Sydney Jewish Museum
    E2023_001_003_i.JPG; M2025/005:002; ;
    Номер объектаM2025/005:002
    НазваниеRag doll with camp uniform clothing
    ОписаниеRag doll with camp uniform clothing, made in Bergen-Belsen by a displaced person and given to Muriel Knox Doherty (1896-1988) as a token of gratitude, 1945.

    Muriel Knox Doherty served with distinction in the Royal Australian Air Force Nursing Service during World War II. In 1945 she applied for a post with UNRRA (United Nations Relief and Rehabilitation Administration), arriving at Bergen-Belsen on 11 July 1945, three months after liberation. Here she was appointed Chief Nurse and Principal Matron to the camp.

    The 81st British General Hospital Staff managed the hospital in Bergen-Belsen, but as Principle Matron, Muriel oversaw all administrative duties; estimating requirements for nursing staff, liaising with welfare staff, managing inventory of linen and the requisition of medical equipment. She also faced the enormous task of nursing the thousands of survivors back to health. The ‘gypsy’ doll is one of the gifts she received from survivors grateful to now have a future.

    Doherty was an avid and meticulous recorder of all that she saw and did. During her time at Bergen-Belsen she kept a detailed diary and wrote weekly letters to her mother and friends, often by candlelight, providing invaluable insight into the conditions at the camp, and offering a woman’s perspective on war. She was awarded the Royal Red Cross Medal (1st Class) for her wartime nursing work. In 1960 she donated copies of her wartime letters to the Mitchell Library, with instructions that they not be opened until 2000.
    Место изготовленияBergen-Belsen concentration camp
    Дата 1945 - 1945
    Период созданияpost World War II
    Темаtoys, rehabilitation centres, post-liberation recovery, Australian link to Holocaust, education, art
    Наименованиеdolls
    Материалfibres (fabrics)
    Размерность
      height: 190.00 mm
    Кредитная линияSydney Jewish Museum collection, transferred from the Great Synagogue. Object originally donated by Muriel Knox Doherty. In appreciation to the Conference on Jewish Material Claims Against Germany (Claims Conference) for supporting this archival project.