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![]() Eva Frank [I59875]Dochter van Levie Frank en Mietje Delden. Geboren 26 aug 1897 (28 Av 5657) Amsterdam, Noord-Holland, Nederland, bron: Archiefkaart Amsterdam E (persoonskaart) (Mietje Delden 1873). Overleden 5 okt 1942 (24 Tishrei 5703) Auschwitz, Polen, leeftijd 45 jaar, doodsoorzaak: vermoord, bron: Archiefkaart Amsterdam E (persoonskaart) (Frank, Eva - 26-08-1897 - A01232_0245_0652)
Gehuwd 18 sep 1918 (12 Tishrei 5679) Amsterdam, Noord-Holland, Nederland, leeftijd 21 jaar, bron: Archiefkaart Amsterdam E (persoonskaart) (Mietje Delden 1873) (24 jaar gehuwd) met: ![]() Salomon IJdis [I59881], leeftijd bij huwelijk 24 jaarZoon van Abraham IJdis en Lena Blum. Geboren 11 dec 1893 (2 Tevet 5654) Amsterdam, Noord-Holland, Nederland, bron: Archiefkaart Amsterdam E (persoonskaart) (Frank, Eva - 26-08-1897 - A01232_0245_0652). Overleden 31 dec 1942 (23 Tevet 5703) Schöppenitz, Kattowitz, Polen, leeftijd 49 jaar, doodsoorzaak: vermoord, bron: Archiefkaart Amsterdam E (persoonskaart) (Ydis, Salomon - 11-12-1893 - A01232_0954_0660). Beroep: sigarenwinkelier, bron: Archiefkaart Amsterdam E (persoonskaart) (Ydis, Salomon - 11-12-1893 - A01232_0954_0660)
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Lena IJdis [I139556]Geboren 10 mei 1920 (22 Iyar 5680) Amsterdam, Noord-Holland, Nederland, bron: Archiefkaart Amsterdam E (persoonskaart) (Ydis, Salomon - 11-12-1893 - A01232_0954_0660). Beroep: coupeuse, bron: Archiefkaart Amsterdam E (persoonskaart) (Ydis, Salomon - 11-12-1893 - A01232_0954_0660) Lena IJdis heeft WO II overleefd., bron: Archiefkaart Amsterdam E (persoonskaart) (IJdis, Lena - 1920) 2.
Martha IJdis [I139557]Geboren 17 nov 1921 (16 Cheshvan 5682) Amsterdam, Noord-Holland, Nederland, bron: Archiefkaart Amsterdam E (persoonskaart) (Ydis, Salomon - 11-12-1893 - A01232_0954_0660). Overleden 18 apr 1945 (5 Iyar 5705) Malchow, Germany, leeftijd 23 jaar, bron: Joods Monument Joodse Gemeenschap in Nederland. Beroep: naaister, bron: Archiefkaart Amsterdam E (persoonskaart) (Ydis, Salomon - 11-12-1893 - A01232_0954_0660) Malchow was one of the numerous sub-camps of Nazi concentration camp: Ravensbrück, located in Germany, which is believed to be first opened in the winter of 1943. It was located at Malchow in Mecklenburg. Size of the Malchow camp The Malchow camp system consisted of ten barracks on the terrain of the Ravensbrück concentration camp, which each had the capacity to house about 100 women. This meant that the Malchow camp was able to house 1,000 women prisoners. But, by 1945, the camp population had grown to 5,000 women. In the summer of 1943, the camp terrain finally became enclosed by a high fence. The ten barracks that were part of the camp, which was originally used for the construction workers of Ravensbrück, were enclosed by this fence. Conditions and life in the camp Day-to-day conditions in the camp were almost unbearable. The prisoners were forced out of their will to stand at attention for roll call, twice a day, like most regular concentration camp prisoners would have to do. The prisoners were guarded under the watchful eyes of the Schutzstaffel (SS) female guards and their German Shepherd Dogs. The SS were very cruel, but probably one of the harshest female guards at Malchow was the SS wardress by the name of Luise Danz. She was transferred from the main camp of Ravensbrück to Malchow and became commandant of the camp. She was captured in 1945 and put on trial for crimes against humanity at the Auschwitz trial in Kraków, Poland. She was sentenced to life imprisonment in 1947, but released due to general amnesty on August 20, 1957 In Malchow, the prisoners barely received anything to eat and were forced to kneel on sharp gravel stones. Body searches and beatings were routine at Malchow. Although residents of the town of Malchow were not allowed to have any contact with the prisoners of the camp, some townspeople provided the inmates with supplies of food. When they were discovered by the SS, they too were imprisoned in Malchow. Aside from starvation and exhaustion, many prisoners also died during many epidemics of diseases such as tuberculosis and typhus. Some types of forced labor that the prisoners had to do were producing mines, collecting nettles from childrens playgrounds, cleaning the factory and town, building canals for the hospital of Malchow, and doing horticultural work. Malchow as a transit camp During 1944, when most of the death marches were taking place across Europe, Malchow served as a transit camp for other prisoners arriving from other concentration camps. Eyewitness reports of many Malchow survivors say that a transport of about 1,000 concentration camp prisoners arrived at the camp on 24 November 1944. They had traveled on a death march for several weeks. There, at Malchow, they were brought to Wismar, and placed on barges that were sunk in the Baltic Sea or a nearby river. Liberation of Malchow On 2 May 1945, Malchow, and the rest of Ravensbrück was liberated by the Red Army., bron: (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Malchow_concentration_camp) 3.
![]() Rebecca IJdis [I139558]Geboren 19 sep 1924 (20 Ellul 5684) Amsterdam, Noord-Holland, Nederland, bron: Archiefkaart Amsterdam E (persoonskaart) (Ydis, Salomon - 11-12-1893 - A01232_0954_0660). Overleden 5 okt 1942 (24 Tishrei 5703) Auschwitz, Polen, leeftijd 18 jaar, doodsoorzaak: vermoord, bron: Joods Monument Joodse Gemeenschap in Nederland. Beroep: naaister, bron: Archiefkaart Amsterdam E (persoonskaart) (Ydis, Salomon - 11-12-1893 - A01232_0954_0660) 4.
![]() Louis IJdis [I139559]Geboren 12 mei 1932 (6 Iyar 5692) Amsterdam, Noord-Holland, Nederland, bron: Archiefkaart Amsterdam E (persoonskaart) (Ydis, Salomon - 11-12-1893 - A01232_0954_0660). Overleden 5 okt 1942 (24 Tishrei 5703) Auschwitz, Polen, leeftijd 10 jaar, doodsoorzaak: vermoord, bron: Joods Monument Joodse Gemeenschap in Nederland | |||
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