February 22, 1944, he and his parents were deported to Auschwitz in Transport No. 8 .

Alberto Leone Todesco and his parents did not survive the Shoah . The date and place of his death are unknown.

Stumbling block for Marco Todesco.jpg
HERE LIVED
MARCO TODESCO
BORN 1891
ARRESTED 06/12/1943
deported
AUSCHWITZ
DIED
DAY OF DEATH UNKNOWN
Fondamenta dei Mori 3399 / a
Erioll world.svg
Marco Todesco was born in Venice on November 11, 1891 . He was the son of Allegra Ottolenghi and Alberto Todesco. Marco was married to Adele Dina and had a son with her, Alberto Leone.

On December 5, 1943, Marco was arrested by Italians along with his wife and son and was first imprisoned in Venice prison and then in the Fossoli transit camp . On February 22, 1944, the family was deported to Auschwitz on Transport No. 8 , where they arrived on February 26. Like his wife and son, Marco Todesco was murdered. The date and place of his death are not known.

Stumbling block for Edoardo Usigli.jpg
EDOARDO USIGLI
LIVED HERE
BORN 1876
ARRESTED 5.12.1943
DEPORTED
AUSCHWITZ
MURDERED 26.2.1944
Calle della Misercordia
Cannaregio 386
Erioll world.svg
Edoardo Usigli , called Sacagnao, was born in Venice on August 28, 1876 . He was the son of Leone Usigli and married to Gisella Campos.

On December 5, 1943, Edoardo Usigli was arrested by Italians in Venice . After weeks of imprisonment in the city's prison and the Fossoli transit camp , he was deported to Auschwitz on February 22, 1944 with Transport No. 8 . Upon his arrival on February 26, Edoardo was registered with the letter S and immediately murdered.

Stumbling stone for 21 deported people.jpg
AUGUST 17, 1944, 21 OLD RESIDENTS WERE DEPORTED
FROM THIS HOUSE AND MURDERED IN THE NAZIS CAMPING



Campo di Ghetto Nuovo
Erioll world.svg
The Casa Israelitica di Riposo , a Jewish old people's home, was located at Campo di Ghetto Nuovo . From there, 21 elderly women and men, all over 70, were arrested on August 17, 1944, deported and murdered by the Nazi regime.

Today, a stumbling block and reliefs by the Lithuanian sculptor Arbit Blatas remember the victims.

Castello

image translation Location Name, biography
Stumbling block for Gianna Cavalieri.jpg

GIANNA CAVALIERI LIVED HERE BORN IN
1888
ARRESTED 15.2.1944
DEPORTED
RAVENSBRÜCK
MURDERED
Calle Scaletta
Castello 6039
Erioll world.svg
Gianna Cavalieri was born in Ferrara on October 6, 1888 . Her parents were Pesaro Bice Ercole Cavalieri and she had a sister, Giuseppina. Gianna was married to Girolamo Vivante.

On February 15, 1944, Gianna was arrested by Italians in Venice and was imprisoned in the city prison. She was later taken to the Risiera di San Sabba camp in Trieste . On November 28, 1944, Gianna was deported to the Ravensbrück concentration camp on Transport No. 41T . The date of her arrival is unknown. Gianna was murdered in Ravensbrück .

Stumbling block for Alba Vivante.jpg
HERE LIVED
ALBA VIVANTE
BORN 1872
ARRESTED 07/08/1944
deported
AUSCHWITZ
MURDERED
Calle Scaletta 6039
Erioll world.svg
Alba Vivante was born in Venice on September 10, 1872 . Her parents were Sara and Cesare Vivante, who had three other children, Anna, Ida and Costante.

On August 7, 1944, Alba and her siblings were arrested by Germans and Italians in Mogliano Veneto , in the Treviso province . They were imprisoned in the Risiera di San Sabba camp in Trieste and were deported from there to Auschwitz . Upon arrival, Alba was registered with the letter S and murdered. The exact date of Alba's death is unknown.

Stumbling block for Anna Vivante.jpg
HERE LIVED
ANNA VIVANTE
BORN 1866
ARRESTED 07/08/1944
deported
AUSCHWITZ
MURDERED
Calle Scaletta 6039
Erioll world.svg
Anna Vivante was born on September 20, 1866, the first daughter of Sara and Cesare Vivante in Venice .

Together with her siblings Alba (1872), Ida (1870) and Costante (1878), Anna was arrested by Germans and Italians on August 7, 1944 in Mogliano Veneto , in the province of Treviso . Until the time of their deportation to Auschwitz , the siblings were held in the Risiera di San Sabba camp in Trieste . Upon her arrival in Auschwitz , Anna was registered with the letter S and immediately murdered.

Stumbling block for Costante Vivante.jpg
COSTANTE
VIVANTE LIVED HERE BORN IN
1878
ARRESTED August
7th,
1944
DEPORTED AUSCHWITZ MURDERED
Calle Scaletta 6039
Erioll world.svg
Costante Vivante , the only son of the couple Sara and Cesare Vivante, was born in Venice on June 29, 1878 .

Together with his three sisters Anna, Alba and Ida, he was arrested on August 7, 1944 in Mogliano Veneto , in the province of Treviso , and was then imprisoned in the Risiera di San Sabba camp in Trieste . From there, Costante and his sisters were deported to Auschwitz . On arrival he was registered with the letter S and immediately murdered. His sisters did not survive the Shoah either.

Stumbling block for Ida Vivante.jpg
HERE LIVED
IDA VIVANTE
BORN 1870
ARRESTED 07/08/1944
deported
AUSCHWITZ
MURDERED
Calle Scaletta 6039
Erioll world.svg
Ida Vivante was born in Venice on August 4, 1870 . Her parents were Sara and Cesare Vivante, her siblings Alba (1872), Anna (1866) and Costante (1878).

