Franzi Groszmann

Franziska "Franzi" Stern Groszmann (December 27, 1904 – September 20, 2005)[1] was possibly the last surviving mother of the Kindertransport.[2] She sent her daughter (born 1928), now a writer known as Lore Segal,[3] to England following Kristallnacht. Groszmann's husband, Ignatz, a Vienna accountant before the Holocaust, died at the end of World War II following a series of strokes.

Segal, with her mother and grandmother, emigrated to New York City from the Dominican Republic in 1951 and lived together in a small apartment on the Upper West Side of Manhattan.[2]

Media

Groszmann served as a consultant on the documentary Into the Arms of Strangers: Stories of the Kindertransport. Groszmann and Segal also appeared in Melissa Hacker's Academy Award-winning 1996 film My Knees Were Jumping.

Death

Groszmann died on September 20, 2005, aged 100. She was survived by her daughter, two grandchildren, two great-grandsons and a brother, Paul Stern.[4]

gollark: Yep!
gollark: Fusion is... somewhat lategame.
gollark: It's completely self-sustaining and produces about 500kRF/t.
gollark: This is my triple fusion reactor in a compact machine.
gollark: MRF/second is probably doable easily (that's only 50kRF/t) but MRF/tick needs fusion.

References


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