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Helene Politzer (Lack)

Also Known As: "Helen"
Birthdate:
Birthplace: Vienna, Vienna, Austria
Death: October 16, 2014 (90)
Immediate Family:

Daughter of Adolf Lack and Elsa Lack
Wife of Henry Hans Politzer
Mother of Joan Frances Vera Frohlich and Private

Managed by: Christopher Johnstone
Last Updated:
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Immediate Family

About Helene Politzer

https://www.hebrewmemorial.org/obituaries/HELENE-POLITZER/#!/Obituary

Obituary for HELENE POLITZER
Mrs Politzer died October 16, 2014 at the age of 90. She was the dear wife of the late Henry Politzer for 60 years.

Funeral Services will be held at our chapel in Oak Park.

Family Info:
Daughters: Joan (Jerry) Frohlich, Susan (Dr. Marc) Beals

Grandchildren: Julie (Dr. Thomas) Song, Jaimee (David) Witten, Jill Frohlich, Jonathon Frohlich, Aaron (Alana) Beals, Jodi Beals, Marnie Beals

Great-grandchildren: Aiden, Emma, Tyler, Alex, Kyra, Noah

https://www.holocaustcenter.org/visit/library-archive/oral-history-...

POLITZER (LACK), HELEN
EMIGRE
VIENNA (AUSTRIA)
Born in Vienna, Austria, Politzer was the only child of a couple living in Vienna’s 13th district, a nice area with a relatively small number of Jews. Her father was a civil engineer working on state and municipal projects. She attended public primary school and then a Realgymnasium, a specialized combination junior and senior high school for the more talented children with admission based on an examination. Since she was a girl, a special fee had to be paid for her attendance.

Politzer describes life in Austria before the Nazis came as quite normal and she experienced little anti-Semitism. However, after Germany’s annexation, her life changed quickly. Having reached fourteen years of age, the maximum age for mandatory education, she was expelled from school, her father lost his job, her family was evicted from their apartment and had to move in with her grandparents. During the riots of Kristallnacht they were again evicted and sent to another apartment in the same building to live with another family.

Her father was able to obtain a financial guarantor for emigration to the United States but his low quota position prevented him from leaving. The family attempted to illegally enter Belgium but was turned back by German border guards. Politzer’s mother found a job as a maid in England and thus obtained a visa to move there. Politzer eventually also obtained a visa for England and was able to join her mother for a short period before being moved to a hostel where children from the Kindertransport were housed. Although she was forbidden to work with or without pay by British regulations, she became a trainee in a silversmith factory.

Politzer’s father and grandfather attempted another illegal entry into Belgium and this time succeeded. Because of his engineering background, her father was able to go to the Kitchener Camp in England as an instructor. The Kitchener Camp was an accommodation by the British for German Jews who had documentation for emigration to another country but were awaiting their place on the quota. Her grandfather remained in Belgium and ultimately was deported to Auschwitz where he perished. Her father was later interned on the Isle of Man with other Germans but when their quota number came up, Politzer and her parents were able to immigrate to the United States in June 1940.

Interview Information:
Date: November 21, 1996
Interviewer: Hans R. Weinmann
Format: Video recording

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Helene Politzer's Timeline

1923
December 31, 1923
Vienna, Vienna, Austria
1951
May 29, 1951
2014
October 16, 2014
Age 90