On August 7, 1944, the siblings were arrested in the province of Treviso , in Mogliano Veneto , and then held in the Risiera di San Sabba camp. Eventually they were deported to Auschwitz , where Ida, like her siblings, was registered with the letter S and immediately murdered.

JOLE JESURUM
LIVED HERE
BORN 1926
ARRESTED 7/11/1944
DEPORTED
RAVENSBRÜCK
MURDERED 1/5/1945
Calle Cicogna
Castello 6222
Erioll world.svg
Jole Jesurum was born in Venice on August 15, 1926 . Her parents were Elvira Starita and Arrigo Giuseppe Jesurum.

On November 7, 1944, the sisters Jole and Marisa were arrested in Pianiga , in the metropolitan city of Venice , and then held in Venice prison . After a few weeks they were brought to Trieste to the Risiera di San Sabba concentration camp and deported from there on November 28th to the Ravensbrück concentration camp on Transport No. 41T .

Jole Jesurum was murdered a few weeks later on January 1, 1945 in the Bergen-Belsen concentration camp .

MARISA JESURUM
LIVED HERE
BORN 1929
ARRESTED 11/7/1944
DEPORTED
RAVENSBRÜCK
DIED
08/22/1945 BERGEN-BELSEN
Calle Cicogna
Castello 6222
Erioll world.svg
Marisa Jesurum was born in Venice on December 24, 1929, the second daughter of the couple Elvira Starita and Arrigo Giuseppe Jesurum . She had a sister named Jole three years older than her.

On November 7, 1944, 15-year-old Marisa was arrested with her sister Jole in Pianiga in the metropolitan city of Venice . The sisters were then imprisoned in Venice prison before being taken to the Risiera di San Sabba concentration camp in Trieste . On November 28, they were deported from Trieste to the Ravensbrück concentration camp on Transport No. 41T .

Marisa's sister Jole was murdered a few weeks later in the Bergen-Belsen concentration camp . Marisa herself survived the horrors of the concentration camp , but died a few months after its liberation (April 1945). Her date of death is August 28, 1945, the place of death is unknown.

HERE LIVED
AUGUSTO
COEN PORTO
BORN 1869
ARRESTED 05/12/1943
deported
AUSCHWITZ
MURDERED 26/02/1944
Calle Larga S. Lorenzo
Castello 5117
Erioll world.svg
Augusto Coen Porto was born in Venice on July 8, 1869 . He was the son of the couple Aristea Colorni and Mosè Coen Porto and had two siblings: Vittorio (1866) and Amelia (1873). Augusto Coen Porto was married to Rosalia Luzzatto.

On February 2, 1944, Augusto was arrested in Venice with his brother Vittorio and his wife Rosalia . As a result, they were all detained together in the city prison. A short time later they were taken to a transit camp Fossoli brought. Augusto, his wife Rosalia and his sister Amelia (arrested on December 5, 1943) were deported on February 22 with Transport No. 8 from the Fossoli transit camp to Auschwitz .

When they arrived at the concentration camp on February 26, all three of them were registered with the letter S and immediately murdered.

Dorsoduro

image translation Location Name, biography
HERE LIVED
OLGA Blumenthal
BORN 1873
ARRESTED 30.10.1944
deported
RAVENSBRÜCK
MURDERED 02/24/1945
Calle Foscari
Erioll world.svg
Olga Blumenthal was born on April 20, 1873 in Venice as the daughter of Carlo Blumenthal and Mimma Goldschmidt. She married Gilberto Secretant. She was arrested in Venice on October 30, 1944 and was held first in the Venice prison and then in the Risiera di San Sabba in Trieste. On November 28, 1944, she was taken with convoy No. 41T deported from Trieste to the Ravensbrück concentration camp . There she was murdered on February 24, 1945.

San Marco

image translation Location Name, biography
Stumbling block for Bonaventura Ferrazzutto.jpg
HERE LIVED
BONAVENTURA
FERRAZZUTTO
BORN 1887
POLITICAL PRISONER
11/26/1943
deported
MAUTHAUSEN
MURDERED 04/10/1944
CASTLE HARTHEIM
Calle dei Fabbri
San Marco 4741
Erioll world.svg
Bonaventure Ferrazzutto was
Bonaventure Ferrazzutto
Born on March 5, 1887 in Venice. His family came from Friuli , specifically from Coseano . His father Antonio ran a trattoria on Calle dei Fabbri near Campo San Luca in Venice. While still at school he joined the socialist movement and got to know Giacinto Menotti Serrato , a leading member of the PSI and at the time editor-in-chief of a Venetian weekly newspaper. He became Serrato's advisor and secretary. As Serrato became editor-in-chief of Avanti! he followed him to Milan. There he met Elvira Pillen, a Venetian woman. They married. His wife became the leader of the Socialist Women Movement. Both were both well integrated into Milan's socialist circles and became friends with Angelica Balabanova , Claudio Treves and others. When Serrato left the Socialist Party and joined the Communists, Ferrazzutto stayed in the PSI, but in the reform wing. When Pietro Nenni took over the management of Avanti! took over, Ferrazzutto became its administrator. A close friendship developed with Nenni. After several fascist attacks on the newspaper, it was shut down in 1922. Bonaventura accepted an offer from the publisher Angelo Rizzoli , won his trust and was finally appointed general agent of the publishing house. On 26 November 1943 he was arrested as a political adversary and then to the Mauthausen concentration camp deported. There he actively participated in the secret resistance. On October 4, 1944, he was murdered by the Nazi regime in Hartheim Castle .

When the Avanti! Re-appeared on May 1, 1945, it printed a picture of Ferrazzutto Bonaventura on its front page and paid tribute to his efforts for the working class. Angelo Rizzoli honored him and his services to the publishing house on a marble plaque in the company's premises in Via Civitavecchia in Milan. Several socialist organizations were named after him.

