Aron Rauner

State:
Surviving
Gender:
male
Maiden name:
Not known
So called:
-
Alias:
-
Date of birth:
08. Juli 1885
Birthplace:
Residence:
Place of persecution:
Not known
Date of death:
Not known
Deceased in:
LEA file number:
*Hidden due to legal regulations

Vita

(RS) Heirat 22 Dec 1922 Freudenburg, Trier-Saarburg
Einreise 21 Jun 1941 New York, NY, von Lissabon
Residence 1942 New York, New York (City), USA; Relation to Head: Head
(W) Aron was born on July 8, 1885, in Merzig am Saar in southwestern Germany to Isaak and Miriam Schnerb Rauner. The family had lived there for generations. Aron’s parents operated a bakery, specializing for part of the year in matzo, for which they received orders from throughout the Saar and Mosel regions. Aron’s sister Hedwig was born in 1883. They were a deeply religious family. Aron was in the wholesale candy and chocolate business in Merzig. He was wounded by artillery during World War I (1914-1918.) On December 26, 1922, Aron married Hedwig Kahn. Hedwig was born on February 5, 1893, in Freudenburg, to Solomon and Hedwig (Kahn) Kahn. Her father was a horse dealer. She had three siblings: Ludwig (d. 1902), Simon, who married Elizabeth Weil, and Minna, who married Arthur Hanau. Aron and Hedwig settled in Trier. He expanded the family business to include the sale of food machinery, chiefly from the firm Rowenta. (...)
The family lived comfortably and had a housemaid and a non-Jewish governess, Gretchen, whose aunt had been their father’s governess. His paternal grandmother lived with the family, but passed away on January 29, 1933. Hitler was appointed Chancellor of Germany that year. Anti-Jewish laws were soon enacted and Jewish businesses were boycotted. In January 1935, Aron returned to his hometown in the Saar to vote in the reunification plebiscite. When he returned, he was shaken by the events he had witnessed there and told the family they must prepare to leave Germany before it was too late. The Rauner family left for Luxembourg in September 1935 with most of their furniture and other belongings. Neddy’s sister, Minna and Arthur Hanau, and their sons Walter and Ernest and her brother Simon and his family resided in Luxembourg City. Simon had obtained a professional license there, so that Aron could work as a salesman. Aron contacted the Rowenta company and tried to restart his sales business. Wolfgang attended the local school as well as Hebrew school organized by the closeknit Jewish community. His older siblings were sent to work to learn trades that would prepare them for their future in America. In 1937-1938, both of Neddy’s siblings and their families left for the US. Neddy’s father died in Germany in 1939 after being beaten by Nazi Party members. Her ill mother joined them in Luxembourg but died the following year. In 1939, the Rauner family’s citizenship was revoked by Germany, making them stateless. That September, Germany occupied Poland. On May 10, 1940, Luxembourg was occupied by Germany. Wolfgang had to leave school. The German civil authorities confiscated their valuable belongings. Life became very difficult as Aron’s work did not bring in much money. Aron’s sister Hedwig came to live with them. Her husband Cesar had recently died in France where they had fled after the invasion. Circa early 1940, Neddy’s siblings Simon and Minna, and a cousin Dr. Paul Kahn sponsored affidavits of support for the family so they could secure US visas; they also paid for their ship passage. On June 10, 1941, the Rauner’s sailed on the SS Mouzinho from Lisbon, Portugal, arriving in New York eleven days later. The family settled in the Washington Heights section of New York City. Edgar enlisted in the US army in April 1943 and was deployed overseas with the US Seventh Army. He was one of the Ritchie boys, native German speaking, mostly Jewish, refugees, trained in special intelligence and interrogation techniques. Aron was in poor health when he arrived in America and found it difficult to start over. Wolfgang later served in the US Army during the Korean War (1950-1953.) He married Rosie Stern. Wolfgang’s mother Hedwig, age 69, died in 1962. Aron, age 78, died on July 15, 1963.
Q: https://portal.ehri-project.eu/units/us-005578-irn49917-irn59307

Notes

(RS) Vater Isaak Rauner 1855–1925
Mutter Myriam Debora Rauner geb. Schnerb 1856–1933
Schwester Hedwig Rauner 31.03.1883 Merzig, Saar – 03.05.1944 Ghetto Theresienstadt, verh. Kahn (o)
Ehefrau Hedwig Rauner geb. Kahn 05.02.1893 Freudenburg, Trier-Saarburg – 31.07.1962 New York, NY
Sohn Edgar Leopold Rauner 14.11.1923 Trier – 1966
Sohn Ludwig Louis David Rauner 02.01.1925 Trier – 1993
Tochter Gertrude Trudy Rebekka Rauner 05.10.1926 Trier – 2010
Sohn Wolfgang Isaac Rauner 26.11.1928 Trier –

