Zij is getrouwd met Gerhard Herz.
Zij zijn getrouwd in het jaar 1946 te Hampstead, London, Westminster, England, zij was toen 26 jaar oud.
Ilse Flatow was born on 20 October 1919, the daughter of Georg and Hedwig Flatow. Both active Social Democratsuhe as a ministry official involved in formulating the works constitution in Germany (the Works Council Act of 1920); she as a language teacher and department head at the city social welfare officeuthey married on 26 March 1918. Targeted by the Nazis after 1933 as Jews and Social Democrats, they were eventually deported and, in 1944, murdered in Auschwitz.
When Ilse was born, Things were looking up for the Flatows. Ilseus father became secretary to the upeopleus deputyu Rudolf Wissel, and later ministry official. He bought an apartment in Lichterfelde, at Promenadenstraue 10, where the family lived until they moved to Schunhauser Straue 11 in Steglitz, and finally into a specially built house at Niklasstraue 5 in Schlachtensee. uMy parents both worked. Both were socialists, both active in their own fields. My father as a lawyer, my mother in educational and social work. Until 1933, they worked to support the rights of the uhave-notsu among the German population.u
Unlike her parents and grandparents, then, who had lived in uJewish quartersu in the old town in Mitte, Ilse Flatow went to school and spent her youth in the elegant south-west of Berlin. T
In 1939, when Ilse was 20 years old, the Flatow family were forced to emigrate to Amsterdam. uMy father was arrested during the November pogrom in 1938. He was released thanks to his friend Professor van den Bergh, who promised to take us in in Holland. The day after his arrest, Professor van den Bergh sent us a Christian lawyer to make the arrangements.u
When he was released from the concentration camp, a physical and emotional wreck, with the shaven head of a prisoner and hands swollen from frostbite and covered in injuries, he stopped at the station in town (Zoo station) to buy some flowers, white chrysanthemums, for my mother before he took a taxi home. A broken man, he went into the house with the flowers and said: uThatus for still being alive.u u He went straight to his study, stretched out on his leather couch (known as the couch for thinking) and said: uHow can we stay in a country where the kind of things happen that I have now seen for 5 weeks with my own eyes.uu
The Flatow family emigrated to Amsterdam a short time later. Ilse soon left Amsterdam for London.
Ilseus parents did not manage to leave Amsterdam in time. about Ilseus time in London. Initially she lived with Otto Kahn-Freund, formerly a judge in Berlin, who had been a close associate of her fatherus but had been forced to emigrate back in 1933. Later, Ilse lived outside London in Chertsey, Surrey, in the house of Dr Glaister. In December 1942, she wrote a card to her parents in telegram style, saying: uI am happy, lots of work, but also much pleasure because of our friends.u
On 3 January 1946, she married Gerhard Herz, who also seems to have come from Berlin, but lived in Haifa (Tel Aviv) at the time and served in the British Royal Navy. Documents show the address of Ilse Herz, nue Flatow, as the Runwell Hospital in Wickford, Essex. However, there is no record that she worked in this hospital.
One of her first addresses in Israel, in 1951, was 16 Tempeldor Street in Tel Aviv, c/o Dr. Loewy-Hattendorf. Later she lived at 17 Kaznelson Street, Tel Aviv. This is where she died, on 30 September 1995.
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Ilse Flatow | ||||||||||||||||||
1946 | ||||||||||||||||||
Gerhard Herz | ||||||||||||||||||
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