Stumbling block for Rita Calimani.jpg
HERE LIVED
RITA Călimani
BORN 1892
ARRESTED 05/12/1943
deported
AUSCHWITZ
MURDERED
Campo della Guerra
San Marco 515
Erioll world.svg
Rita Lea Calimani was born in Venice on December 31, 1892. Her parents were Giacomo Calimani and Enrichetta geb. Polacco. She had a brother named Moisè (born 1870). First she was married to Mario Nacamulli, the couple had at least one daughter, Wally (born 1914). She was later married to Ettore Girolamo Segré, the couple also had a daughter, Nedda (born 1933). Rita Calimani, her husband and daughters were arrested in Venice on December 5, 1943. They were taken to Carcere di Venezia and then taken to the Fossoli transit camp . On February 22, 1944, the family was deported to the Auschwitz concentration camp on Transport 08 . They arrived on February 26, 1944, and on the same day, their husband and younger daughter lost their lives in the Auschwitz gas chambers . Rita Calimani and her older daughter were also murdered by the Nazi regime. The day and place of her death are unknown.

Her brother Moisè Calimani was also killed during the Shoah .

Stumbling block for Wally Nacamulli.jpg
WALLY NACAMULLI
LIVED HERE
BORN 1914
ARRESTED 5.12.1943
DEPORTED
AUSCHWITZ
MURDERED
Campo della Guerra
San Marco 515
Erioll world.svg
Wally Nacamulli was born in Venice on August 26, 1914. Her parents were Mario Nacamulli and Lea Calimani. She and her family were arrested in Venice on December 5, 1943. They were detained in Carcere di Venezia and then taken to the Fossoli transit camp . On February 22, 1944, the family was deported to the Auschwitz concentration camp on Transport 08 . They arrived on February 26, 1944 and on the same day their younger sister and stepfather lost their lives in the gas chambers at Auschwitz. Wally Nacamulli and her mother were also murdered by the Nazi regime. The day and place of her death are unknown.
Stumbling block for Girolamo Segre.jpg
GIROLAMO SEGRÉ
LIVED HERE
BORN 1881
ARRESTED 5.12.1943
DEPORTED
AUSCHWITZ
MURDERED 26.2.1944
Campo della Guerra
San Marco 515
Erioll world.svg
Ettore Girolamo Segré was born in Trieste on July 21, 1881 . His parents were Leone Segré and Rachele geb. Campos. He was married to Rita Lea Calimani. The couple had a daughter, Nedda (born 1933). He and his family were arrested in Venice on December 5, 1943. They were first brought to Carcere di Venezia and then taken to the Fossoli transit camp . On February 22, 1944, the family was deported to the Auschwitz concentration camp on Transport 08 . They arrived on February 26, 1944 and on the same day Ettore Girolamo Segré and his eleven-year-old daughter Nedda lost their lives in the gas chambers at Auschwitz.

His wife and stepdaughter Wally Nacamulli were also murdered by the Nazi regime during the Shoah . The date and place of death are unknown.

Stumbling block for Nedda Segre.jpg
NEDDA SEGRÉ
LIVED HERE
BORN 1933
ARRESTED 5.12.1943
DEPORTED
AUSCHWITZ
MURDERED 26.2.1944
Campo della Guerra
San Marco 515
Erioll world.svg
Nedda Segré was born in Venice on June 7, 1933. Her parents were Ettore Girolamo Segré and Rita Lea geb. Calimani. She and her family were arrested in Venice on December 5, 1943. They were taken to Carcere di Venezia and then taken to the Fossoli transit camp . On February 22, 1944, the family was deported to the Auschwitz concentration camp on Transport 08 . They arrived on February 26, 1944, and on the same day 11-year-old Nedda Segré and her father lost their lives in the gas chambers at Auschwitz.

Her mother and sister Wally Nacamulli were also murdered by the Nazi regime during the Shoah . The date and place of death are unknown.

HERE LIVED
VITTORIO
COEN PORTO
BORN 1866
ARRESTED 02/02/1944
deported
AUSCHWITZ
MURDERED 04/10/1944
Calle del Pestrin
San Marco 2313
Erioll world.svg
Vittorio Coen Porto was born on July 18, 1866 as the eldest son of the couple Aristea Colorni and Mosè Coen Porto in Venice . He had two younger siblings, Augusto (1869) and Amelia (1873).

On February 2, 1944, Vittorio was arrested in Venice along with his brother Augusto and his brother's wife, Rosalia . They were then held first in the city prison and then in the Fossoli transit camp . His siblings and his sister-in-law were deported to Auschwitz on February 22, 1944 .

Vittorio's deportation did not take place until a few weeks later, on April 5th. After the arrival of Transport No. 9 in Auschwitz on April 10, Vittorio Coen Porto was registered with the letter S and immediately murdered.

HERE LIVED
AMELIA
COEN PORTO LEVI
BORN 1873
ARRESTED 05/12/1943
deported
AUSCHWITZ
MURDERED 02/26/1944
Calle del Pestrin
San Marco 2313
Erioll world.svg
Amelia Coen Porto Levi was born in Venice on April 25, 1873, the youngest of the three children of Aristea Colorni and Mosè Coen Porto . Amelia had two older brothers: Vittorio (1866) and Augusto (1869). She was married to Amedeo Levi.

Amelia Coen Porto Levi was arrested in Venice on December 5, 1943 . She was detained first in the city jail and then in the Fossoli transit camp . On February 22nd, Amelia, together with her brother Augusto and her sister-in-law Rosalia, who had been arrested on February 2nd, 1944, was deported to Auschwitz in Transport No. 8 .

When they arrived on February 26, all three were registered with the letter S and murdered immediately.

