|
|
 |
 |
Election 2004
Kerry's relatives were victims of Holocaust
By Associated Press
Published March 5, 2004
JERUSALEM - Democratic presidential candidate John Kerry, who discovered only last year the extent of his Jewish roots, lost two relatives in the Nazi genocide of World War II, officials at Israel's Holocaust archive said Thursday.
A brother of Kerry's grandmother died in the Theresienstadt ghetto, and a sister vanished in the Treblinka death camp, archivists at Jerusalem's Yad Vashem Holocaust memorial and museum said.
Word of Kerry's Jewish ancestry first surfaced last year when an Austrian genealogist hired by the Boston Globe found that the Massachusetts senator's paternal grandfather, Frederick A. Kerry, was born under the name Fritz Kohn in 1873 in a village in what is now the Czech Republic.
In the early 1900s, the elder Kerry changed his name and immigrated to the United States, presumably to escape anti-Semitism. The news astonished Kerry, a Catholic. He knew that his paternal grandmother, Ida Loewe, was born Jewish and converted to Catholicism.
On Sunday, the Austrian genealogist Felix Gundacker posted on his institute's Web site that a sister and brother of Ida Loewe were among the 6-million Jews who perished in the Holocaust. Gundacker named the two as Jenny and Otto Loewe.
Kerry campaign officials confirmed that the two were a brother and sister of his grandmother's.
Jenny Loewe was born in 1872 and her brother Otto in 1875, according to the data. Both were taken from their home in Vienna to the Theresienstadt ghetto in Czechoslovakia on Aug. 14, 1942. The ghetto held Jews before they were transported to death camps.
Otto perished there. Jenny was moved to the Treblinka death camp, where she vanished.
The Treblinka camp, built in 1942, was an extermination facility, not a labor camp. The Nazis brought 800,000 Jews there with the intention of killing them.
[Last modified March 5, 2004, 01:31:15]
World and national headlines
Would e-mail postage lick spam or speech?
Saudi student accused of aid to terrorists
Powder sifting from parcels gives postal workers pause
Report on stolen Senate files cites two staffers, lax security
Obituaries of note
Election 2004Kerry's relatives were victims of Holocaust
HaitiMarines met with stares, and a few words, in Haiti
HealthGroup asks for ban of drug Crestor
Study: Teens who shun dairy weigh more
IraqThere's Osama, and then Zarqawi
Iraq may be led by expanded council
Nation in briefU.S. proposes to make border more friendly to Mexicans
World in briefIsraeli arrested for planting bombs

© 2006 • All Rights Reserved • St. Petersburg Times
490 First Avenue South St. Petersburg, FL 33701 727-893-8111
|
|
 |