First Name | Fred (Manfred) |
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Family Name | P. |
Date of Birth | 1930 |
Birthplace/Place of Residence | - |
Residence in „Heim Isenburg“ | 07/20/1938 - 08/17/1938 ("Ferienkind" from Frankfurt) |
Departure to | Frankfurt am Main |
Profession | - |
Deportation/Escape | Survived as 'Half-Jew' in Berlin |
Date of Death/Place of Death | - |
Fred P. came to „Heim Isenburg“ in the summer holidays 1938 together with his brother Heinz, who is also listed in this Memorial Book, in a group of Frankfurt school children for three weeks. Fred and Heinz had a Jewish father and an evangelical mother. The father died before the beginning of the Second World War. The children were regarded as "half-Jew" by the National Socialists.
Fred visited the Philanthropy Jewish College in Frankfurt. When the school was compulsorily closed in 1942, his education at the age of 12 was an abrupt end. With his brother, Fred was sent to Oranienburger Straße 2 in Berlin. This is the address of the “Neue Synagoge.” According to later statements made by Heinz during the reparation procedure, the brothers in Oranienburger Straße were censored together with other children: they were not allowed to leave the house and did not receive any school lessons. Shortly before the end of the war, the two boys returned to Frankfurt, where they experienced the war.
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