Heinzs daughter is back home, after an amazing journey on The Winton Train. Look for links and photos here on this page, soon!Mood: inspired Posted at 4:35 AM Sep 15view more
Dad LOVED music! Big Band era (Glen Miller etc), Vera Lynn, Marlene Dietrich, Symphonies & Opera (Schubert, Strauss, Mozart, Dvorak etc), Leonard Bernstein, Arthur Fiedler & Boston Pops; Irish Music (Tommy Makem, Clancy Brothers, The Chieftains); John McDermott, Tommy Hunter, Anne Murray, Gwen Swick (Vacuum Song), Bachman & Cummings (of Guess Who & BTO)
Myspace Codes..
"BRUNDIBAR" by Hans Krasa.
A moving, bittersweet children's opera as performed in Terezin (Theresienstadt)Concentration Camp in Czechoslovakia in 1942. Over 50 performances of this poignant production were performed in the ghetto, all by children internees.
"INTO THE ARMS OF STRANGERS" (The Kindertransport Story)
was an Academy Award-winning documentary film released in 2000. It was directed by Mark Jonathan Harris and narrated by Judi Dench. It told the story of the kindertransport, an underground railroad that saved the lives of over 10,000 Jewish children. The movie used archival footage and interviews to recount the stories of children sent to live in England, after fleeing from Nazi Germany.
The documentary relied heavily on filmed interviews in which the children of the kindertransport (now grown men and women in their 70s and 80s) recalled their feelings and experiences of the kindertransport. An overwhelming majority of American film critics responded positively to Into the Arms of Strangers, writing that it both intellectually and emotionally captures this chapter of history.The film went on to win the prestigious Academy Award for Documentary Feature.
"MY KNEES WERE JUMPING: REMEMBERING THE KINDERTRANSPORTS"
Is is the first documentary feature film made on the subject of the Kindertransports. This award winning film was directed by Melissa Hacker, a member of the second generation whose mother fled Vienna on a Kindertransport in January 1939. The film is narrated by Joanne Woodward and has been screened in film festivals, museums, community centers and Universities and on television throughout the world.
POLITICS, POLITICS, POLITICS! CBC Newsworld - offering news 24/7(with daily BBC News), CTV Newsnet - offering news 24/7, Marketplace (CBC), Mike Duffy (CTV), The National (CBC), PBS, TV Ontario (TVO), CBS 60 MInutes, Election debates and results (both Canadian and USA - he & mum watched the entire Watergate hearings with rapt attention); The Canadian Parliament Channel - live parliament in session (it's painful as watching paint dry - but seriously, he lobbied the local cable company to bring it back after they cancelled it. And WON!!!)
DOCUMENTARIES: Anything to do with the holocaust (he videotaped and documented tons of these over the years), Life & Times (CBC), W5 (CTV), Fifth Estate (CBC), History Channel
COMEDY: Royal Canadian Air Farce (CBC), Wayne & Schuster (CBC), All in the Family, Waiting for God (BBC)
DRAMA: Heartbeat (BBC), A Touch of Frost(BBC), Masterpiece Theatre, Foyle's War
MUSIC: PBS Great Performances, Boston Pops (PBS), Bravo, A&E
AND RADIO: CBC, Rex Murphy (CBC), Randy Bachman - music show (CBC), Shelagh Rogers (CBC), Rob Clipperton (CBC Ottawa), BBC (on his shortwave radio, every morning to start his day)
“JEWS IN NORTH DEVON DURING THE SECOND WORLD WAR” by Helen Fry (Dad is featured in this book).
