Prisoner badge with a yellow bar over a red triangle and 14354 worn by a female inmate
Extent and Medium
overall: Height: 2.000 inches (5.08 cm) | Width: 7.750 inches (19.685 cm)
Creator(s)
- Ilona Barkal (Subject)
Biographical History
Ilona Winograd was born in the Łódź Ghetto on German occupied Poland on January 15, 1940, to Bajla (Bella) Kozak and Marcus Marek Winograd. Bajla was born on December 12, 1909, and was a Strasbourg educated bacteriologist. Marcus, born on May 18, 1903, was a textile engineer. Thier families lived next door to each other. Bella's family had a newspaper distribution business and Marek's family ran a clothing store. The couple married on February 2, 1938. Germany invaded and occupied Poland in early September 1939. In February, the families were forced into a Jewish ghetto. Bella and Marek lived with their extended family, including Ilona’s paternal grandparents, Luba and Nuchem, maternal grandparents, Ita and Moshe, and three maternal uncles, Szmul, (1910-1944), Fabian, (1907-1943), and Izio, d. 1941. Marcus worked for the Jewish Council and was in charge of housing. Bajla worked as a bacteriologist in the laboratory at 3 Zgierska Street. From September 5-12, 1942, 12,000 Jews were deported to Chelmno extermination camp during the Gehsperre Aktion. The ghetto hospital was closed, and the patients were the first to be deported, followed by the elderly, the infirm, and children. Ilona was two and a half years old, but was exempted from deportation because she was the child of a Jewish Council essential employee. During the Aktion, each exempted child was issued a round, wooden tag with their name and required to wear it around their neck. The group of 226 children were hidden in the hospital on Lagiewnicka Street, until the Aktion ended. In August 1944, as the ghetto was being emptied of all residents through mass deportations, the Winograd family was permitted to stay until October. On October 21, 1944, a group of 600 Jews, including Ilona and her parents, known as Biebow's Jews, after the Nazi administrator of the ghetto, Hans Biebow, were taken to Konigs Wusterhausen concentration camp, near Berlin. Ilona and Bella were transported to Ravensbrück concentration camp and Marcus was sent to Oranienburg concentration camp. Ilona's mother, with her skills as a scientist, would drug Ilona to keep her still and quiet during times of danger in the camp. On April 27, 1945, the Soviet Army liberated the area and Ilona, Bella, and Marcus were reunited. The family walked back to Łódź and searched unsuccessfully for any remaining family members. Bella found work as a laboratory technician but, in 1946, the family left for Sweden because of the intense antisemitism in Poland. Ilona received a degree in dentistry and emigrated to Israel in 1970.
Archival History
The badge was donated to the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum in 2015 by Ilona Winograd Barkal.
Acquisition
United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Collection, Gift of Ilona W. Barkal
Funding Note: The cataloging of this artifact has been supported by a grant from the Conference on Jewish Material Claims Against Germany.
Scope and Content
Prisoner identification patch owned by Ilona Winograd and believed to be the one worn by her mother Bella when they were imprisoned in Ravensbrück concentration camp from October 1944-May 1945. Germany occupied Poland in September 1939. Her parents Bella and Marek lived in Łódź and were imprisoned in the ghetto where Ilona was born in 1940. On September 5-12, 1942, the Germans conducted a mass deportation, targeting hospital patients, the elderly, and children; over 12,000 people were deported to Chelmno killing center. Ilona was not included in the round-up because she was the child of an essential Jewish Council employee; her father was in charge of ghetto housing. With other children, Ilona was hidden in a hospital until the Aktion ended. When the ghetto was liquidated in October 1944, Ilona and her mother were sent to Ravensbrück and her father was sent to Oranienburg. They were reunited when the war ended in May 1945. They walked back to Łódź and searched unsuccessfully for relatives. They left for Sweden in 1946 because of postwar antisemitism.
Conditions Governing Access
No restrictions on access
Physical Characteristics and Technical Requirements
Rectangular, discolored and soiled white cotton patch with a hand-applied, yellow bar above an inverted red triangle next to the prisoner number 14354 in black ink. There are brown stains in the center. All edges are frayed. The long edges are pressed over to the back. The short edges have a deep crease with a line of pin holes, possibly from being folded and pinned to clothing.
front, hand applied, black ink : 14354
Subjects
- Jewish children in the Holocaust--Poland--Łódź.
- Concentration camp inmates--Germany--Ravensbruck.
- Holocaust survivors--Sweden.
- Hidden children (Holocaust)--Poland--Łódź.
- Jewish ghettos--Poland--Łódź.
- Poland--History--German occupation, 1939-1945--Money.
- Child concentration camp inmates--Germany--Ravensbruck.
- Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945)--Poland--Łódź.
Genre
- Object
- Identifying Artifacts