To avoid persecution of Jews in Austria following its annexation by Germany in 1938, Olson's parents fled from Vienna to Belgium. With the invasion of Belgium by Germany imminent, Olson's father was arrested and placed in a detention camp. Her mother, Pauline Gerstl, was able to flee on the last train leaving Belgium for France. In France Pauline Gerstl was placed into the Vallon en Sully detention camp. At that time she was already three months pregnant. Because the camp had no medical facilities, Pauline Gerstl was dismissed from the camp approximately three weeks prior to the expected birth of her child. Pauline Gerstl proceeded to Nice where she met relatives and her husband who had escaped from the camp. On October 19, 1940, Pauline Gerstl gave birth to her daughter Jeanette in Nice (later to become Jeanette Olson). During the first round-up of Jews, Olson was exempted because she was under the age of three and her father went into hiding. When the south-east part of France was ceded to Italy, the family was placed into a ghetto in Vence, north of Nice, controlled by Italian authorities. However, her father was able to continue to work as a tailor for a Eugène Francone* who was very helpful to them. When Italy capitulated and changed sides in 1943, the family fled back to Nice to avoid being deported to Italy. They went into hiding when the Germans started to deport Jews to concentration camps.
Because remaining in hiding with a young child was very difficult, Olson was placed into the custody of non-Jewish French couples. This was only possible for short periods of time since having a new child immediately placed these people under suspicion of harboring Jews and having to pay the consequences for that. Through the efforts of Mr. Gerstl's former employer, Eugène* and Marguerite Francone*, a childless couple, Emile and Lili Lasfargues, was found in the nearby town of Antibes-Juan-les-Pins. They were willing to take the risk of harboring the child under the pretense of the child being their niece. During the interview Olson states that, according to her mother, she immediately accepted this couple. Although very young at that time, Olson clearly remembers her caretakers and various specific events that took place while she was with them. She was treated very well. The arrangements with the Lasfargues were that, should her parents not survive the Holocaust, the Lasfargues couple would adopt the little girl.
At the end of the war, the Gerstls found that a reunification with their daughter was difficult. Approximately two years had elapsed since their separation and the little girl, now about four and a half years-old, spoke only French whereas her birth parents' primary language was German.
Additionally, Olson considered Mrs. Lasfargues as her mother and didn't want to leave. Mr. Lasfargues had passed away earlier and Mrs. Lasfargues had become very attached to Olson. Nevertheless, reunification was eventually accomplished although it was very traumatic and quite some time elapsed before a proper relationship between Olson and her parents could be re-established.
An attempt was made by her parents to return to Vienna in the late forties, but conditions there were intolerable to Olson's mother considering the abuse she suffered there during the Nazi period. The family emigrated to the United States in 1951. In Detroit, Olson completed her education and received a degree from Wayne State University. She married, had four children, and now has two grandchildren.
Having led a busy life, she has not allowed her past to interfere with the demands of a normal daily life. She has kept in touch with those in France, or their offspring, who probably saved her life and the lives of her parents. Several photographs were displayed during the interview.
Note: A personal history video interview of Pauline Gerstl, Mrs. Olson's mother, was taped on January 9, 1996, and is on file at the Holocaust Memorial Center.
Interview Information:
Date: March 19, 2001
Length: 1 hour 5 minutes
Interviewer: Hans Weinmann
Chronologie[Ajouter]
Cet article n'est pas encore renseigné par l'AJPN, mais n'hésitez pas à le faire afin de restituer à cette commune sa mémoire de la Seconde Guerre mondiale.
Témoignages, mémoires, thèses, recherches, exposés et travaux scolaires [Ajouter le votre]
Pas de travaux actuellement sur ce sujet… Vous pouvez mettre le votre en ligne sur le site ajpn.org.
