Leitz glass slide projector with case, trays, and key ring used in a displaced persons camp

Identifier
irn40088
Language of Description
English
Alt. Identifiers
  • 2009.372.5 a-e
Dates
1 Jan 1945 - 31 Dec 1948
Level of Description
Item
Languages
  • English
Source
EHRI Partner

Extent and Medium

a: Height: 11.000 inches (27.94 cm) | Width: 13.750 inches (34.925 cm) | Depth: 5.875 inches (14.923 cm)

b: Height: 6.625 inches (16.827 cm) | Width: 3.250 inches (8.255 cm) | Depth: 0.500 inches (1.27 cm)

c: Height: 12.500 inches (31.75 cm) | Width: 16.000 inches (40.64 cm) | Depth: 6.875 inches (17.463 cm)

d: Height: 5.375 inches (13.653 cm) | Width: 0.750 inches (1.905 cm) | Depth: 0.250 inches (0.635 cm)

e: Height: 1.500 inches (3.81 cm) | Width: 0.750 inches (1.905 cm) | Depth: 0.125 inches (0.318 cm)

Creator(s)

Biographical History

Efraim Majer Rubinzon (later Ephraim Robinson, 1915-1985) was born in Warsaw, Poland, to Chaim (?-1939) and Henna Rubinzon. Chaim and Henna owned a store that sold imported perfumes and cosmetics, and the family lived in a comfortable apartment above it. Efraim had one younger brother, Lolik. In 1934, Efraim pursued his academic studies in France because Jewish university students were welcomed there and not in Poland. He received a Bachelor of Science in agronomy in July 1938, from the University of Nancy. He continued his studies with a year at the Dairy Industry School, and hoped to immigrate to Palestine afterwards. During the summer of 1939, Efraim was working at a dairy in Montauban Tarn-et-Garonne when his aunt wrote to tell him that his father had died unexpectedly. Efraim had maintained his Polish citizenship, and also acquired a French passport in order to work at the dairy, so he was able to quickly return to Warsaw in mid-July. He planned to liquidate the family business and return to France with his mother and brother. On September 1, 1939, Germany invaded Poland, and began bombing Warsaw daily. The family’s apartment and store were destroyed by an incendiary bomb, and they moved in with Efraim’s aunt. The Soviet Union, a German ally, invaded eastern Poland on September 17. Later that fall, German soldiers came looking for Efraim because of his French passport. He was able to grab a rucksack and escaped out the backdoor, but did not have a chance to say goodbye. Efraim fled, first by bicycle and then by foot, to Soviet-controlled territory near Bialystok, Poland. The situation there was slightly better, and Efraim planned to bring his mother and brother to live with him there. It was getting more difficult to cross the border, so Efraim decided that it would be best to have official entry papers for Henna and Lolik. In exchange for their papers, he agreed to work in a coal mine in the Donbas (Dombosk) region (now in Ukraine). The process to acquire the papers took a long time, but once Efraim acquired the papers, he sent them to his mother. She confirmed their receipt in a letter sent from within the Warsaw ghetto, which had been established by German authorities in October 1940. Efraim received additional letters from Henna until war broke-out following the German invasion of the Soviet Union in June 1941. Henna disappeared not long after and perished. Lolik also died, possibly while fighting with partisans. Efraim convinced Soviet authorities that his degree in agronomy made him more useful on a farm than in a coal mine. He was put to work dividing land for the government, breeding sheep, and overseeing the production of milk and cheese on collective farms throughout the western Soviet Union. He spent some time near Lemberg (now Lviv, Ukraine), as well as Tashkent (now Uzbekistan). During this time, Efraim met recently widowed Sara Shpigel Ghingis (later Sarah Robinson, 1916-1984) on a sovchoz [collective farm] near Tashkent. Sara and several relatives had fled from Romanovka in Soviet-controlled Bessarabia (now Basarabeasca, Moldova), one day before the town was invaded by German forces in July 1941. During her flight, Sara gave birth to her daughter Fania (later Fay Shlimovitz,1941-2002) in Novaya Odessa (now