After the outbreak of war it was the remote seaside towns of Westward Ho! and Ilfracombe in North Devon that eventually became home to more than 3000 Jews. Here they settled for a time, the majority as refugees in uniform, in former holiday camps or requisitioned hotels. They brought with them a uniquely continental intellect and culture, not only overcoming the natural suspicion of the local population against largely German-speaking refugees, but also coming to terms with their own fears and sense of loss (for many had left families in Europe, never to be seen again). * Dad is included in the Index of Names which references which pages in the above book that feature his story:
"I NEVER SAW ANOTHER BUTTERFLY"
is a collection of works of art and poetry by Jewish children who lived in the concentration camp Terzin (Theresienstadt) in Czechoslovakia . This book is named after a poem by one of the children, Pavel Friedmann. Here is that poem:
"THE BUTTERFLY"
The last, the very last,
So richly, brightly, dazzlingly yellow.
Perhaps if the sun's tears would sing
against a white stone. . . .
Such, such a yellow
Is carried lightly 'way up high.
It went away I'm sure because it wished to
Kiss the world good-bye.
For seven weeks I've lived in here,
Penned up inside this ghetto.
But I have found what I love here.
The dandelions call to me
And the white chestnut branches in the court.
Only I never saw another butterfly.
That butterfly was the last one.
Butterflies don't live in here,
in the ghetto.
PAVEL FRIEDMAN was born in Prague on January 7, 1921. He was deported to Terezin on April 26, 1942 and later to Auschwitz on September 29, 1944.
"I NEVER SAW ANOTHER BUTTERFLY" is also the name of a one-act play by Celeste Raspanti. It is a true story about the life of the girl, Raja Englanderova, who survived Terezin. The play is a series of flashbacks in which Raja retells each segment of her life in Terezin, starting from when she first arrived at Terezin as a scared child and ending with a collage of voices in her memory. This was the camp where my grandmother died.
This page is a tribute to our dear father: Henry Lewis, born Heinz Laufer, a "Kindertransport Holocaust survivor (sent to safety in England)" who went on to live a full, joyful life. It serves to educate about the Kindertransport initiative and the Terezin camp (also known as Theresienstadt), where our grandmother perished. Both the Kindertransport and Terezin are lesser known yet integral facets of Holocaust history, so it is our hope to create more awareness of them through this website.
Dad was a true communicator and a 'natural' teacher. As far back as we can remember, people would pay rapt attention to him as he gently and generously shared his stories - all so that others might learn and understand.
Quite simply put, he was a "mensch" (měnsh):
A person having admirable characteristics, such as fortitude and firmness of purpose: "He radiates the kind of fundamental decency that has a name in Yiddish; he's a mensch" (James Atlas). * From the American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language
Sadly, he very recently left us (December 24, 2007), so it is his legacy that we now continue to retell his tales, in his memory.
We miss him so ... But in our minds, we can still clearly hear his voice.
Thanks for visiting, reading, and especially CARING.
PLEASE LET OTHERS KNOW ABOUT THIS PAGE. And PLEASE feel free to ASK questions.
"Obituary for Henry Lewis"
(Born Heinz Jindrich Josef Laufer)
May 21, 1924 to December 24, 2007
It is with great sadness that we announce the death of Henry Lewis, suddenly at the Ottawa Hospital, Civic Campus, on Monday December 24th, 2007 in his 84th year. Henry was predeceased by his devoted wife Edith (Pat) Lewis (nee Anderson, formerly of Belfast, Northern Ireland and daughter of a staunch Ulster Protestant "Orangeman"!) of Prescott, and was the dear father of David, Patricia, Brenda and loving grandfather of Shannon. He was more recently cherished by special friend Marge Scrutton.
HENRY LEWIS was born and originally named HEINZ JINDRICH JOSEF LAUFER on May 21, 1924 in the city of Teplice Sanov, Capitol of the Province of Northern Bohemia, Czechoslovakia, to parents Otto Laufer and Elsa Bloch. He received his schooling in Czechoslovakia until 1939, just before WWII, when his parents, assisted by the Kindertransport program, thankfully sent him to England to escape the Nazis.
It was there, in England where he officially changed his name to Henry Lewis for the reason of self-preservation. He chose the name from a London phone book! Both of his parents and his younger brother George (Jiri / Max) Laufer predeceased him during the holocaust (his mother in Terezin, and, his father and brother in Auschwitz). Sadly, it is believed that Jiri lived to only 13 years of age. In his later years, Henry put a great deal of effort into holocaust research and education for future generations, yet never became bitter.
