Carolina Taitz papers relating to the Rīga ghetto
Extent and Medium
folder
1
Creator(s)
- Carolina Taitz
Biographical History
Carolina Knoch Taitz was born on Feb. 24, 1929, in Rīga, Latvia. She grew up in the countryside outside of Rīga on a small farm. She recalls the time up until the Soviet occupation of Latvia in 1941 as a peaceful time. In 1942, her family was forced to move to Rīga when the Germans invaded Latvia. She, her sister, and her mother were transported to the ghetto in Rīga shortly thereafter. Carolina was saved from two Aktionen; the second time, she was saved and given shelter by a Russian priest. She remained hidden in the priest's cellar for two years and eight months. The priest disguised himself as a Jew by wearing a yellow Star of David and sneaked in and out of the ghetto in Rīga, carrying letters between Carolina and her sister and mother who were still imprisoned there. This priest also helped many of the other Jews in the ghetto. She was liberated in 1945 when the Soviet Union seized the Baltic nations of Estonia, Lithuania, and Latvia. She immigrated to the United States in 1967.
Archival History
United States Holocaust Memorial Museum
Acquisition
The letters from Berta Knoch to her sister, Carolina Taitz, were donated to the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum by Carolina Taitz during her survivor interview with the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Oral History Department. English translations of the Latvian originals were provided by Taitz at the time of her oral history interview. The letters were initially given to the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Collections Department but were later transferred to the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Archives in Mar. 1991 by Lisa Topelmann.
Scope and Content
Includes letters exchanged between Carolina Taitz and her sister, Berta Knoch, during the Holocaust along with English translations prepared for the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum by Taitz. The letters discuss conditions of living and forced labor in the ghetto in Rīga, Latvia. Also included is the survival testimony of Carolina Taitz. The testimony describes her escape from the Rīga ghetto and her life in hiding.
System of Arrangement
The papers are arranged in four folders: 1) Correspondence, 2) Correspondence, translations, 3) Testimony, 4) Photograph.
People
- Kateneva, Olga Alexandrovna.
- Micko, Vladimir Alexandrovich.
- Knoch, Berta.
- Taitz, Carolina Knoch, 1929-
Subjects
- Labor.
- Torúz (Concentration camp)
- Jewish ghettos--Latvia--Rīga.
- Jews--Latvia.
- Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945)--Personal narratives.
- Smuggling.
- Holocaust survivors.
- Hiding places--Latvia.
- Escapes.
- Executions and executioners.
Genre
- Document
- Letters.