San Polo

image translation Location Name, biography
Stumbling block for Romano Brussato.jpg
ROMANO BRUSSATO
LIVED HERE
BORN 1914
PRISONER
OF POW
ARRIVED
9.9.1943
DEPORTED FALLINGBOSTEL
MURDERED 11/7/1944 BERGEN-BELSEN
Calle Sbianchesini
San Polo 1145
Erioll world.svg
Romano Brussato was born in 1914. He was the only son of Luigi Brussato and Elisabetta nee Ballarin. His parents married in 1909. He was arrested as a soldier in the Italian army on September 9, 1943 and then deported to Fallingbostel . On November 7, 1944, he was murdered by the Nazi regime in the Bergen-Belsen concentration camp .
Stumbling block for Giovanni Gervasoni (Venice) .jpg
GIOVANNI GERVASONI
LIVED HERE
BORN 1909
POLITICAL PRISONER
ARRIVED 3.1.1944
DEPORTED
DACHAU
MURDERED 2/17/1945
Calla Bajamonte Tiepolo
San Polo 2305
Erioll world.svg
Giovanni Gervasoni was born in 1909 into a poor Venetian family. He became a primary school teacher. In 1930 he converted to Protestantism and joined the Methodist denomination in Venice. He was a member of the Republican Party from his youth . He founded a group that distributed anti-fascist pamphlets. Thanks to his friendship with Pastor Anselmo Ammenti , the group members were able to use rooms of the Methodist Church. He was arrested in 1932 and closely monitored after his release. Together with other young evangelicals such as Giovanni Vezzosi and Ferdinando Geremia , he founded a new group in 1935 that distributed the writings of the resistance movement Giustizia e Libertà . He was arrested again, this time sentenced to five years in exile on the island of Ventotene for his subversive activities . Two years later he was arrested again and tried in a special court in Rome . He was sentenced to 15 months in prison for drafting and distributing appeals and memoranda against fascism together with the doctor Romolo Quarzola . He served his imprisonment in Rome and Civitavecchia. This was followed by a prison camp on the island of Tremiti, various prisons in Apulia, including Foggia and San Severo, finally the island of Ponza and again Ventotene, where he made friends with Riccardo Bauer , Eugenio Colorni , Ernesto Rossi and other anti-fascists. The banishment was finally extended for two years. After his release in July 1943, he returned to Venice, joined the partisans, was captured by German forces in 1944 and deported to the Dachau concentration camp . There he was murdered on February 17, 1945.

Santa Croce

image translation Location Name, biography

GILDA JESURUM
FOA ' LIVED HERE,
BORN 1884
ARRESTED 3.2.1944
DEPORTED
AUSCHWITZ
MURDERED 02.26.1944
Campiello del Spezier
Santa Croce 2047
Erioll world.svg
Gilda Jesurum Foà was born in Venice on June 19, 1884 . Her father was Napoleone Jesurum. Gilda was married to Gabriele Foà and had two sons with him: Giorgio (1920) and Arnoldo (1927).

Gilda Jesurum Foà was arrested on February 3, 1944 with her two sons in Turin . They were then imprisoned in Turin prison and then in Fossoli transit camp . On February 22, 1944, Gilda, Arnoldo and Giorgio were deported to Auschwitz in Transport No. 8 .

Upon her arrival on February 26th, Gilda was immediately registered with the letter S and murdered. Her two sons did not survive the Shoah either.

Isola di San Servolo

image translation Location Name, biography
Stumbling block for 6 deported patients.jpg
OCTOBER 11, 1944 6 JEWISH PATIENTS WERE DEPORTED
FROM THIS HOSPITAL AND MURDERED IN THE NAZIS CAMPING



Ospedale psichiatrico San Servolo
Erioll world.svg
The former clinic on San Servolo
On the lagoon island of San Servolo , now uninhabited, there was a psychiatric clinic in the 1940s. In October 1944, six Jewish patients were arrested, deported and murdered by the Nazi regime.

Lido

image translation Location Name, biography
Stumbling block for Edgardo Bassani (Venice) .jpg
EDGARDO BASSANI
LIVED HERE
BORN 1893
ARRESTED 1.12.1943
DEPORTED
AUSCHWITZ
MURDERED
Via Orso Partecipazio 4
Lido
Erioll world.svg
Edgardo Bassani was born on November 27, 1893 in Ferrara to Giacomo Bassani and Ida Rieti. He was married to Nives Servadio. The couple had three children: Tina, Franco and Renzo Bassani. On December 1, 1943, Edgardo Bassani was arrested along with his daughter Tina and son Franco in Como and held there in prison. Starting from the transit camp in Fossoli , the family was taken to Auschwitz concentration camp on February 22, 1944 on Transport No. 8 , where they arrived on February 26. Edgardo Bassani was registered in Auschwitz with matriculation number 174478. Edgardo was presumably murdered in Auschwitz after April 27, 1944 .
Stumbling block for Franco Bassani (Venice) .jpg
FRANCO BASSANI
LIVED HERE
BORN 1923
ARRESTED 1.12.1943
DEPORTED
AUSCHWITZ
MURDERED
Via Orso Partecipazio 4
Lido
Erioll world.svg
Franco Bassani was born on September 18, 1923 in Venice to Edgardo Bassani and Nives Servadio. Together with his father and sister Tina, he was arrested on December 1, 1943 in Como and held there. On February 22, 1944, the family was deported from the Fossoli transit camp on Transport No. 8 to Auschwitz , where they arrived on February 26, 1944. Franco Bassani was registered there with matriculation number 174479. On May 5, 1944, Franco Bassani was murdered in Auschwitz .
Stumbling block for Tina Bassani (Venice) .jpg
HERE LIVED
TINA BASSANI
BORN 1929
ARRESTED 01/12/1943
deported
AUSCHWITZ
MURDERED
Via Orso Partecipazio 4
Lido
Erioll world.svg
Tina Bassani was born in Venice on June 3, 1929 . Her parents were Edgardo Bassani and Nives Servadio. On December 1, 1943, she was arrested along with her brother and father in Como and held there for several weeks. On February 22, 1944, she and her family were deported from the Fossoli transit camp to the Auschwitz concentration camp on Transport No. 8 . The date and place of Tina Bassani's murder are unknown.
Stumbling block for Nives Servadio (Venice) .jpg
NIVES
SERVADIO LIVED HERE BORN IN
1900
ARRIVED 1.12.1943
DEPORTED
AUSCHWITZ
MURDERED
Via Orso Partecipazio 4
Lido
Erioll world.svg
Nives Servadio was born on March 17th, 1900 in Florence . She was the daughter of Giacomo Servadio and Rina Donati. Nives Servadio married Edgardo Bassani and had three children with him: Tina, Renzo and Franco. On December 1, 1943, Nives Servadio was arrested on the Italian-Swiss border and held together with her family in Como prison . On February 22, 1944, she and her husband and children Franco and Tina were deported from the Fossoli transit camp to Auschwitz in Transport No. 8 . The date of her murder is unknown.

