Zofia Zamenhof
Zofia Zamenhof (13 December 1889 – probably in August 1942) was a Polish pediatrician and the daughter of Klara (Silbernik) and L. L. Zamenhof, the inventor of Esperanto.
Zofia Zamenhof | |
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Sofia Zamenhof around the year 1906 | |
Born | |
Died | 1942 (aged 52–53) |
Nationality | Polish |
Known for | Activity in Esperanto movement |
Parent(s) | L. L. Zamenhof (1859–1917) Klara Zamenhof (1863–1924) |
Signature | |
From 1907 to 1913 she completed her medical studies at the University of Lausanne and she passed a state examination in Saint Petersburg in 1914.[1] She then continued to specialize in internal and pediatric diseases. She worked at a hospital in Lebedin, and from 1922 in a hospital in Warsaw. During World War II, she moved to the Warsaw Ghetto. Despite the presence of the Nazis, she continued her medical practice until she was arrested and transported to a death camp. In 1942 she was taken from Umschlagplatz in Warsaw's ghetto to the extermination camp in Treblinka, where she was murdered, most likely in a gas chamber.
Her symbolic tomb (commemorative plaque near the tomb of Klara Zamenhof) is located on the Jewish Cemetery, Warsaw.[2]
References
- Louis Falstein, The martyrdom of Jewish physicians in Poland, Exposition Press, 1964, s. 493
- Zofia Zamenhof cemetery.jewish.org.pl