Stolpersteine in Milovice nad Labem

The Stolpersteine in Milovice nad Labem lists the Stolpersteine in the town of Milovice nad Labem in the Central Bohemian Region (Czech: Středočeský kraj). Stolpersteine is the German name for stumbling blocks collocated all over Europe by German artist Gunter Demnig. They remember the fate of the Nazi victims being murdered, deported, exiled or driven to suicide.

All five Stolpersteine from Milovice

Generally, the stumbling blocks are posed in front of the building where the victims had their last self chosen residence. The name of the Stolpersteine in Czech is: Kameny zmizelých, stones of the disappeareds.

The lists are sortable; the basic order follows the alphabet according to the last name of the victim.

Milovice nad Labem

Stone Inscription Location Life and death
HERE LIVED
ADOLF GEIGER
BORN 1877
DEPORTED 1943
TO THERESIENSTADT
TO AUSCHWITZ 1943
MURDERED
ČSA 152/11 Geiger, AdolfAdolf Geiger war born on 26 December 1877. He was married to Rosa Růžena née Iltis. The couple had three children, Viktor (born 1903), Zdeňka (born 1905) and Otto (born 1907). After the destruction of Czechoslovakia by the German Nazi regime, his family was step by step limited in its income, property and freedom and lastly deprived of their lives. On 13 January 1943 he, his wife and his son Viktor were arrested and deported from Mladá Boleslav to Theresienstadt concentration camp by transport Cl. His transport number was 56 of 552. There his family was torn apart. Already one week later, on 20 January 1943, his son Viktor was deported to Auschwitz. On 13 February 1943, his wife died in Theresienstadt due to starvation and grieve. On 6 March 1943 his son Otto arrived in Theresienstadt, but he too was deported to Auschwitz six months later. On 15 December 1943, also Adolf Geiger was deported to Auschwitz with transport Dr. Most probably he was murdered there on the day of his arrival in one of the gas chambers.[1]

Both sons lost their lives in Auschwitz. His daughter was deported to Theresienstadt in 1945, she could survive.

HERE LIVED
OTTO GEIGER
BORN 1907
DEPORTED 1943
TO THERESIENSTADT
TO AUSCHWITZ 1943
MURDERED
ČSA 152/11 Geiger, OttoOtto Geiger born in 1907. His parents were Adolf Geiger and Rosa Růžena née Iltis. He had two siblings, Viktor (born 1903) and Zdeňka (born 1905). On 6 March 1943 he was arrested and deported from Prague to Theresienstadt concentration camp by transport Cv. His transport number was 300. On 6 September 1943 he was deported to Auschwitz concentration camp by transport Dl. His transport number was 589. He lost his life there.[2]

His mother was brought to death in Theresienstadt before his arrival there. His father and his brother were murdered in Auschwitz.

HERE LIVED
VIKTOR GEIGER
BORN 1903
DEPORTED 1943
TO THERESIENSTADT
TO AUSCHWITZ 1943
MURDERED
ČSA 152/11 Geiger, ViktorViktor Geiger was born on 20 June 1903. His parents were Adolf Geiger and Rosa Růžena née Iltis. He had two siblings, Zdeňka (born 1905) and Otto (born 1907). On 13 January 1943 he and his parents were arrested and deported from Mladá Boleslav to Theresienstadt concentration camp by transport Cl. His transport number was 58 of 552. One week later, on 20 January 1943, he was deported to Auschwitz concentration camp by transport Dl. His transport number was 877 of 2,000. He lost his life there.[3]

His mother died in Theresienstadt, three weeks after his deportation. Both his father and his brother were murdered at Auschwitz. His sister could survive.

HERE LIVED
RŮŽENA GEIGEROVÁ
BORN 1879
DEPORTED 1943
TO THERESIENSTADT
TO AUSCHWITZ 1943
MURDERED
ČSA 152/11 Geigerová, Rosa RůženaRosa Růžena Geigerová née Iltis was born on 16 October 1879 in Újezd. Her parents were Salomon Iltis and Katharina née Pfeifer (ca. 1855-1930). She had three sisters and three brothers: Berta (ca. 1878-1933, married to Emil Sušicky, two children), Ernest Iltis (born 1878), Arthur (born 1881), Olga (born 1885, married to Josef Lustig), Oskar Iltis (born 1892, married, one daughter) and Flora (married to Karl Kafka). She was married to Adolf Geiger. The couple had three children: Viktor (born 1903), Zdeňka (born 1905, later married to Jan Kolář) and Otto (born 1907).[4] Her last residence before deportation was in Milovice. On 13 January 1943 she, her husband and their son Viktor were arrested and deported from Mladá Boleslav to Theresienstadt concentration camp by transport Cl. Her transport number was 57 of 552. Already one week later, on 20 January 1943, her son Viktor was deported to Auschwitz. On 13 February 1943 she died in Theresienstadt due to starvation and grieve.[5][6]

Her husband and both sons were murdered at Auschwitz. Also at least two of her siblings were killed in the course of the Shoah, Olga in 1941 in Poland and Oskar in 1944 in Auschwitz. The fate of three of her siblings is not known. Her daughter Zdeňka could survive.

HERE LIVED
ZDEŇKA KOLÁŘOVÁ
NÉE GEIGEROVÁ
BORN 1905
DEPORTED 1945
TO THERESIENSTADT
SURVIVED
ČSA 152/11 Kolářová, ZděnkaZděnka Kolářová née Geigerová was born in 1905. Her parents were Adolf Geiger and Rosa Růžena née Iltis. She had two brothers, Viktor (born 1903) and Otto (born 1907).[7] She was arrested and deported to Theresienstadt concentration camp in 1945. She could survive the Shoah.

Her mother was murdered in Theresienstadt, her father and both brothers in Auschwitz.

Date of collocations

The Stolpersteine in Milovice nad Labem were collocated by the artist himself on 13 September 2014.

The Czech Stolperstein project was initiated in 2008 by the Česká unie židovské mládeže (Czech Union of Jewish Youth) and was realized with the patronage of the Mayor of Prague.[8][9]

gollark: Can we make it also... MACHINE-PARSEABLE?
gollark: Exactly.
gollark: * gecki, lasers
gollark: deploy geckos with lsaers
gollark: No, no tenses, just blank verbs/whatever and words like "in the past" and "in the future".

See also

References

  1. The Central Database of Shoah Victims' Names: ADOLF GEIGER, retrieved on 7 April 2017
  2. The Central Database of Shoah Victims' Names: OTTO GEIGER, retrieved on 7 April 2017
  3. holocaust.cz: VIKTOR GEIGER, retrieved on 7 April 2017
  4. geni.com: Rosa Růžena Geiger (Iltis), retrieved on 7 April 2017
  5. holocaust.cz: RŮŽENA GEIGEROVÁ, retrieved on 7 April 2017
  6. The Central Database of Shoah Victims' Names: RUZENA GEIGEROVA, retrieved on 7 April 2017
  7. geni.com: Zdeňka Kolář (Geiger), retrieved on 7 April 2017
  8. Zdeňka Kuchyňová: Praha má na chodnících své první pamětní kameny holocaustu, Radio Praha, 19 October 2008
  9. stolpersteine.cz: archive.is/6bh0z Stolpersteine in der Tschechischen Republik, retrieved on 20 March 2017 (German)
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.