Next, while still in England, he worked as an apprentice carpenter until 1944, when he proudly served in the U.K. Forces as a language interpreter until 1947. During that time, he met his future wife Pat (also in the U.K. Forces) and they enjoyed a colourful, joyful courtship while working and traveling in Britain and Europe as part the troops, before marrying in London, England on May 30, 1950.
After the war, he worked as a manager at a U.K. scientific publishing company (Maxwell) from 1947-1952. After immigrating to Canada with his wife, he was employed by RCA Victor in Montreal from 1952-1957, continuing with RCA in Prescott, Ontario where over the years, he worked his way through many roles (including union stewardship) up to management, before his retirement in 1985. He was highly respected among his co-workers for fairness, wisdom and encouraging demeanour, for which many regularly contacted him for professional advice even after retiring.
Since 1967, Henry was an active member of The Royal Canadian Legion Branch 97 (Prescott, Ontario) and for decades a proud member of The Queen's Regiment Association. His deep concern for conservation of our natural world led him to three decades of 'hands-on' membership in the Eager Beavers Camping Club (Brockville Chapter) and the National Campers and Hikers Association. Both Henry and his wife Pat were 'politics buffs', and passionate social justice and human rights activists. Henry remained a member of the Consumers' Association, Canadian Association of Retired Persons and the British Pensioners Association.
The loss of his own family at such an early age made Henry a truly dedicated family man when it came to the time when he would raise his own children with Pat. Although he never had the opportunity to receive the education for which he might have wished, he was a 'born' educator himself, always gently but firmly encouraging his son and daughters to be interested in and to learn about anything and everything that the world had to offer.
He will best be remembered by both family and friends for always upholding and teaching tolerance and respect for all peoples – and his sharp wit / love for wordplay, quirky sense of humour, youthful outlook and genuine warmth – all for which we are grateful that he was able to maintain until almost his final day (oh yes, AND his giant sweet-tooth).
A non-denominational funeral service for Henry was held in Prescott on Saturday December 29th, 2007, officiated by his good friend Reverend Bob Hill of Carleton Place, Ontario. Bob was born and raised in Northern Ireland and is a long-time friend of our mother's family. Once in Canada, he worked with our dad at RCA Victor, before becoming a 'man of the cloth'!
Dad’s own burial with family present was extremely important to him, since he was never given the opportunity to witness a proper burial of his own family due to the holocaust. As a mere teenager, he was left on his own to find some sort of closure for the loss of his parents and younger brother.
On Saturday May 31, 2008, we said a final loving "Goodbye" to our dear Henry, with family and a few close friends of his in attendance - some being almost lifelong friends who were unable to attend the funeral due to being far away during the holiday season. He was buried beside his loving wife and our beloved mother Pat in Sandy Hill Cemetery, Prescott, Ontario.
WHAT WAS THE KINDERTRANSPORT?
Kindertransport (also Refugee Children Movement) is the name given to the rescue mission that took place nine months prior to the outbreak of World War II. The United Kingdom took in nearly 10,000 predominantly Jewish children from Nazi Germany, and the occupied territories of Austria, Czechoslovakia, and the Free City of Danzig. The children were placed in British foster homes, hostels, and farms.
The rescue operation is, in general, considered a success as most of the Kinder survived the war. A small percentage were reunited with parents who had either spent the war in hiding or survived the Nazi camps. The majority of children, however, lost home and family forever. The end of the war brought confirmation of the worst: their parents were dead. In the years since the Kinder had left the European mainland, the Nazis and their collaborators had killed nearly six million European Jews, including nearly 1.5 million children.
Learn more at "The Kindertransport Association (KTA)" website:
In 1939, independently of Operation Kindertransport, a 29-year-old London stockbroker named Nicholas Winton set up his own rescue operation - and personally saved the lives of 669 children. Most of them were Jewish — from Czechoslovakia, which was soon to be occupied by the Nazis.
