Passport
https://www.cjhn.ca/link/cjhn76762
- Collection
- Montreal Holocaust Museum
- Description Level
- Item
- Material Type
- textual record
- Physical Description
- Passport : Paper : handwritten, printed : Ink : red, green, black, blue ; Ht: 15 cm x W: 10.2 cm
- Date
- 1950-1951
- Collection
- Montreal Holocaust Museum
- Description Level
- Item
- Material Type
- textual record
- Physical Description
- Passport : Paper : handwritten, printed : Ink : red, green, black, blue ; Ht: 15 cm x W: 10.2 cm
- Other Title Information
- Documentary Artifact
- Date
- 1950-1951
- Physical Condition
- Good
- Language
- French
- Notes
- Belgian passeport with a red cover and light green pages. Information is filled out in handwriting assigning the document to Mindla Elgarten. A black and white photograph of of Mindla isvisa stapled to the top right corner of page three. Several passport stamps are distributed throughout the pages including a statement of authorization to enter Canada on page seven and a handwritten authorization to travel with her two children. (page four. Six fiscal stamps on various pages throughout the document. Narrative: Donor is the son of Icek Rabinowicz and Mindla Rabinowicz (born Elgarten). Mindla was born in Warsaw, Poland in 1923 and immigrated to Brussels with her family in 1926. Icek was born in 1919 in Ciechanow, Poland and immigrated to Belgium with his family at the age of 10. The two met through a Jewish youth group. They survived the war in Belgium by concealing their Jewish Identity and carrying false identification papers. They were also both members of the Belgian Resistance movement where they distributed false identification papers to other Jews in Belgium. They married in Brussels in 1946 and had two children, Daniel and Élise Rabinowicz. They immigrated to Canada in 1951, settling in Montréal, where Icek found work in his profession as a pursemaker. Mindla later went to University and obtained a degree as a translator. Mindla had two younger siblings and only her brother survived by hiding at a clergy house. Her sister was arrested by Germans and sent to a concentration camp where she was presumably killed.
- Accession No.
- 2014.03.12
- Name Access
- Rabinowicz, Daniel
- Archival / Genealogical
- Archival Descriptions
- Repository
- Montreal Holocaust Museum
Images
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