Jürgen (Jack) Bassfreund

statut:
survivant
le genre:
masculin
Nom de naissance:
Not known
Appelé:
-
Alias:
Jack
Date de naissance:
30. September 1923
Lieu de naissance:
Domicile:
Not known
Lieu du dommage survenu:
Not known
Date de décès:
03. Mai 2010
Numéro de dossier LEA:
Conjoint:
Date et lieu de mariage:
Not known
Mère:
Père:
Frères et sœurs:
Enfants:
Not known
*En raison de dispositions légales, les données du conjoint ne seront pas divulguées

Vita

(ML) Jürgen Bassfreund
30.09.1923 in Bernkastel / Bernkastel / Rheinprovinz
"Rasse": JJJJ
Verfolgungsgrund: rassisch
Überlebt. (Bundesarchiv)
17.05.1939 Sybelstr. 6, Charlottenburg / Charlottenburg / Stadt Berlin Charlottenburg /
Deutsches Reich
Deportation 27.02.1943
Deportiert ab: Berlin
Zielort der Deportation: Auschwitz, Extermination Camp
Deportationsdatum: 01.1945
Zielort der Deportation: Dachau, Concentration Camp
Deportation : 01.1945
Zielort der Deportation: Mühldorf, Subcamp of Dachau Concentration Camp
Deportation 18.01.1945
Zielort der Deportation: Groß-Rosen, Concentration Camp
Deportation
(RS) Departure 1 Dec 1946 Bremen
Arrival 13 Dec 1946 New York, NY
Heirat 15 Apr 1994 Asbury Park, Monmouth, NJ: Phyllis Sherman (1923–2016)
Residence 1996-2002 Adamsville, Alabama, USA
Burial: Birmingham, Jefferson, Alabama, USA

Remarques

Data are hidden due to legal regulations

Biographie

Bass, Jack

Born in 1923, Jack was subjected to antisemitic name-calling in school even before Hitler came to power. His mother hoped he would become a doctor like his father, but Jack’s schooling would become a series of interruptions.

Following his father’s death in 1932, Jack, his sister, and his mother moved to Trier, then Cologne, and finally to Berlin, each time moving to a larger city in an effort to remain anonymous, each time forced to attend Jewish schools. Jack’s mother remarried, and recognizing the bleak future, Jack’s step-father left for the U.S. in 1938 to arrange the family’s emigration. During Kristallnacht in Berlin, Jack was almost killed in the streets. His step-father did not return to Germany.

Two months before the war started, Jack’s sister left for England, taking a job in a children’s hospital. With school no longer an option for Jack, forced labor became his education. Jack and his mother made leather knapsacks for the German troops, paid only half the wage of non-Jewish Germans. In mid-1942, Joseph Goebbels, Reich Minister of Enlightenment and Propaganda, promised to make Berlin “Judenrein” (free of Jews) by Hitler’s April birthday. Jack and his mother were arrested in late 1942. Separated during deportation, he was sent by railroad cattle car to Auschwitz; his mother was sent to her death.

Because he was young and strong, Jack was selected for slave labor in five different camps: Auschwitz III (Buna or Monowitz), Auschwitz I, Dachau, Gross-Rosen, and Mühldorf. Each move was hastened by the approaching Russian forces. Jack worked building factories and sorting human hair to be used in the manufacture of mattresses. On May 8, 1945, Jack was liberated from Mühldorf by American troops. Now twenty-two, he weighed only sixty pounds.

After liberation, Jack searched for his family with no success and immigrated to New York in 1947. His family in Atlanta and a cousin working for the Jewish Telegraphic Agency in New York were instrumental in his immigration. Jack has said that he could not have lived in the South during that period because the Jim Crow Laws were constant reminders of the persecution he had endured. With the ability to speak German and some French, English, and Yiddish, Jack wasted no time finding work.

Jack met and married his wife, Phyllis, in New Jersey. In 1994, they moved to Adamsville to be near family and escape the cold northern winters. 

Addendum:  Jack Bass passed away on May 3, 2010.