Oral History Interview with Kurt Simon

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Title

Oral History Interview with Kurt Simon

Date

July 10, 1989

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Summary

Kurt Simon was born in Ludenscheid, Germany on April 19, 1922. His father was a cavalry officer in the German army during World War I. Mr. Simon talks about his early childhood. He mentions subtle and not so subtle changes in Germany after Hitler came to power and the impact of the Nuremberg Laws which he discusses briefly. After the earliest attack on Jewish stores on April 1, 1933, his father resigned from his executive position at the Tietzdeparment store and moved his family to Cologne. Kurt was thrown out of his school in 1936 because he was Jewish.

His Jewish grandmother made it possible for the family to leave Germany in June or July 1939. He explains the paperwork and documents needed. The Simons arrived in the United States on October 3, 1940 after a stopover in London, where they had to prove they were not enemy aliens. They settled in Philadelphia with help from the Jewish Family Service.


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Publisher:
Gratz College
Number of Tapes:
2
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Identifier:
HOHAGC00490
Cite this item
Oral History Interview with Kurt Simon. 1989. InterviewInterview by Deborah Feingold. Audio. Oral History Interview With Kurt Simon. Holocaust Oral History Archive. Gratz College. https://grayzel.gratz.edu/hoha/oral-history-interview-kurt-simon.

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