Oral History Interview with Anna Berenholz

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Title

Oral History Interview with Anna Berenholz

Date

September 5, 1989

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Summary

This is an auxiliary interview to the 1987 interview with Anna Berenholz, nee Bohorochaner, about her experiences living in Budapest, Hungary during WWII.

She feels she owes her life to Swedish diplomat Raoul Wallenberg. In November/December 1944 she was put on a death march. At the time Anna was 19 years old. She was pulled out of the march along with other young Jews by orders of Raoul Wallenberg. Working as a translator for the Russians, Anna survived in Budapest until the Soviets freed the city on January 20, 1945.

Once in America after the war she worked hard to find Wallenberg and thank him. She went to the Swiss, Spanish and Swedish embassies and she wrote to President Carter, and Pennsylvania Senators Heinz and Specter to try and find him, but to no avail.


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Publisher:
Gratz College
Length:
00:08:55
Number of Tapes:
1
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Identifier:
HOHAGC00051b
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