Wedding photograph of Moritz and Jana
Номер объектаM2022/035:007
НазваниеWedding photograph of Moritz and Jana
ОписаниеPhotograph of Moritz Mamon and his wife Jana on their wedding day. Inscribed on the reverse "for our dear sister and brother-in-law in memory of our wedding, Jana and Moritz, 26 December 1942." The Bulgarian yellow Star of David button is visible on Moritz's lapel. Jana is holding a bunch of Calla Lily's - a flower often used to mark life's rite of passage.
Part of a collection of photographs relating to the Jewish experience in Bulgaria during the Holocaust. The Sydney Jewish Museum currently has only a handful of items which speak to the Bulgarian Jewish story. Between the wars, Bulgaria had become increasingly dependent on Germany, its World War I ally. Even before March 1941 when Bulgaria joined the Axis powers, the country adopted anti-Jewish legislation which curbed the civil rights of the 48,000 Jews living in Bulgaria proper. Further anti-Jewish legislation was introduced in 1942. Jews had to wear yellow Star of David badges and Jewish men were rounded up, mobilised into ‘labour groups’ and made to work on state projects that involved heavy construction like road works. Heskia Lazar was forced to work with pick and shovel in the snow, until he was able to secure a better work detail as a shoe repairer. According to the donor, “it was his salvation.”
In February 1943, the Bulgarian government signed a confidential agreement for the deportation of 20,000 Jews from their territories in Yugoslavia and northern Greece, where they had invaded in 1941. 11,343 Jews from Aegean Thrace, Macedonia, and southern Serbia were deported to the extermination camp of Treblinka. Approximately 8,000 Jews were then to be deported from Sofia, the capital of Bulgaria. However, political and public opposition to the plan eventually led instead to the resettlement of Sofia Jews to the provinces. Approximately 23,000 people were expelled to the Bulgarian countryside, including Moritz and the Mamon family to Dupnitsa. Between June 1943 and September 1944, the ghetto in Dupnitsa incarcerated over 1,600 Jews expelled from Sofia.
In October 1944, Bulgaria changed allegiances and declared war on Germany. By the end of the war, the Jewish population of Bulgaria was still at its prewar level.
Heskia Lazar and Matilde Mamon were married towards the end of the war. Their daughter Klara was born in Sofia in 1946. The family immigrated to Israel in 1948.
Part of a collection of photographs relating to the Jewish experience in Bulgaria during the Holocaust. The Sydney Jewish Museum currently has only a handful of items which speak to the Bulgarian Jewish story. Between the wars, Bulgaria had become increasingly dependent on Germany, its World War I ally. Even before March 1941 when Bulgaria joined the Axis powers, the country adopted anti-Jewish legislation which curbed the civil rights of the 48,000 Jews living in Bulgaria proper. Further anti-Jewish legislation was introduced in 1942. Jews had to wear yellow Star of David badges and Jewish men were rounded up, mobilised into ‘labour groups’ and made to work on state projects that involved heavy construction like road works. Heskia Lazar was forced to work with pick and shovel in the snow, until he was able to secure a better work detail as a shoe repairer. According to the donor, “it was his salvation.”
In February 1943, the Bulgarian government signed a confidential agreement for the deportation of 20,000 Jews from their territories in Yugoslavia and northern Greece, where they had invaded in 1941. 11,343 Jews from Aegean Thrace, Macedonia, and southern Serbia were deported to the extermination camp of Treblinka. Approximately 8,000 Jews were then to be deported from Sofia, the capital of Bulgaria. However, political and public opposition to the plan eventually led instead to the resettlement of Sofia Jews to the provinces. Approximately 23,000 people were expelled to the Bulgarian countryside, including Moritz and the Mamon family to Dupnitsa. Between June 1943 and September 1944, the ghetto in Dupnitsa incarcerated over 1,600 Jews expelled from Sofia.
In October 1944, Bulgaria changed allegiances and declared war on Germany. By the end of the war, the Jewish population of Bulgaria was still at its prewar level.
Heskia Lazar and Matilde Mamon were married towards the end of the war. Their daughter Klara was born in Sofia in 1946. The family immigrated to Israel in 1948.
Место изготовленияBulgaria
Дата 1942-12-26 - 1942-12-26
Наименованиеphotographs
Материалpaper, photographic emulsion
Размерность
- length: 140.00 mm
width: 89.00 mm
Язык
- Bulgarian
Кредитная линияSydney Jewish Museum Collection, Donated by Klara Bechler