Nova Odesa, Ukraine). Sara’s family continued fleeing eastward until they reached the area around Tashkent. In 1943, Sara received a letter informing her that her husband, Chaim Ghingis (1916-1941?), died fighting in Stalingrad. Efraim and Sara married at city hall on March 3, 1944, and Efraim adopted Fania. The family was still near Tashkent when the Soviets drove German forces out of the region in 1944. All refugees there were told to return to their places of origin. Efraim did not want to return to Warsaw, so the Rubinzon family then made their way to Romanovka. They arrived there in December 1944, after a six-week train journey. They lived with several of Sara’s surviving relatives in the home of Nachman Rapoport, her maternal grandfather. Following the Soviet return to the region in 1944, the area was renamed the Moldavian Soviet Socialist Republic. The Rubinzon family was living there when their daughter, Henia (later Alice Lev, b. 1945), was born in February 1945. The war ended in Europe that May. Efraim oversaw milk and cheese production at a nearby dairy where the workers did not earn enough to properly feed their families, due to rampant corruption. He faced pressure to alter production records so the workers could steal food. Efraim faced disgruntled workers if he didn’t alter the records, but knew he could end up in a gulag in Siberia if he cheated the government. He decided it was time to leave the region, and in August, he bribed a farmer with bottles of vodka to smuggle his family out of the country. The farmer got the family across the border in two trucks, likely into Soviet-occupied Romania. Once over the border, Jewish agents helped the family continue their escape. That October, the Rubinzon family was sent to Zeilsheim displaced persons camp in Germany with the assistance of the Hebrew Immigrant Aid Society (HIAS). Zeilsheim was operated by UNRRA (United Nations Refugee Relief Administration). While at the camp, Efraim worked as the photographer for the camp newspaper, turning his hobby into a profession by taking hundreds of photographs. This position allowed the family to get better housing, and Efraim opened his own studio. As a fellow camp resident, Efraim was able to get many photos of daily life in the camp that outsuiders would not have been able to capture. Efraim and Sara’s son, Joseph (b.1946), was born in Zeilsheim. Efraim wished to relocate to Palestine, but that was not possible because the British closed the borders to Jewish immigrants. For a time, there were plans to smuggle the family members in individually, but they did not want to be separated. Efraim was able to send word to his Aunt Pauline and Uncle Louis Robinson in the United States to explain that he had survived. He was the only member of his family to survive the Holocaust, and his relatives wanted his family to join them in the US. They sent the Rubinzon family immigration papers, so Efraim, Sara, Henia, Fania, and Joseph booked passage on the USAT General W. M. Black from Bremerhaven on October 21, 1948. The family arrived in New York City on October 30. Efraim thought that, due to his training, he would do better in “the Dairy State”, so the family settled in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. They anglicized their surname to Robinson, and Efraim and Sara also anglicized their first names to Ephraim and Sarah. Henia changed her name to Alice and Fania became Fay (Ghingis-Robinson). Ephraim worked for several companies, and in 1950, he became an independent livestock dealer. Around 1968, he became a real estate broker and opened Blue Ribbon Realty with two partners. On July 7, 1967, Alice married Abraham David Lev (Abby, b. 1944), had children, and settled in California. In 1965, Fay married Dr. Alan Shlimovitz (1941-2020) and the couple later had children. Joseph settled in Los Angeles, California. In 1995, a selection of Ephraim’s photographs of Zeilsheim were published as Das Album von Ephraim Robinson: jüdische Überlebende in DP-Lagern im Nachkriegsdeutschland (Ephraim Robinson's album: Jewish survivors in DP camps in post-war Germany).