Chioggia

image translation Location Name, biography
GIULIO
BERGO LIVED HERE, BORN IN
1919
[...]
In the old part of Sottomarina, zone San Felice
Guilio Bergo was born in 1919.
GIUSTO GREGO
LIVED HERE,
BORN 1915
[...]
Cavanella d'Adige
Guisto Grego was born in 1915.
GUIDO LIONELLO
LIVED HERE
BORN 1901
ARRESTED JULY 1942
DEPORTED 1943
DACHAU
DEAD 22.5.1945
Corner of Calle Duomo / Fondamenta Canal Lombardo
Guido Lionello was born on November 16, 1901 in Chioggia. He came from a large family and had ten siblings. His father was a fisherman and an anarchist. Guido Lionello was a staunch anti-fascist and evaded military service under Mussolini. He fled first to the United States, then to Yugoslavia, Austria, Switzerland and France. He participated on the republican side in the Spanish Civil War and went back to France after the defeat of the left forces. In July 1942 he was arrested by the French police collaborating with Hitler's Germany. It was planned to deport him to Italy in July 1943, but because of the hostilities and the collapse of the Mussolini regime, it did not take place. He was deported to the Dachau concentration camp , where he was registered as a political prisoner on December 2, 1943. He died on May 22, 1945 as a result of forced labor, hardship and illness in the concentration camp.

A street in Chioggia was named after him.

Mirano

image translation Location Name, biography
Stumbling block for Paolo Errera (Mirano) .jpg
PAOLO ERRERA
LIVED HERE
BORN 1861
ARRESTED 25.2.1944
DEPORTED
AUSCHWITZ
MURDERED 10.4.1944
Via Bastia Fuori 58
Mirano
Erioll world.svg
Paolo Errera was born in Venice on October 18, 1861. His parents were Mosè Errera and Eloisa Da Zara. He married Nella born in 1892. Grassini. The couple were arrested in Mirano on February 25, 1944, first interned in Venice prison and then transferred to the Fossoli transit camp . On April 5, 1944, the couple were deportedto the Auschwitz concentration camp , where they arrived on April 10, 1944 and were murdered by the Nazi regime immediately after their arrival.
Stumbling block for Nella Grassini Errera (Mirano) .jpg
NELLA GRASSINI
ERRERA LIVED
HERE
BORN 1874
ARRESTED 25.2.1944
DEPORTED
AUSCHWITZ
MURDERED 10.4.1944
Via Bastia Fuori 58
Mirano
Erioll world.svg
Nella Grassini Errera was born on July 19, 1874 in Venice. She came from a wealthy Jewish family of lawyers, her parents were Laudadio Grassini and Emma Levi. Her father was a successful entrepreneur who founded the first vaporetti company and developed the Lido for tourism. At the time of the Shoah she had become known as the writer and lover of Mussolini , Margherita Sarfatti, still a living sister. Margherita emigrated to Argentina in 1938 because of the racial laws . Her youngest sister, Margherita Sarfatti (1880–1961), became known as a writer, lover of Mussolini and founder of the Novecento artist group . In 1892 Nella Grassini married Mirano's councilor, Paolo Errera, who was also from a famous Venetian family. Her husband was mayor of Mirano from 1895 to 1920. The couple had three sons, Mario, Amedeo and Adolfo. Son Amedeo died in 1910 at the age of 15 as a result of tetanus . In his memory, Nella and Paolo Errera set up a foundation that still exists today. The elderly couple were arrested on February 25, 1944 in Mirano, first interned in the Santa Maria Maggiore prison in Venice and then transferred to the Fossoli transit camp . On April 5, 1944, the couple were deported to the Auschwitz concentration camp , where they arrived on April 10, 1944 and were murdered by the Nazi regime immediately after their arrival. Paolo Errera was 82 years old, Nella Grassini Errera 70. When she boarded the deportation train, she is said to have held a salvacondotto from Mussolini in her hands, the assurance of safe conduct , but this letter did not save her either.

The former Piazza delle Erbe in Mirano has been called Piazza Paolo e Nella Errera since 2007 .

