Marc Ratner papers
Extent and Medium
folder
1
Creator(s)
- Marc Ratner
Biographical History
Marjan Ratner (later Marc Ratner) was born on November 29, 1920 in Łódź, Poland to Julian (Chaim) Ratner (1889-1941) and Gustava Szrajer Ratner (b. February 17, 1894). Marc’s younger sister, Alicja Ratner was born on November 1, 1923. His father was a prosperous textile industrialist in Łódź. Marc graduated from a private gymnasium in Łódź, and in 1938 began attending the University of Manchester in England. He returned to Poland in June 1939 to visit his family and was there when World War II began on September 1. Marc received an order to report for service in the Polish Army, and his father decided to accompany him. They lived with a customer of Julian’s in Lvov (Lviv), Ukraine. After bribing a German, Julian returned to Łódź to retrieve his wife and daughter, as well as some merchandise from his factory. On June 25, 1940, at 2:00 am, the Soviet police arrested the Ratner family and deported them to a forced labor camp in the forest of the Ural Mountains. Marc and Julian worked in the forests. Alicja atteneded school. Julian, who was multi-lingual, was appointed camp manager. However, he suddenly died of food poisoning on May 26, 1941. Following the German invasion of the Soviet Union, Jewish deportees received permission to leave the camps. Marc and his family remained in the Urals for a few months, and Marc worked as a fireman. In March 1942, the family traveled with a group of other refugees to Samarkand and Uzbekistan. When they learned that the Anders Army was stationed in Kiermine, they went there in hopes of going with them to Iran. The Ratners were ready to board a train for Teheran, Iran when a Polish special services officer asked Marc’s mother what was their religion. When she replied “Mojrzeszoew” they were taken off the train and forced to remain in Uzbekistan. After a few months, the family returned to Samarkand where Marc’s mother sold jewelry and clothing on the black market to support the family. Marc enrolled in a branch of the University of Leningrad in Samarkand and studied economics and statistics. At this point the Polish Government-in-Exile in London, England was sending food and clothing to Polish refugees in the Soviet Union. By coincidence, Piotr Novacki, the Polish delegate overseeing the distribution in Samarkand, graduated from the same gymnasium as Marc, and he appointed him to be in charge of this distribution to prevent the goods being sold on the black market. However, when the Soviet Union advanced towards Poland, it broke off its relationship with the Polish Government-in-Exile and instead created a Soviet-Polish puppet government. They dissolved the delegation in Samarkand, closed the distribution center, and arrested Piotr Nowacki. Marc found work as a cashier and bookkeeper in a textile cooperative. World War II ended in May 1945, and the Soviets allowed Polish refugees to return to Poland. Because of Marc’s connection with Piotr Nowacki, the Ratners were kept in Samarkand after others departed. The family finally left by their own means at the end of June 1946. They returned to Łódź to find their apartment and belongings gone. They went to live with relatives who survived the Łódź ghetto. Seeing no future in Poland, they traveled by train to Czechoslovakia and eventually came to a DP camp in Ebensee, Austria. Marc found work as a translator, and he met an America Jewish chaplain who offered to help. The refugees were transferred to another DP Camp in Cham, Germany. After one week, Marc was told to proceed to Munich, Germany to pick up Venezuelan visas for him and his family. The American rabbi arranged with a Jewish organization in New York to secure fictitious visas to Venezuela and sent them to the Central Committee of Liberated Jews in Munich. Marc, his mother, and sister picked up their travel documents as well as a French transit visa. On September 26, 1946, the family arrived in Paris, France. Marc managed to obtain work as the assistant head of the transportation department of the Joint Distribution Committee in Paris. Thus, he was able to help thousands of survivors obtain transport to the United States, Canada, Australia, and Brazil. He also worked for the World ORT organization and the United Jewish Appeal. Marc married a French-Jewish employee of the Joint and they had a son, Pierre, in 1948. In February 1954, they immigrated to the United States.
Archival History
United States Holocaust Memorial Museum
Acquisition
United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Collection, Gift of Marc Ratner
Funding Note: The cataloging of this collection has been supported by a grant from the Conference on Jewish Material Claims Against Germany.
Marc Ratner donated the Marc Ratner papers to the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum in 2005.
Scope and Content
The papers consist of documents and letters relating the experiences of Marc Ratner after World War II. Includes a letter of recommendation for Marc Ratner from the Provisional Engineering team in Ebensee, Austria; a certificate from the Cham Jewish transient camp for Gustava, Marijan, and Alicia Ratner; a transit visa for Venezuela from the Central Committee for Liberated Jews for Alicja [donor's sister] and Manau (Marian) Ratner issued on September 11, 1946; and two letters from the Joint Distribution Committee (JDC) certifying that Marian and Simone Ratner were employed in the Paris, France, office of the JDC.
System of Arrangement
The Marc Ratner papers is arranged in a single series.
People
- Ratner, Alicia.
- Ratner, Marc.
- Ratner, Gustava Szrajer.
- Ratner, Simone.
Corporate Bodies
- American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee
Subjects
- France.
- World War, 1939-1945--Refugees--France--Paris.
- Austria.
- Refugees, Jewish--France--Paris.
- World War, 1939-1945--Refugees--Austria--Ebensee.
- World War, 1939-1945--Refugees--Germany--Cham.
- Refugees, Jewish--Austria--Ebensee.
- Germany.
- Refugees, Jewish--Germany--Cham.
Genre
- Document
- Certificates.
- Letters.