Henia Rubinzon (later Alice Lev, b. 1945) was born to Efraim (later Ephraim Robinson, 1915-1985) and Sara Shpigel Ghingis (later Sarah Robinson, 1916-1984) Rubinzon in Romanovka (now Basarabeasca, Moldova), in a region known historically as Bessarabia. Following World War I (1914-1918), the region, formerly part of the Russian Empire, became part of Romania. Henia had an older half-sister, Fania (later Fay Shlimovitz ,1941-2002) and a younger brother, Joseph (later Robinson, b. 1946). Henia’s father, Efraim, was a trained agronomist who specialized in dairy. Efraim was from Warsaw, Poland, where his family sold imported perfumes and cosmetics in a store below their home. Henia’s mother, Sara, was originally from Romanovka, and had a large, extended family. Efraim was in Warsaw with his mother and brother, following his father’s death, when Germany invaded Poland on September 1, 1939. Germany began bombing Warsaw daily, and an incendiary bomb destroyed the family’s apartment and store. Later that fall, German soldiers came looking for Efraim because he had a French passport from the prior year, when he studied agronomy and worked at a dairy in France. He escaped and fled alone to Soviet-controlled territory near Bialystok, Poland, and then the Donbas region (now in Ukraine). By the time he was able to obtain travel papers for his mother and brother, they were imprisoned in the Warsaw ghetto and later died. Efraim convinced Soviet authorities that his French degree in agronomy was useful on a farm than in a coal mine, and he was put to work on collective farms throughout the western Soviet Union. During this time, Efraim met recently widowed Sara Shpigel Ghingis on a sovchoz [collective farm] near Tashkent (now Uzbekistan). Sara and several relatives had fled from Romanovka one day before it was invaded by German forces in July 1941. During her flight, Sara gave birth to Henia’s sister, Fania, in Novaya Odessa (now Nova Odesa, Ukraine). They continued fleeing eastward until they reached Tashkent. In 1943, Sara learned that her husband, Chaim Ghingis (1916-1941?), had died fighting in Stalingrad. Efraim and Sara married at city hall on March 3, 1944, and Efraim adopted Fania. The family was still near Tashkent when the Soviets drove German forces out of the region in 1944. All refugees there were told to return to their places of origin. Efraim did not want to return to Warsaw, so the Rubinzon family then made their way to Sara’s hometown, Romanovka. They arrived there in December 1944, after a six-week train journey. They lived with several of Sara’s surviving relatives in the home of Nachman Rapoport, her maternal grandfather. These were relatives that had initially fled with her and returned just before the Rubinzons. Any relatives that had not fled had been killed. Following the Soviet return to the region in 1944, the area was renamed the Moldavian Soviet Socialist Republic. The Rubinzon family was living there when Henia was born in February 1945. The war ended in Europe that May. Efraim oversaw milk and cheese production at a nearby dairy where the workers did not earn enough, due to rampant corruption. He faced mounting pressure to alter production records so the workers could steal food to feed their families. If Efraim gave into their pressure, he knew he could end up in a gulag in Siberia. He decided it was time to leave the region, and in August, he bribed a farmer with bottles of vodka to smuggle his family out of the country. The farmer got the family across the border in two trucks, likely into Soviet-occupied Romania. Once over the border, Jewish agents helped the family continue their escape. That October, the Rubinzon family was sent to Zeilsheim displaced persons camp in Germany with the assistance of the Hebrew Immigrant Aid Society (HIAS). Zeilsheim was operated by UNRRA (United Nations Refugee Relief Administration). While at the camp, Efraim worked as a photographer, taking hundreds of photographs of camp life. Henia’s brother, Joseph (b.1946), was born in Zeilsheim. Efraim wished to relocate to Palestine, but that was not possible because the British closed the borders to Jewish immigrants. For a time, there were plans to smuggle the family members in individually, but they did not want to be separated. Henia’s father was able to send word to his relatives in the United States to explain that he had survived. He was the only member of his family to survive the Holocaust, and his relatives wanted his family to join them in the US. They sent the Rubinzon family immigration papers, so Efraim, Sara, Henia, Fania, and Joseph booked passage on the USAT General W. M. Black from Bremerhaven on October 21, 1948. The family arrived in New York City on October 30. Efraim thought that, due to his training, he would do better in “the Dairy State”, so the family settled in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. They anglicized their surname to Robinson, and Efraim and Sara also anglicized their first names to Ephraim and Sarah. Henia changed her name to Alice and Fania became Fay (Ghingis-Robinson). Ephraim worked for several companies, and in 1950, he became an independent livestock dealer. Around 1968, he became a real estate broker and opened Blue Ribbon Realty with two partners. On July 7, 1967, Alice married Abraham David Lev (Abby, b. 1944), had children, and settled in California. In 1965, Fay married Dr. Alan Shlimovitz (1941-2020) and the couple later had children. Joseph settled in Los Angeles, California. In 1995, a selection of Ephraim’s photographs of Zeilsheim were published as Das Album von Ephraim Robinson: jüdische Überlebende in DP-Lagern im Nachkriegsdeutschland (Ephraim Robinson's album: Jewish survivors in DP camps in post-war Germany).