Laying data

The Stolpersteine ​​in Venice were laid by Gunter Demnig personally on the following days:

  • January 12, 2014: Cannaregio 1156 (Bruna Grassini and Ugo Beniamino Levi), 1223 (Clerle, Clerle, Grassini), 2115, 2337, 274, 3399 / a, 4470, Campo di Ghetto Nuovo
  • January 14, 2015: Cannaregio 1146, 1232, 1543, 2346 / b; San Servolo
  • January 19, 2016: Cannaregio 1223 (Aboaf), 2006, 2337 and 5401 / a; Castello 6039 (Vivante family); San Marco 515, Mirano
  • January 20, 2017: Cannaregio 386, 1150, 1156 (six members of the Levi family), 1215, 2198 and 5999; Castello 6039 (Gianna Cavalieri), San Marco 4741, San Polo 1154
  • January 22, 2018: Venice
  • January 28, 2019: Chioggia (Calle Duomo), Venice: Cannaregio 506 (Franca Muggia, Giuseppe Muggia, Maria Ester Anna Levi Muggia), 1445 (Gino Aboaf), 1771 (Gustavo Corinaldi); San polo 2305
  • January 18, 2020: Chioggia, San Felice zone and Cavanella d'Adige
  • January 31, 2020: Venice: Cannaregio 2874 (Ida and Ada Ancona), 3826 (Giuseppe Jona), 1600 (Pia Cesana and Leo Mariani), 6042 (Eugenio Saraval); Castello 5117 (Augusto Coen Porto), 6222 (Jole Jesurum, Marisa Jesurum); San Marco 2313 Calle Larga XXI Marzo (Vittorio Coen Porto, Amelia Coen Porto); Santa Croce 2047 (Gilda Jesurum Foà).

