Ruth Hannah KLEMENS

Ruth Hannah KLEMENS

Eigenschaften

Art Wert Datum Ort Quellenangaben
Name Ruth Hannah KLEMENS

Ereignisse

Art Datum Ort Quellenangaben
Geburt 4. August 1927
Bestattung Temple Beth Shalom Memorial Park nach diesem Ort suchen
Tod 29. Oktober 2011

Ehepartner und Kinder

Heirat Ehepartner Kinder

Paul KLEMENS

Notizen zu dieser Person

{geni:about_me} Ruth Klemens, beloved wife of Paul Klemens, passed away on October 29 after a courageous struggle with cancer. She had been a resident of Connecticut since 1967, living first in Manchester, then in Storrs until moving to West Hartford this year.

Although her profession was as a foreign language teacher, she was also a respected educator and frequent lecturer on the Holocaust. Her courage as a survivor gave her an international platform to remind the world: “Never again.”

She was born in Berlin, Germany on August 4, 1927, the child of Alfred Wiener and Margaret Saulmann. In 1933, the family fled to Amsterdam to escape the growing Nazi threat, where they joined a community of other displaced Jews. Her father, working as an intelligence agent for the Allied forces, journeyed to London in 1939. Ruth, her mother, and two sisters Eva and Mirjam, were trapped in Holland when the Nazis invaded in 1940. Ruth was forced to attend a Jewish high school, where students disappeared with no warning, including Anne Frank and her sister Margot. Ruth, her mother and sisters were then arrested and sent first to the Dutch camp Westerbork, then to Bergen-Belsen, where Ruth sorted and cut up the shoes of concentration camp victims.

While in Bergen-Belsen, she kept a diary of her experiences, even though it was not permitted, and at great risk to herself and her family, she attended secret religious services at the camp.

In 1945, they were selected to leave the camp in one of the few prisoner exchanges of the war, and were given passports granting passage to Paraguay. Her mother, sickened from the camp, collapsed during the prisoner exchange and died a few hours later when the train reached Switzerland, a neutral country that did not take in Jewish refugees. Ruth shepherded her two sisters to safety on a Swedish hospital ship that embarked from the newly liberated port of Marseilles, and arrived on Ellis Island in New York City some days later. In New York, the sisters were reunited with their father, who then returned to London. The girls were separated, living with three different families, and Ruth attended the Robert Louis Stevenson high school in New York, where she graduated as salutatorian.

After the war, the sisters rejoined their father in London, where she received a B.A. at the University of London. Ruth met her husband Paul, a doctoral candidate in physics at Oxford University in October 1948, and they moved to his adopted country of Australia in 1950, where their two children Michael and Susan were born. They moved to Pittsburgh, Pa. in 1959 where Paul was employed by Westinghouse and Ruth was a foreign language teacher. In 1967, the family moved to Manchester, and Ruth was a foreign language teacher in the East Hartford school system. She also earned a master’s of education degree from the University of Connecticut.

Ruth was a frequent speaker at Connecticut schools, synagogues and other institutions, where she championed human rights and freedom, within the context of her own Holocaust experience. In 2011, she received a citation from the Connecticut General Assembly for her work.

Her Holocaust experience has been documented through countless interviews, including the Stephen Spielberg Shoah Foundation and the Yale University Holocaust archive. She donated numerous papers and artifacts to the U.S. Holocaust Museum, including a hand-drawn map of the camp and a receipt from the German government for her confiscated bicycle. She was active in the Wiener Library Institute of Contemporary History, founded by her father after the war.

She has held numerous leadership positions with Beth Shalom B’nai Israel in Manchester, as well as the regional Hadassah organization.

She is predeceased by her sister Eva Plaut, who died in 1977, and is survived by her husband Paul of West Hartford, a sister Mirjam Finkelstein of London, a son Michael Klemens of Salisbury and daughter-in-law Nicole Klemens of Rye, N.Y. and their sons Daniel and Robert Klemens; her daughter Susan Klemens and son-in-law Daniel Root and their daughter Melinda Root of Alexandria, Va.; and her brother-in-law Ted Plaut of Madison. She is also survived by three nieces and two nephews: Anthony and Daniel Finkelstein and Tamara Finkelstein Isaacs of London, Julie Furey of Madison, and Karen Plaut of West Lafayette, Ind.

Funeral services will be held on Monday, November 7 at 11 a.m. at Temple Beth Shalom B’nai Israel, 400 East Middle Turnpike, Manchester, with interment in Temple Beth Shalom Memorial Park, Manchester.

A memorial period will be observed at Summerwood, 160 Simsbury Road, #333, West Hartford following the interment until 8 p.m. with a service at 4 p.m., and on Tuesday, from 2 - 4 p.m. and 6 - 8 p.m. In lieu of flowers, the family requests that memorial contributions be made to: American Friends of the Wiener Library, c/o Gary Joseph, 7 Claudet Way, Eastchester, N.Y. 10709.
From http://mywesthartfordlife.com/people.php?cid=1&id=581


See the tribute to Ruth from her nephew, Anthony Finkelstein, on his blog, which includes excerpts from Ruth's Westerbork and Bergen-Belsen diaries: http://blog.prof.so/2014/04/egypt.html

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Hochgeladen 2021-08-04 16:57:49.0
Einsender user's avatar Jens Aaron Guttstein
E-Mail Aron_Guttstein@outlook.com
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