Biography

Aron Rauner was born July 9, 1885 in Merzig, near the German border with France and Luxembourg. He was the son of the baker Isaac Rauner and his wife Miriam née Schnerb and had an older sister, Hedwig. After training in business and accounting he worked in his father's wholesale business that sold flour and feed. A 1913 automobile accident and its subsequent difficult recovery made him unfit for service in World War I until 1916, when was he assigned to a position in the field artillery in the Trier/ Mosel area. After completing his military training he was wounded in April 1917. No longer able to participate in the fighting due to his medical condition, he was sent to Romania as part of Field Marshall August von Mackensen's staff. For his war service Aron Rauner received an honorary cross (Ehrenkreuz) second class and a commendation for having been wounded in the fighting.

Following the war Aron Rauner again joined his father's business, eventually taking over the branch in Trier. To the wholesale business in sugar products he added a special department for bakery and pastry markets, taking over as general representative for various related commercial machinery businesses. Prominent among these was Rowenta, who produced commercial coffee machines, ovens and freezers for bakeries and related operations. Later he became involved with the import of raw materials, including chocolate and sugar products. In 1928 he gave up his other enterprises in order to focus his business on the representation of the various machinery firms, with a staff of fifteen people in the greater Saar region. Due to his success, his family – which included his wife Hedwig (née Kahn), who he had married in 1922 and with whom he had four children (Edgar, Ludwig, Gertrud and Wolfgang) – led a comfortable life in Trier. They resided in a 6-room apartment and had a maid; his eldest son attended Gymnasium. Prior to giving up his participation in the import of chocolates and confections in 1928, Aron Rauner had also owned several delivery trucks and cars and employed several drivers.

In September 1935 Aron Rauner and his family fled Germany due to Nazi persecution, taking with them their furniture and other possessions. Their goal was Luxembourg, where Salomon Kahn, Hedwig Rauner's father, had secured a professional license (Berufserlaubnis) for Aron Rauner to work as a salesman. In Luxembourg Rauner attempted to establish himself once again with the Rowenta firm. He also represented similar Belgian firms. Supporting his family with such work was difficult due to the low currency exchange.

On May 10, 1940 German troops occupied Luxembourg. No longer able to attend to his customers due to the presence of German troops in the city's bakeries and other establishments where his machines were used, Rauner's income shrank still further, although he tried to support his family with various small jobs. The family sold their jewelry and artwork. Paul Kahn, Hedwig Rauner's cousin, was a doctor in New York and assisted them in receiving immigration visas. In 1941 the family was transported in trucks by the Gestapo to Irun on the Spanish border, having been required to surrender their apartment and all their household items prior to their departure. From Irun, the Rauners traveled to San Sebastian, Formosa and Lisbon before boarding the S.S. Mouzinho that took them to New York. They arrived in Staten Island on June 21, 1941.

The family's first months in the United States were assisted financially by HIAS. They settled in the Washington Heights area of Manhattan, along with many other German-speaking Jews who had fled the Nazis. Three months after arriving Aron Rauner suffered a heart attack and became unable to work. Once the U.S. had entered the war, Aron Rauner's two eldest sons, Edgar and Louis, were sent to the army. The family was supported with the money his sons received from the army and from what money Gertrud and Wolfgang earned through odd jobs; their mother was required to remain at home to care for Aron Rauner while he recovered. Louis Rauner's plane was shot down and he returned home only after one-and-a-half years' convalescence in a hospital.

Aron Rauner was eventually able to work from home, although it was interrupted by attacks of angina pectoris. Such work included the establishment of Service for Israel, which sent care packages to Israel, and a travel agency, Rauner Travel. In 1956 he invented a serving dish for citrus fruits that removed their cores and separated their edible portions into servings. After the war Louis Rauner received training as a watchmaker and eventually opened a jewelry business with a partner. Wolfgang Rauner worked as a window designer for Sears before serving for three years in the Korean War. After returning home he continued a career in design and advertising. Hedwig Kahn (née Rauner), Aron Rauner's sister, had remained in Merzig and died in Theresienstadt. Aron Rauner died in New York on July 15, 1963, following his wife Hedwig who had passed away the previous year.

Researchers should note that following her marriage to César Kahn, Aron Rauner's sister shared the same name as his wife prior to her marriage to him: both were named Hedwig Kahn.

Q: https://archives.cjh.org/repositories/5/resources/4027