swell

Individual evidence

  1. CDEC: Aboaf, Achille , accessed on August 10, 2020
  2. CDEC: Aboaf, Gino , accessed on May 23, 2020.
  3. Gli ebrei deportati dal Veneto (1943–1945): Aboaf Gino , accessed on May 19, 2020.
  4. CDEC: Aboaf, Abramo Marco , accessed on May 23, 2020.
  5. CDEC: Aboaf, Guido , accessed on May 23, 2020.
  6. CDEC: Aboaf, Umberto , accessed on May 23, 2020.
  7. a b c d e Pezetti: La liberazione dei campi nazisti , 2016, p. 100.
  8. CDEC: Aboaf, Giuditta Rita , accessed on May 6, 2017.
  9. CDEC: Navarro, Lina , accessed May 6, 2017.
  10. CDEC: Navarro, Amalia , accessed May 6, 2017.
  11. CDEC: Aboaf, Salomone Girolamo , accessed on May 6, 2017 (with a photo by Salomone Aboaf).
  12. ^ Giovanni Tomasi, Silvia Tomasi: Ebrei nel Veneto orientale: Conegliano, Ceneda e insediamenti minori , Casa Editrice Giuntina, 2012, p. 34.
  13. CDEC: Ancona, Ada , accessed on May 14, 2020.
  14. Gli ebrei deportati dal Veneto (1943–1945): Ancona Ada , accessed on May 14, 2020.
  15. CDEC: Ancona, Ida , accessed on May 14, 2020.
  16. Gli ebrei deportati dal Veneto (1943–1945): Ancona Ida , accessed on May 14, 2020.
  17. a b Marina Scarpa Campos and Matteo Ermacora (eds.): Dalla prigionia a Fossoli alla resistenza, I ricordi di Marco Brandes, giovane ebreo veneziano , Deportate, esuli, profughe, accessed on May 7, 2017.
  18. CDEC: Brandes, Riccardo , accessed on May 7, 2017 (with a photo by Riccardo Brandes).
  19. CDEC: Calimani, Moisè , accessed on May 7, 2017 (with a photo by Moisè Calimani).
  20. CDEC: Campos, Gisella , accessed May 8, 2017 (with a photo by Gisella Campos).
  21. CDEC: Usigli, Edoardo , accessed on May 8, 2017.
  22. CDEC: Cesana, Pia , accessed May 18, 2020.
  23. Gli ebrei deportati dal Veneto (1943–1945): Cesana Pia , accessed on May 18, 2020.
  24. a b CDEC: Clerle, Alba , accessed on May 9, 2017 (with a photo by Alba Clerle).
  25. CDEC: Grassini, Attilio Grasini , accessed on May 9, 2017 (with a photo by Attilio Grassini).
  26. CDEC: Grassini, Raffaele , accessed on May 9, 2017 (with a photo by Raffaele Grassini).
  27. CDEC: Grassini, Bruna , accessed on May 9, 2017 (with a photo by Bruna Grassini).
  28. a b CDEC: Clerle, Cesira , accessed on May 9, 2017.
  29. Yad Vashem: Clerle, Cesira , accessed on May 9, 2017th
  30. ^ Levis Sullam, Simon: L'archivio antiebraico: Il linguaggio dell'antisemitismo moderno , Gius. Laterza & Figli, 2008, p. 1-3.
  31. Iveser: Dopo l'8 September: la scelta dell'ebreo Corinaldi , [1] , accessed on May 25, 2020.
  32. CDEC: Corinaldi, Gustavo , accessed on May 25, 2020.
  33. ^ Gli ebrei deportati dal Veneto (1943–1945): Corinaldi Gustavo , accessed on May 25, 2020.
  34. a b c d e f g CDEC: Corinaldi, Rosita , accessed on May 10, 2017.
  35. a b c d e CDEC: Dina, Mario , accessed on May 10, 2017.
  36. a b c d e f CDEC: Fano, Elena , accessed on May 10, 2017.
  37. a b c d e f g CDEC: Dina, Anna , accessed on May 10, 2017.
  38. a b c d e f g CDEC: Dina, Guido , accessed on May 10, 2017.
  39. a b c d e f g CDEC: Dina, Leone , accessed on May 10, 2017.
  40. a b c d e f g CDEC: Dina, Giorgia , accessed on May 10, 2017.
  41. a b CDEC: Dina, Adele , accessed on May 10, 2017.
  42. CDEC: Todesco, Alberto Leone , accessed on May 10, 2017.
  43. CDEC: Todesco, Marco , accessed on May 10, 2017.
  44. a b CDEC: Dina, Ida , accessed on May 10, 2017.
  45. CDEC: Fano, Giulio , accessed on May 16, 2017.
  46. CDEC: Fano, Giuseppe , accessed on May 16, 2017.
  47. CDEC: Foà, Annina , accessed on April 22, 2020.
  48. Gli ebrei deportati dal Veneto (1943–1945): Foà, Annina , accessed on April 22, 2020.
  49. CDEC: Grassini, Attilio , accessed April 20, 2020.
  50. ^ Gli ebrei deportati dal Veneto (1943–1945): Grassini, Attilio , accessed on April 20, 2020.
  51. CDEC: Grassini, Bruna , accessed April 20, 2020.
  52. ^ Gli ebrei deportati dal Veneto (1943–1945): Grassini Bruna , accessed on April 20, 2020.
  53. CDEC: Jarach, Anna , accessed on April 22, 2020.
  54. ^ Gli ebrei deportati dal Veneto (1943–1945): Jarach, Anna , accessed on April 22, 2020.
  55. a b Ateneo Veneto: [2] , accessed on May 18, 2020.
  56. CDEC: Jona, Giuseppe , accessed on May 18, 2020.
  57. Gli ebrei deportati dal Veneto (1943–1945): Jona, Giuseppe , accessed on May 18, 2020.
  58. ^ Zuccotti, Susan: The Italians and the Holocaust: Persecution, Rescue, and Survival , 1996, pp. 139ff.
  59. CDEC: Levi, Angelo , accessed April 20, 2020.
  60. ^ Gli ebrei deportati dal Veneto (1943–1945): Levi Angelo , accessed on April 20, 2020.
  61. CDEC: Levi, Leonella , accessed April 20, 2020.
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  63. CDEC: Levi, Lina , accessed April 20, 2020.
  64. CDEC: Levi, Maria Ester Anna , accessed on May 23, 2020.
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  66. CDEC: Levi, Mario , accessed April 20, 2020.
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  71. CDEC: Mariani, Ada , accessed April 22, 2020.
  72. ^ Gli ebrei deportati dal Veneto (1943–1945): Mariani, Ada Elena , accessed on April 22, 2020.
  73. ^ Gli ebrei deportati dal Veneto (1943–1945): Mariani, Elena , accessed on April 22, 2020.
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  75. CDEC: Mariani, Enrico , accessed April 22, 2020.
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  77. CDEC: Mariani, Luciano , accessed April 22, 2020.
  78. CDEC: Mariani, Francesco Isacco , accessed April 22, 2020.
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  80. CDEC: Mariani, Luciano , accessed April 22, 2020.
  81. CDEC: Mariani, Leo , accessed May 18, 2020.
  82. Gli ebrei deportati dal Veneto (1943–1945): Mariani Leo , accessed on May 18, 2020.
  83. Unione Sarda: Bartolomeo Meloni , accessed on May 10, 2017.
  84. Resistance, resistance in Italy: First stumbling blocks in Venice , March 6, 2014 2:59 p.m., accessed on May 19, 2017.
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  87. CDEC: Muggia, Giuseppe , accessed on May 23, 2020.
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  89. CDEC: Navarro, Achille , accessed April 27, 2020.
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  91. CDEC: Navarro, Amalia , accessed April 27, 2020.
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  93. CDEC: Navarro, Lina , accessed April 27, 2020.
  94. ^ Gli ebrei deportati dal Veneto (1943–1945): Navarro, Lina , accessed on April 27, 2020.
