2 records – page 1 of 1.

Earmuffs

https://www.cjhn.ca/link/cjhn75222
Collection
Montreal Holocaust Museum
Description Level
Item
Material Type
object
Physical Description
Earmuffs : Sewn, welded : beige, blue, black, silver
Date
[ca. 1944-1945]
Collection
Montreal Holocaust Museum
Description Level
Item
Material Type
object
Physical Description
Earmuffs : Sewn, welded : beige, blue, black, silver
Other Title Information
Clothing, Headwear
Date
[ca. 1944-1945]
Physical Condition
Good
Notes
Metal headband with two striped fabric circles sewn at each end to be worn as ear protection.These prisoner earmuffs belonged to Israel Viezel, a former prisoner of the Auschwitz-Birkenau and Buchenwald concentration camps. Narrative: Israel Viezel was born in January 1919 in Marosvásárhely (Hungary) a town known today as Târgu Mure? in Romania. Raised in a religious family, he was attending a yeshiva in Sziget to become a rabbi when the Nazis invaded the region. On May 3, 1944, Israel was among the 8,638 Jews of Târgu Mure? to be forced into three ghettos and deported the same month to Auschwitz the same month. Selected for slave labour in Auschwitz, Israel was working in the forests surrounding the camp. He was later transferred to the concentration camp of Buchenwald. Israel survived the camps, as did three of his siblings. His parents, two sisters and one brother were killed in Auschwitz. After the end of the war, Israel returned to Romania and spent some time in Israel. He finally immigrated to New Brunswick, where one of his sisters had settled. After a few months in Saint John, he relocated to Montreal. Israel worked in several restaurants on the Saint-Laurent Boulevard before opening his own deli, “Israel Delicatessen”, on Decarie Boulevard. In 1965, due to construction on the road for the upcoming Expo 67, Israel Delicatessen had to close. Mr. Viezel took that opportunity to spend some vacation visiting his brother in Israel. This is where he met Talia, a child survivor from Romania, who would become his wife. They lived together in Montreal until his death in 1999.
Accession No.
2013.10.01
Name Access
Viezel, Talia
Places
Auschwitz-Birkenau, Poland, Europe
Archival / Genealogical
Archival Descriptions
Repository
Montreal Holocaust Museum
Images
Less detail

Identification tag

https://www.cjhn.ca/link/cjhn78358
Collection
Montreal Holocaust Museum
Description Level
Item
Material Type
object
Physical Description
Identification tag : white, red, black, beige, grey ; Ht: 10,5 cm x W: 6,6 cm
Date
[Prior to 1945]
Collection
Montreal Holocaust Museum
Description Level
Item
Material Type
object
Physical Description
Identification tag : white, red, black, beige, grey ; Ht: 10,5 cm x W: 6,6 cm
Other Title Information
Personal Symbol
Date
[Prior to 1945]
Physical Condition
Good
Notes
Identification tag painted white, red and black on the front. On the b.r. is a 2cm metal pin and a smaller one on the t. On the b.l. is a drilled small hole. A piece of fabric is attached to the t. pin. This fabric is beige in the front and grey on the back. Narrative: Israel Viezel was born in January 1919 in Marosvásárhely (Hungary) a town known today as Târgu Mure? (Romania). Raised in a religious family, Israel was attending a yeshiva in Sziget to become a rabbi when the Nazis invaded the region. On May 3, 1944, Israel was among the 8,638 Jews of Târgu Mure? to be forced into three ghettos and deported to Auschwitz the same month. Selected for slave labour in Auschwitz, Israel was working in the forests surrounding the camp. He was later transferred to the concentration camp of Buchenwald. Israel survived the camps, as did three of his siblings. His parents, two sisters and one brother were killed in Auschwitz. After the end of the war, Israel returned to Romania and spent some time in Israel. He finally immigrated to New Brunswick, where one of his sisters had settled. After a few months in Saint John, he relocated to Montreal. Israel worked in several restaurants on the Saint-Laurent Boulevard before opening his own deli, “Israel Delicatessen”, on Decarie Boulevard. In 1965, due to construction on the road for the upcoming Expo 67, Israel Delicatessen had to close. Mr. Viezel took that opportunity to spend some vacation visiting his brother in Israel. This is where he met Talia, a child survivor from Romania, who would become his wife. They lived together in Montreal until his death in 1999.
Accession No.
2013.10.02
Name Access
Viezel, Talia
Places
Europe
Archival / Genealogical
Archival Descriptions
Repository
Montreal Holocaust Museum
Images
Less detail