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  Child Survivors arrow About the Site
 
About the site Print E-mail

INTRODUCTION.

Thank you for visiting our website.
Anika Kanter Movchine is the webdesigner and webmaster.
Eva Floersheim is the researcher. We are two private persons who have worked on this website since 1995. 

This renewed version of our website, now with its own domain, was made possible through the generous contribution of Mrs. Hanita - Izabella Leshem nee Waldbaum - Izabella Waldbaum on this website.
http://missing-identity.net/mi/content/view/43/26/

Like Hanita Leshem there are many other persons who survived Holocaust as children and tried for years to locate information regarding their past.
Some are still searching.
Perhaps you can help them.

Some  child survivors hope to find living relatives who can tell them about their parents and family.

Others hope to find out the most basic information about themselves:

their own name,

their birth date and birthplace,

the names of their parents.

Sometimes the name they have, is not their original name ( the name given to them by their parents when they were born), but a cover name used during the war or an invented name given to the child after the war when crossing borders illegally on their way to their new homeland.

By looking at the photos and reading the profiles of each child, you may be able to help.

THE HISTORY OF THIS WEBSITE.
In the spring of 1997 the Israel Broadcasting Authority - Israeli Television featured two documentaries called "Missing Identity". The first program was produced as a joint venture with Polish TV. The profiles of twelve child survivors of the Holocaust, born roughly between 1935 - 1943, were presented in the hope that viewers in Israel or Poland would recognize the children and be able to help them in their search, thus solving the problems of their identities. In Israel the Missing Identity programs were produced by Vered Berman.

Two of the Israeli viewers watching "Missing Identity", Moshe Chertoff from Kibbutz Shomrat and Rami Rosengarten from Haifa, suggested that making a website for this project would enable people, not only from Poland and Israel, but from the whole world , to help. They enlisted the help of Netvision, an Israeli Hosting provider. That was the beginning of this site. Anika Kanter Movchine from Kibbutz Shomrat took upon herself the task of webmaster and webdesigner .

Eva Floersheim from Shadmot Dvorah had worked as a researcher for the two TV programs. As she is also a member of the Galil Genealogical Society, the Missing Identity website became for some years a project of the Society under their president Tali Hadar z"l from Kibbutz Mizra. Erela Goldschmidt  z"l from Shadmot Dvorah, a child survivor herself, was also an important person in collecting the relevant information from the other child survivors.
Erela is also on this website
http://missing-identity.net/mi/content/view/26/26/

Vered Berman , the documentary TV producer, is still personally involved in this subject, and in the year 2000 she produced an additional documentary called "Hanita's Missing Identity".

TODAY MORE THAN 60 CHILD SURVIVORS ARE SEARCHING FOR THEIR PAST.
Since 1997, additional child survivors have requested to have their profiles published on this site. As a result, today this site includes more than 60 profiles.

Netvision stopped sponsoring the site in the autumn of 1998. Since then JewishGen has been our generous host.

Now in 2005 we have our own domain with more features to make  each profile more dynamic and to make it easier to work on the website  for both Anika and Eva.

This website is today, and has been for some years,  a website run by  two private persons. The texts and research are done by Eva Floersheim, and Anika Kanter Movchine continues to do the webdesign and acts as the webmaster. As the work is done out of our own time and pockets, this limits many aspects of the work. So if you can help us anyway:
  • Obtain the necessary information
  • Come with additional good ideas for research
  • Press the "Donation" tab 
that is a very welcome contribution.
 
RELATIVES SEARCH FOR CHILDREN LOST IN HOLOCAUST.
As we said earlier, the main purpose of this website is to help child survivors find information about their own past. But after the Missing Identity programs back in 1997, close to 140 letters were sent to the Israeli Television searching for children who were lost in the Holocaust. These were relatives – cousins, sisters, brothers and even parents, who after so many years still hoped that the child lost somewhere during the war may have survived. Perhaps he or she may even be one of the children with a missing identity.

We have therefore added these requests to our website. Click on: "Missing Children"  ( List Children) on the main menu

SMALL SUCCESSES. BIG SUCCESSES.
Each profile on our site is a person now in their fifties or early sixties, most of them live in Israel, some in the States, some in Poland.

Some have actively searched for their identity their whole grownup lives  – often with very little success. Others gave up many years ago.

Sometimes the word "success" in a search can mean getting just one little piece of information – your birthdate, f.ex. . In a very few cases the success is dramatic - finding a living relative -  your mother, your brother, your aunt.

These successes happened sometimes with the help of the Missing Identity TV programs or through our Missing Identity website, but mostly because so many people from all over the world took the time to piece together different documents and information.

Sometimes, like in Polina Mishures' case, it was her husband Kelly Modlin who persisted for close to thirty years.
Sometimes it happened because the child survivor dared to stand forward and tell his/her story in a newspaper article or on a TV program.

With the hope for more successes - small or big, we ask you to look through the information represented here to see how you can help.

Eva Floersheim, Shadmot Dvorah, Israel



First written in February 2001

Revised June 2005

 

Last Updated ( Saturday, 27 August 2005 )
Comments (1) >>
...
written by Michael Gaster on December 12, 2006

I was born in Turkmenistan in 1942, of Polish-Jewish parents who had managed to flee Busczascz. I lived in a Jewish orphanage in Krakow from 1946 to 1949, when I was taken to live with a family of dstant cousins in Lille, France. My mother and younger brother (orn in 1945) survived the war, but lived in a DP camp near Munich during these years. The three of us were reunited in 1950, in Israel, though we never lived together. My brother and I grew up in various foster homes and finally, Kibbutz Negba. My wife and I are currently living in Chicago, and we would like to research this orphanage in Krakow and any records they might have of this time. Would you be able to advise us how to proceed, or perhaps supply the name of this institution? Probably there was more than one. I remember something to the effect that the building in which we were housed had been a Gestapo Headquarters. It was a beautiful, large building.

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