  95. ^ Carlo Ottolenghi: Adolfo Ottolenghi biography "sommaria nota biografica". (PDF) Retrieved February 11, 2015 .
  96. Laura Fano Jacchia: Adolfo Ottolenghi biography "Il rabbino Adolfo Ottolenghi". (PDF) Retrieved February 11, 2015 .
  97. CDEC: Ottolenghi, Adolfo , accessed April 28, 2020.
  98. CDEC: Ottolenghi, Giacomo Giorgio , accessed April 28, 2020.
  99. Yad Vashem: Ottolenghi, Giacomo , accessed April 29, 2020.
  100. Yad Vashem: Ottolenghi, Giacomo , accessed April 29, 2020.
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  102. a b Gli ebrei deportati dal Veneto (1943–1945): Romanelli, Elsa , accessed on May 14, 2020.
  103. ^ Yad Vashem: Romanelli, Elsa , accessed May 14, 2020.
  104. CDEC: Romanelli, Raffaella , accessed May 6, 2020.
  105. ^ Gli ebrei deportati dal Veneto (1943–1945): Romanelli, Raffaella , accessed on May 6, 2020.
  106. CDEC: Saraval, Eugenio , accessed May 19, 2020.
  107. Gli ebrei deportati dal Veneto (1943–1945): Saraval Eugenio , accessed on May 19, 2020.
  108. CDEC: Todesco, Alberto Leone , accessed on May 6, 2020.
  109. Gli ebrei deportati dal Veneto (1943–1945): Todesco, Alberto Leone , accessed on May 6, 2020.
  110. CDEC: Todesco, Marco , accessed on May 6, 2020.
  111. ^ Gli ebrei deportati dal Veneto (1943–1945): Marco , accessed on May 6, 2020.
  112. CDEC: Usigli, Edoardo , accessed on May 6, 2020.
  113. Gli ebrei deportati dal Veneto (1943–1945): Usigli, Edoardo , accessed on May 6, 2020.
  114. CDEC: Cavalieri, Gianna , accessed May 6, 2020.
  115. Gli ebrei deportati dal Veneto (1943–1945): Cavalieri Gianna , accessed on May 6, 2020.
  116. CDEC: Vivante, Alba , accessed on May 6, 2020.
  117. Gli ebrei deportati dal Veneto (1943–1945): Vivante Alba , accessed on May 6, 2020.
  118. CDEC: Vivante, Anna , accessed on May 6, 2020.
  119. ^ Gli ebrei deportati dal Veneto (1943–1945): Vivante Anna , accessed on May 6, 2020.
  120. CDEC: Vivante, Costante , accessed on May 6, 2020.
  121. Gli ebrei deportati dal Veneto (1943–1945): Vivante Costante , accessed on May 6, 2020.
  122. CDEC: Vivante, Ida , accessed on May 6, 2020.
  123. Gli ebrei deportati dal Veneto (1943-1945): Vivante Ida , accessed on May 6, 2020th
  124. CDEC: Jesurum, Jole , accessed May 19, 2020.
  125. a b Gli ebrei deportati dal Veneto (1943–1945): Jesurum Jole , accessed on May 19, 2020.
  126. CDEC: Jesurum, Marisa , accessed May 19, 2020.
  127. Gli ebrei deportati dal Veneto (1943–1945): Jesurum Marisa , accessed on May 19, 2020.
  128. CDEC: Coen Porto, Augusto , accessed on May 23, 2020.
  129. Gli ebrei deportati dal Veneto (1943–1945): Coen Porto Augusto , accessed on May 19, 2020.
  130. CDEC: Luzzato, Rosalia , accessed on May 23, 2020.
  131. CDEC: Blumenthal, Olga , accessed on March 13, 2020
  132. Associazione Nazionale Partigiani d'Italia: Bonaventura Ferrazzutto ( Memento of the original from April 28, 2017 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.anpi.it archive link has been inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. , July 22, 2011, accessed March 22, 2017.
  133. a b c d CDEC: Calimani, Rita Lea , accessed on March 24, 2017.
  134. Gli ebrei deportati dal Veneto (1943–1945): Provincia di Venezia, 34th CALIMANI LEA RITA , accessed on March 24, 2017.
  135. ^ Gli ebrei deportati dal Veneto (1943–1945): Provincia di Venezia, 35. CALIMANI MOISÈ , accessed on March 24, 2017.
  136. CDEC: Nacamulli, Wally , accessed March 24, 2017.
  137. Gli ebrei deportati dal Veneto (1943–1945): Provincia di Venezia, 158. NACAMULLI WALLY , accessed on March 24, 2017.
  138. CDEC: Segré, Ettore Girolamo , accessed on March 24, 2017.
  139. ^ Gli ebrei deportati dal Veneto (1943–1945): Provincia di Venezia, 91.SEGRÈ GIROLAMO ETTORE , accessed on March 24, 2017.
  140. CDEC: Segré, Nedda , accessed on March 24, 2017.
  141. Gli ebrei deportati dal Veneto (1943–1945): Provincia di Venezia, 211.SEGRÈ NEDDA , accessed on March 24, 2017.
  142. CDEC: Coen Porto, Vittorio , accessed on May 23, 2020.
  143. ^ Gli ebrei deportati dal Veneto (1943–1945): Coen Porto Vittorio , accessed on May 25, 2020
  144. CDEC: Coen Porto, Amelia , accessed May 23, 2020.
  145. ^ Gli ebrei deportati dal Veneto (1943–1945): Coen Porto Amelia , accessed on May 25, 2020.
  146. ^ Dizionario biografico dei protestanti in Italia: Giovanni Gervasoni, biografia , written by Luca Pilone, accessed on March 14, 2020
  147. CDEC: Jesurum, Gilda , accessed May 25, 2020.
  148. Gli ebrei deportati dal Veneto (1943–1945): Jesurum Gilda , accessed on May 25, 2020.
  149. Gli ebrei deportati dal Veneto (1943–1945): Foà Arnoldo , accessed on May 25, 2020.
  150. Gli ebrei deportati dal Veneto (1943–1945): Foà Giorgio , accessed on May 25, 2020.
  151. CDEC: Bassani, Edgardo , accessed April 17, 2020.
  152. Gli ebrei deportati dal Veneto (1943–1945): Bassani Edgardo , accessed on April 17, 2020.
  153. CDEC: Bassani, Franco , accessed April 17, 2020.
  154. ^ Gli ebrei deportati dal Veneto (1943–1945): Bassani Franco , accessed on April 17, 2020.
  155. CDEC: Bassani, Tina , accessed April 17, 2020.
  156. ^ Gli ebrei deportati dal Veneto (1943–1945): Bassani Tina , accessed on April 17, 2020.
  157. CDEC: Servadio, Nives , accessed April 17, 2020.
  158. ^ Gli ebrei deportati dal Veneto (1943–1945): Servadio Nives , accessed on April 17, 2020.
  159. ^ Associazione Nazionale Partigiani d'Italia : Due nuove “Pietre d'Inciampo” a Chioggia , accessed on March 13, 2020
  160. ^ La Nuova di Venezia e Mestre : Le memorie di un deportato , January 28, 2004
  161. INSTALLATA NEL SELCIATO DI PIAZZA POLIUTO PENZO LA PIETRA D'INCIAMPO A MEMORIA DI GUIDO LIONELLO, DEPORTATO MORTO A DACHAU , 28. January 2019
  162. CDEC Digital Library: Errera, Paolo , accessed on May 1, 2017 (with a portrait).
  163. Venezia today : Giornata della Memoria 2017: posa delle pietre d'inciampo, 24 in tutto a Venezia e Mirano , January 17, 2017, accessed on March 20, 2017.
  164. The brother Marco, who died in 1933, is also described in detail in the book Margherita Sarfatti by Rachele Ferrario, Edizioni Mondadori 2015.
  165. CDEC Digital Library: Grassini, Nella , accessed on May 1, 2017 (with a portrait).
  166. Teo Ducci: Un Tallet ad Auschwitz ., 2000
  167. Asterico: 62 ° Anniversario della Liberazione a Mirano (VE) , accessed on May 1, 2017th

Web links

Commons : Stumbling Blocks in Venice  - Collection of Images