Archival History

The glass slide projector was donated to the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum in 2009 by Alice Robinson Lev, the daughter of Ephraim and Sarah Robinson.

Acquisition

United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Collection, Gift of Alice Robinson Lev

Scope and Content

Leitz projector for glass slides with case, trays, and a key ring used by Ephraim Mayer Robinson to view photographs that he took of activities in Zeilsheim displaced persons camp in Germany from 1945-1948. Soon after Nazi Germany invaded Poland in September 1939, Ephraim and his wife, Sarah, fled east to Soviet territory. They relocated often as the Soviet Union demanded that Jewish refugees keep moving further east. They had a daughter, Fay, in 1941, in Odessa, and Alice was born in 1944 in Romanovka, Bessarabia. When the war ended in May 1945, they returned from Uzbekistan to Bessarabia, where they crossed the border to Poland. In October 1945, they were relocated to Zeilsheim, with the assistance of the Hebrew Immigrant Aid Society. Ephraim, Sarah, and their 3 children, Fay, Alice, and Joseph, born in the camp in 1946, got passage on the first immigrant transport to depart under the Displaced Persons Act, the SS General Black, which arrived in the United States on October 30, 1948.

Conditions Governing Access

No restrictions on access

Conditions Governing Reproduction

No restrictions on use

Physical Characteristics and Technical Requirements

a. Black metal tower projector on a footed, rectangular base. The top is open with a smaller square of 4 vents in the center. A lens is attached to the front; in front of this lens is a longer lens apparatus that moves along 2 metal rods protruding from the tower. The slide tray (b) goes into this apparatus. A bent rod with a knob is attached near the tower under the lenses. The right side of the tower has a small hinged door with Leitz embossed. The back left corner of the base has a red toggle screw; the back right corner has a screw post with a washer. A metal plate with text is riveted to the rear tower base. A black rubber cord with a 2 pronged round plug protrudes from the rear. b. Silver colored metal, rectangular tray with 2 extruding tabs on 1 side. There is a square with rounded corners cut out of the center. A thin metal piece with a square center cut out slides into the tray, with tracks and pressure clips to hold a slide. c. Rectangular wooden case covered with black canvas with 2 silver colored metal hasp locks on the front. There are silver colored metal corner protectors and 3 bottom corners have round metal feet. There are 2 metal hinges on the rear. A black leather handle is attached to 2 metal rings and plates on the top. It has a wooden, gray cloth lined interior. In the left base interior are 2 wooden support blocks; above is a painted canvas pocket. A wooden support block in the bottom right spans from front to back and has a leather strap with a metal snap. d. Piece of flat curved wood with tapered ends. e. Split key ring with silver colored key with rounded, textured bow and metal ring tag with green paper with handwritten text. It is attached to the handle of the case by a ball chain.

e. on attached paper tag, handwritten, black ink : German / slide / Projector

Subjects

Genre

This description is derived directly from structured data provided to EHRI by a partner institution. This collection holding institution considers this description as an accurate reflection of the archival holdings to which it refers at the moment of data transfer.