Fritz Gluckstein papers
Extent and Medium
folders
4
Creator(s)
- Fritz P. Gluckstein
Biographical History
Fritz Gluckstein was born on January 24, 1927, in Berlin, Germany, to a Jewish father and a Christian mother, Georg and Hedwig Gluckstein. His father, born in 1886 in Oranienburg, was a municipal court judge and a decorated veteran of World War I. Hedwig was born in 1892 in Breslau. Fritz was raised as a Jew, and the family attended a liberal synagogue. When Hitler came to power in 1933, Jews soon were prohibited from holding public office and his father was dismissed from his position. He went to work as a legal advisor for the Jewish community. The family endured severe financial hardship. Under Nazi racial laws, Fritz was Mischlinge [mixed race] and a non-protected Geltungsjude, a counted Jew, subject to all the restrictions imposed on the Jews of Germany. After the November 9-10, 1938, Kristallnacht pogrom, state sponsored anti-Jewish acts became more common, and even more so after the outbreak of World War II in September 1939 when Germany invaded Poland. All valuables and many other belongings, including their pet dog, were confiscated, and their food rations allowed no meat or milk. Fritz left his public school because of increasing antisemitism and enrolled in a Jewish school. Jews were barred from many public places and activities. Hedwig's Gentile sister, Elfriede Dressler, provided the family with extra food and supplies, sneaking them to the family at night. Elfriede often looked after Fritz and they had a prepared story for when they went outside. If they were stopped, Elfriede would say that she was returning from the store and made this Jewish boy carry her things home. Fritz had a normal bar mitzvah in 1940, receiving Mark Twain books as a gift. In his late teens, Fritz registered for military duty, but was rejected because he was a Jew. By 1942, many Jews were being deported to labor camps and to ghettos in Poland. Friends disappeared and the benches in his school got emptier and, in 1942, his school closed. Fritz was put in the forced labor service. His mother was assigned to work at a factory that made military uniforms. The family was forced to relocate to the Jewish area near the Oranienbergstrasse synagogue. When their apartment was bombed, they had to move again. In 1943, on his sixteenth birthday, Fritz was picked up and interrogated by the Gestapo, but released because of his Christian mother. He was then assigned to work in a factory which made armaments for the German Air Force. In 1943, their apartment was again hit by Allied bombs and the Glucksteins moved into the Jewish hospital. Fritz was assigned to a demolition and cleanup crew. For four days, Fritz was assigned to Eichmann's Gestapo headquarters in the Reich Security Main Office where he was surprised to meet an SS officer, Ernst von Hardenburg, who was sympathetic to his plight as a Jew. On February 27, Fritz and his father were arrested during a roundup of the last remaining Jews in Berlin, later called the Factory Action. Fritz was soon released from the Clou nightclub where arrestees were detained. But he was rearrested the following week, when he went to pick up the family’s ration cards. He was interned with other children and husbands of non-Jewish women in a building on the Rosenstrasse. The building, a former administrative office of the Jewish Community, became the scene of a demonstration by the non-Jewish wives and mothers. They feared the deportation of their families and demanded the release of their loved ones, and the detainees were released. It was the only public demonstration against the Nazi regime to take place in Germany. In the fall of 1944, Fritz and his father were assigned to forced labor gangs sent to demolish buildings damaged by air raids. One day, Fritz was knocked unconscious by falling building debris. The nearby Catholic hospital cared for him even though it was forbidden for the staff to aid Jews. His labor battalion was also assigned to build defensive barriers around Berlin to slow the Soviet advance. The Soviets captured the city in early May 1945. Fritz had trouble convincing them that he was Jewish because there were so few Jews left. Germany surrendered on May 7. Fritz resumed his studies, but it was difficult to find teachers who were not connected to the Nazi Party. Food was scarce, although the American and Soviet liberators supplied food, and food packages were sent by the Jewish Joint Distribution Committee. Fritz decided to leave Germany, but his father remained because to continue his career elsewhere, he would have to learn an entirely new legal system. Georg resumed his judicial career and served as chairman of the new Jewish community's assembly of representatives. Fritz emigrated to the United States, leaving from Bremen on January 18, 1948, on a so-called Liberty ship, Marine Flasher, arriving in New York on January 29. He settled in the Minneapolis/St. Paul area, and worked while attending the university where he earned a degree in veterinary medicine. He met his future wife, Ethel, while there and they would have a daughter. He worked for the United States Army and the US Department of Agriculture. Fritz never spoke about his wartime experiences, except in response to questions from his wife or others. After his retirement, he became a volunteer at the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum.
Archival History
United States Holocaust Memorial Museum
Acquisition
United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Collection, Gift of Fritz Gluckstein
United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Collection, Gift of Fritz Gluckstein
United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Collection, Gift of Fritz Gluckstein
United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Collection, Gift of Fritz P. Gluckstein
United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Collection, Gift of Fritz Gluckstein
Funding Note: The cataloging of this collection has been supported by a grant from the Conference on Jewish Material Claims Against Germany.
Fritz Gluckstein donated the Fritz Gluckstein papers to the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum in 1991, 1997, 2000, 2005, 2009, and 2012. The accessions formerly cataloged as 1997.45, 2000.434.1, 2005.362.1, 2009.254.1, and 2012.166.1 have been incorporated into this collection.
Scope and Content
The Fritz Gluckstein papers include identification papers, permits, and immigration papers for Fritz Gluckstein, a certificate documenting his father’s receipt of a World War I veteran’s medal, two photographs of Fritz Gluckstein and his family, and an announcement for the first Passover seder held in Berlin since 1932. Fritz Gluckstein materials include a 1942 report card; 1942‐1944 permits and notices documenting Gluckstein’s employment, release from the Rosenstrasse holding camp, use of the S‐Bahn, and exclusion from military service; and authorization, identification, and travel papers documenting Gluckstein’s immigration to the United States. Georg Gluckstein material include a 1935 certificate documenting Gluckstein’s award of the World War I Ehrenkreuz für Frontkämpfer medal and a 1942 envelope addressed to Gluckstein from Deutsche Bank. An August 1945 photograph depicts Fritz, Georg, and Hedwig Gluckstein in Berlin, and a 1947 photograph depicts Fritz Gluckstein in Zeven. The Fritz Gluckstein papers include identification papers, permits, and immigration papers for Fritz Gluckstein, a certificate documenting his father’s receipt of a World War I veteran’s medal, two photographs of Fritz Gluckstein and his family, and an announcement for the first Passover seder held in Berlin since 1932. The papers also include a notice for the first Passover seder to be held in Berlin since 1932. The seder was to take place on April 15, 1946, at the Schoenberg, Rathaus, at Rudolf Wilde Platz.
System of Arrangement
The Fritz Gluckstein papers are arranged as a single series: I. Fritz Gluckstein papers, 1942-1948
People
- Fritz P. Gluckstein
Subjects
- United States--Emigration and immigration.
- Berlin (Germany)
- Children of interfaith marriage--Germany--Berlin.
- Jewish children in the Holocaust--Germany--Berlin.
- Forced labor--Germany--Berlin.
- Jews--Germany--Berlin.
Genre
- Document
- Photographs.