OUR DAD WAS ONE OF THESE FORTUNATE CHILDREN. We do not know how we could possibly repay him for his kindness.
He brought them to Britain and kept it a secret for nearly 50 years. In 2002 Queen Elizabeth II conferred knighthood on Winton.
Winton, now 99 years old, is an immensely compelling symbol of how a caring person can truly make a difference. He still wears a ring given to him by some of the children he saved. It is inscribed with a line from the Talmud, the book of Jewish law. It reads:
for the complete story of how Sir Nicholas saved these children.
WHAT WAS THE TEREZIN CAMP (also known as "Theresienstadt")?
During WWII, the Gestapo used Terezín, better known by the German name Theresienstadt, as a concentration camp. The majority of the Jews sent were scholars, professionals, artists and musicians. Inmates were encouraged to lead creative lives, and concerts were even held. Within the camp, parks, grassy areas and flower beds, concert venues and statues were installed to hide the truth; that most of the inmates were going to be killed. This was all part of a Nazi plot to deceive International Red Cross inspectors into believing that Jews were being treated humanely. This façade masked the fact that of the 144,000 Jews were sent there, about 33,000 died, mostly because of the appalling conditions (hunger, stress, disease, and an epidemic of typhus at the very end of the war)[citation needed]. About 88,000 were deported to Auschwitz and other extermination camps[citation needed]. At the end of the war there were 17,247 survivors[citation needed].
Part of the fortification (Small Fortress) served as the largest Gestapo prison in the Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia, separated from the ghetto. Around 90,000 people went through it, and 2,600 of those died there.
This was the camp where my grandmother died - Allegedly of tuberculosis. She was only in her forties, like me (daughter B)...
It was liberated on May 9th, 1945 by the Soviet Army.
Learn more from "The Official Terezin Memorial" website:
~ Other people who are children, relatives, spouses or good friends of Holocaust survivors - and actual survivors (who are as web-savvy as my dad was; he LOVED his internet!). If you are comfortable doing so, please share your stories; it's what keeps them alive and powerful...
~ Historians, museums, educators/students, genocide awareness organizations, international human rights organizations, documentarians, authors, media - ALL who wish to learn/teach/increase awareness about oppression and genocide, with the objective of stopping these and all other forms of human rights abuses which unfortunately still continue internationally, today.
EVERYONE who cares about the future of the human race.
* Please note that this is not a forum for promoting political/religious viewpoints - Dad's views were secular and humanist - and he considered himself a citizen of the world, first. To honour his and our family's memory, this website will not endorse any 'religious nationalist-based' political movement. This is a place for creating friendship, mutual respect and unity in support of the issues that most of us DO agree upon:
the noble causes of tolerance; preventing oppression, hate/war crimes by ANY extremist group or government directed against ANYONE, and, working together towards world peace.
To Dad, "NEVER AGAIN", meant "NEVER AGAIN, *ANYWHERE* on this earth, toward *ANY* group of people." This would be his dearest wish.
Thank you.
Friend Space (Top 40)
H. Laufer, Kindertransport Survivor (1924-2007) has 660 friends.
Happy Holidays se na Vás! Byl jsem procházet moji přátelé a já jsem chtěl pozdravit vás. Přemýšlím o tobě ao tom, jak těžké to může být v tomto ročním období, kdy jeden si tak rád tu již bohužel není. Bůh vám žehnej a vy.
