Saturday, February 10, 2024

Anna's story

 I don't know why exactly the story of Anna, one of my grandmother's ten sisters, has been asking to be written for several days. It's been going on in my head for a few days since my granddaughter played the song about Alabama when I was driving her to school. I found myself telling her about the fact that we have family in Alabama, something I discovered during the days of the Covid closures when I found and united all the descendants of the sisters and the brother in the whole wide world, where they were scattered.                                                                                                                                                                           One of the sisters, Ida, lived in Oslo with her husband Jacob where they ran a Jewish orphanage, apparently, Jacob had a brother who lived in Mississippi and 


had a farm of some kind, he sent Anna a picture of his brother and a picture of Anna's brother. They liked each other and it was decided that Anna would travel from Leipzig in Germany to marry Jacob's brother in Mississippi. In 1922. The brother sent Anna first class ship tickets but she changed it to something simpler and gave the remaining money to the sisters.                                                                                                                                                                          They got married there and had two children, Simon who was killed in World War II and Esther who was a well-known folk singer there.

From the letters found by her grandchildren, it becomes clear that she was very unhappy there and wanted to return to Germany shortly after arriving in Mississippi, but the brother in Oslo wrote to her and convinced her to stay.                                                                                                                                                                At some point they moved to Alabama where the family has remained until today. The granddaughter Diedra, with whom I am in contact after I found her, says that one day she was walking with her mother in the small town where they lived and her mother complained that she felt very lonely with such a small family. Deiadre suggested that they enter a small restaurant that they used to go to in the past, where she suddenly saw a group of people and said to her mother, "They look like us", a short inquiry showed them that it was a family gathering of family members that they also had relate to  and they didn't know about. And so her mother suddenly felt less lonely.                                                This is the story. Maybe I've been thinking about it a lot lately because I wonder about the choices we make and how they determine our destiny. What would have happened if my grandmothers had chosen to immigrate to Australia, South Africa, America or anywhere else in the world like some of their sisters did. Of course, underneath all this lies the anxiety, what will happen to us here.

And there is also the romantic story of a girl traveling with a picture of her future husband, for several weeks, into the unknown, to the Alabama of 1922, another world.                                                                                 Jacob the brother who sent the photos was taken from his home in Oslo along with fifty other Jewish residents of the house in Oslo, they were taken on the ship "Gotland" whose terrible story can be found on Google, and died in a concentration camp. The woman Ida, my grandmother's sister, was left behind because she was disabled. Of course I didn't tell my granddaughter that. Only the romantic part of the journey to the husband.                                                                                                                                                                                         

17 comments:

  1. A person has to know about their family on both sides, if it can be retrieved while their parents are alive. But after the parents pass away, where else can the stories come from? You are fortunate that some of Anna and Jacob's family survived and you were able to trace the family situation.

    Tonight after shabbas it occurred to me _for the first time_ to see if my paternal grandfather's details were on-line at all. He died before I was born but at least I knew his three Hebrew names and his death date. Now I know he was born in Latvia, not Russia.

    Sigh... there is so much more to learn, even though I didn't find any other document on line.

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    1. I started this after there was no one to ask. Fortunately, every one of the relatives I located knew how to complete something in the puzzle. The site that contributed the most was My Heritage, you can also search in Anccery and jewishjen.

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  2. Such a fascinating family history.
    My uncle, aged 89 and living in Australia, is the only one who now has family stories to tell. Alas he often gets these confused so I am still not sure of my family history.

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    1. Look for his descendants, maybe they know something. That's how I found it.

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  3. Thank you for the story of Anna and how her story differed from her sister, your grandmother, and that of her sister, Ida.

    It's astonishing to discover connections through Ancestry.com and genealogy searches. In the past few years, I discovered that one of my high school friends is the cousin of a friend I met when I went away to college in 1967. My high school friend's last name was Ezkenazi. When I mentioned her name to my Sephardic college friend, she was curious but didn't realize that they were cousins. My college friend has since died, but I was able to let her sister know that my high school friend whom I have lost touch with was their cousin. Small world.

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    1. It is indeed a small world. Here there are quite a few families with the name Ashkenazi.

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  4. My sister has started to work on the family ancestry as we don't know many of the old stories and aren't sure if the ones we know are true. No one to ask anymore and we didn't ask enough questions when the ones that knew were alive.

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    1. I'm very sorry I didn't ask more when there was someone to ask.

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  5. Anna"s brother telling her she shouldn't return to Germany likely saved her life, Mary

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  6. It really was. The two remaining sisters, out of the ten, did not survive.

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  7. That is such an interesting history and gives much insight into that time period. I enjoy working on genealogy and use Ancestry a lot. Thank you for sharing this, I enjoyed it.

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  8. I can imagine the shock and loneliness accompanied by a continental move. I'm glad she stayed. Thank you for sharing a part of your family's history with us. x

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  9. It's good to pass the family history down, and even better to write out what you know of it, to aid those looking in the future. Thank you for sharing.

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  10. It must have been very strange to marry someone that one had never met; as still happens in India, and elsewhere, today. One part of my family moved to the USA in the early 1900's, to NY, but I've never been able to find them.

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  11. There are immigration records to America in those years as well, you can find them.

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