Liens externes
[Ajouter un lien vers un article d'intérêt ou un site internet] 1 Les enfants et amis Abadi (Voir le site Les enfants et amis Abadi, remarquable ! Odette Rosenstock et Moussa Abadi avec le concours de Monseigneur Paul Rémond, Archevêque-Évêque de Nice, ont créé le réseau Marcel pour lutter contre le nazisme et les lois antijuives de Vichy. Ils ont caché et sauvé, dans le diocèse de Nice, 527 enfants juifs de 1942 à 1944. « Les Enfants et Amis Abadi » est une association loi 1901 créée le 4 mai 2000 par Jeannette Wolgust. Elle a pour but de réunir les amis et les enfants cachés par Odette et Moussa Abadi, afin de préserver et perpétuer leur mémoire, et plus généralement de préserver et perpétuer la mémoire de la Shoah. )
2 Association pour la Mémoire des Enfants Juifs Déportés des Alpes Maritimes (l’AMEJDAM a été créée, à l’initiative de fils et filles de déportés, d’enfants cachés et d’anciens élèves des écoles de Nice et des Alpes-Maritimes, afin de pérenniser la mémoire des enfants juifs scolarisés dans ces établissements, arrêtés et exterminés en déportation, durant la Seconde Guerre mondiale. )
3 Guide des Archives départementales des Alpes maritimes (Guide des sources d'histoire de la Seconde Guerre mondiale conservées aux Archives départementales des Alpes maritimes )
4 La répression de la Résistance dans les Alpes-Maritimes (La répression de la Résistance par Vichy et par les occupants dans les Alpes-Maritimes. Dossier édité par le Musée de la Résistance azuréenne dans la perspective du Concours de la Résistance et de la Déportation. Il fournit un aperçu régional et des documents originaux, ainsi que des exemples de lieux de mémoire. )
5 Exposition "L'enfant cachée" (Exposition pédagogique pour accompagner la lecture de l'album L'enfant cachée (Le Lombard, 2012) et découvrir l'Histoire. 2012)
Marcel Ribière
(1940 - 1943) Marcel Julien Henri Ribière, Préfet de la région de Marseille (Alpes-Maritimes, Basses-Alpes (Alpes-de-Haute-Provence), Bouches-du-Rhône, Corse, Gard, Hautes-Alpes, Var et le Vaucluse) (1892-1986)
Jean Chaigneau
*
(23/07/1943 - Mai 1944) Marie Joseph Jean Chaigneau, Préfet de la région de Marseille (Alpes-Maritimes, Basses-Alpes (Alpes-de-Haute-Provence), Bouches-du-Rhône, Corse, Gard, Hautes-Alpes, Var et le Vaucluse). Arrêté en mai 1944 par les Allemands, il est déporté au camp d'Eisenberg
Jean Moyon
(08/1944 - 09/1944) Préfet des Alpes-Maritimes
Raymond Aubrac
(1944 - 1945) Raymond Aubrac, de son vrai nom Raymond Samuel, Commissaire de la République de la région de Marseille (Alpes-Maritimes, Basses-Alpes (Alpes-de-Haute-Provence), Bouches-du-Rhône, Corse, Gard, Hautes-Alpes, Var et le Vaucluse) (1914)
Paul Haag
(1945 - 1946) Paul Maurice Louis Haag, Commissaire de la République de la région de Marseille (Alpes-Maritimes, Basses-Alpes (Alpes-de-Haute-Provence), Bouches-du-Rhône, Corse, Gard, Hautes-Alpes, Var et le Vaucluse) (1891-1976)
Avertissement Les informations affichées sur le site de l'AJPN sont fournies par les personnes qui contribuent à l'enrichissement de notre base de données. Certaines, notamment les témoignages, ne peuvent être vérifiées par l'AJPN et ne peuvent donc pas être considérées d'une fiabilité totale. Nous citons les sources de ces informations chaque fois qu'elles nous sont communiquées. Toutes les demandes de rectification de données erronées sont bienvenues et, dans ce cas, les corrections nécessaires sont appliquées dans les meilleurs délais en citant la source de ces corrections. C'est par cette vigilance des visiteurs de notre site que nous pouvons assurer la qualité des informations conservées dans notre base de données.
Justes parmi les Nations -
Righteous among the Nations
- De Gerechten mank de Völker -
Giusti tra
le nazioni - Drept între
popoare -
Gerechter unter den Völkern - Sprawiedliwy
wsród Narodów Swiata -
Rechtvaardige onder de Volkeren -
Justuloj inter la popoloj - Rättfärdig bland folken - Spravodlivý medzi národmi - Spravedlivý mezi národy
-
Vanhurskaat kansakuntien joukossa - Világ Igaza - Justos entre as nações - Justos entre las Naciones - Justos
entre les Nacions