.. Happy Birthday, Henry Lewis! What an extraordinarily brave young man You were during a very difficult time in human history! We honor and commend you; and, we congratulate You on the outstanding contribution You made to the world with your life! I thank your family for developing this memorial profile! Henry Lewis, I am Proud of You!
im not jewish but eversince i learn about the holocaust i always wanted to know more. everytime i thnk about it it brings tears to my eyes that being can do such evil things to another human being. I have a lot of things happend to me as a child and i thought that i would never be able to let it go, Now knowing theyre people who had everything taken from them the way the jewish people had, I found strength in my heart to stay strong. One of my goals in life is to meet someone that survive the holocaust because i feel it would be an honor to meet such a strong person. I also want to visit the consentration camps. thnk u for accepting my invite
Thanks for the kind words Brenda. Wizard's given name is Larry. I fell off the top step onto the concrete patio yesterday. I already have had a spinal fusion so here's hoping there's no more damage there....don't think I can handle another night as looped as I was on Xanax and Lortab again..kept thinking I was falling off my bed all night long, ha ha ha.
Thanks so much for accepting my friends request for your dads memorial myspace, and yes, it is certainly my pleasure. Many blessings !! Please keep in touch !! Chris Keyser, Holocaust Researcher (Va.)
Rosh Hashanah occurs on the 1st and 2nd days of Tishri. Rosh Hashanah means, "head of the year" or "first of the year." Rosh Hashanah (Jewish New Year), has an important similarity with the American one: Many Americans use the New Year as a time to plan a better life, making resolutions. Likewise, the Jewish New Year is a time to begin introspection, looking back at the mistakes of the past year and planning the changes to make in the new year. No work is permitted. One practice is eating apples dipped in honey, a symbol of our wish for a sweet new year. Another is walking to flowing water, such as a creek or river, on the afternoon of the first day and empty our pockets into the river, symbolically casting off our sins. Small pieces of bread are commonly put in the pocket to cast off. See Lev. 23:24-25.
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Hey H. Laufer, Czech/UK Holocaust Survivor (1924-2007), I am sending you a gift. Could you please accept it.
I hope this finds you doing well? I was thinking about you just this morning so I figured I would send this message to back up that thought. Take care and have a great day!
Thank you for accepting me Brenda. People like your Dad are exceptional human beings...they suffered and sacrificed so much. We all take our liberty for granted. I hope you have a wonderful week. Sharon x
Comments
Nov 25 2009 12:00 AM
May 22 2009 3:33 PM
May 20 2009 7:32 PM
May 22 2009 2:10 AM
.. Happy Birthday, Henry Lewis! What an extraordinarily brave young man You were during a very difficult time in human history! We honor and commend you; and, we congratulate You on the outstanding contribution You made to the world with your life! I thank your family for developing this memorial profile! Henry Lewis, I am Proud of You!
May 22 2009 2:21 AM
May 14 2009 2:40 AM
May 15 2009 10:55 PM
Elaine =)
May 14 2009 10:23 AM
Apr 22 2009 8:21 PM
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Hey H. Laufer, Czech/UK Holocaust Survivor (1924-2007),
I left you a gift. Click and pick it up.
Apr 22 2009 9:34 AM
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Hey H. Laufer, Czech/UK Holocaust Survivor (1924-2007),
I left you a gift. Click and pick it up.
Jan 20 2009 2:57 PM
Love, Aline
Dec 23 2008 5:53 PM
Dec 23 2008 1:42 AM
Dec 22 2008 4:50 PM
Dec 15 2008 9:40 PM
Thank you for the add of friendship!
Karen
Dec 7 2008 2:40 PM
Thank you for adding us to your friends list!
Much love,
New Earth Records/Yojana
Nov 17 2008 7:18 PM
You and your father both were in my thoughts also that day, as were many dear souls!
God bless
HP x
Nov 7 2008 6:49 PM
NubianGraphics. com
Sep 30 2008 2:38 AM
Sep 30 2008 9:08 PM
Sep 25 2008 6:07 AM
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Hey H. Laufer, Czech/UK Holocaust Survivor (1924-2007), I am sending you a gift. Could you please accept it.
Click on the gift box you think Mouj sent!
Sep 16 2008 8:06 PM
I hope this finds you doing well? I was thinking about you just this morning so I figured I would send this message to back up that thought. Take care and have a great day!
Jul 14 2008 12:22 AM
We all take our liberty for granted.
I hope you have a wonderful week.
Sharon x