Jakob Altaras papers
Extent and Medium
folder
book enclosure
1
1
Creator(s)
- Jakob Altaras
Biographical History
Jakob Altaras (1918-2001) was born in Split, Croatia and was the youngest of six sons of Leon Altaras. His medical studies in Zagreb were interrupted by the war, and he joined the Partisan resistance movement in Croatia. He saved Torah portions and other sacred objects from the Split Synagogue when it was set on fire; he smuggled a group of 33 Jewish children from Croatia to safety in Villa Emma near Modena, Italy; he illegally entered the Rab (Arbe) concentration camp to smuggled out photographs which were later used by the Commission for War Crimes in Yugoslavia; and he served as a surgeon in hospitals for Jewish partisans in Bari, Italy. After the war, he completed his medical studies and practiced and taught medicine in Zagreb. Altaras was politically persecuted and forced to leave Croatia in 1964 when he began investigating the 1945 death of his brother Silvio Altaras at the hands of the communist regime of Yugoslavia. He worked in Zurich, Switzerland for two years before settling in Giessen, Germany, where he served as the president of the Jewish Community of Giessen.
Archival History
United States Holocaust Memorial Museum
Acquisition
United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Collection, Gift of the Jewish Community of Giessen
Funding Note: The cataloging of this collection has been supported by a grant from the Conference on Jewish Material Claims Against Germany.
Jakob Altaras and the Jewish Community of Giessen donated the Jakob Altaras papers to the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum in 1989, 1990, and 1991. The accessions previously cataloged as 1989.53.1, 1990.118.1, 1990.118.11, and 1990.118.12 have been incorporated into this collection.
Scope and Content
The Jakob Altaras papers consist of one copy print of a photograph of Jakob Altaras with a group of Jewish refugee children in Split, Croatia just before their departure for Italy in April 1943, two copy prints of a photograph identified as a synagogue in Laubach in 1936, and one copybook that appears to contain copies of business letters written by Max Stein and H. Hirsch Nachfolger in Ruppertsberg (near Laubach) between 1900 and 1920.
System of Arrangement
The Jakob Altaras papers are arranged as a single series.
Subjects
- Jews--Croatia--Split.
- Jewish refugees--Croatia.
- Jews--Germany--Laubach.
- Split (Croatia)
- Laubach (Germany)
Genre
- Photographs.
- Document