Red Cross Helps Reconnect Holocaust Survivors

Red Cross Helps Reconnect Holocaust Survivors

The American Red Cross is reaching out to Holocaust survivors and their families to inform them of Red Cross services to reconnect families and find documentation.

Since 1990, the American Red Cross has helped more than 45,000 families search for information and documentation of their loved ones who went missing during the Holocaust. This work has resulted in locating 1,600 individuals and reconnecting them with their families...

 Dreier thought he lost his entire family during the World War II murder of millions by the Nazi regime. After almost 70 years of thinking he was alone, he was able to locate his cousin Lucy Weinberg, a resident of Montreal, Canada, in late 2010 after Red Cross caseworkers scoured records from the former Holocaust and War Victims Tracing Center and more than 180 Red Cross societies around the world for clues. You can read their story here.

HOLOCAUST AND WAR VICTIMS TRACING

So many years after World War II, the pain of being separated from family still affects many. The American Red Cross Holocaust and War Victims Tracing Center was closed in November 2012 but, through its national Restoring Family Links program, the Red Cross continues to help residents of the United States search for information about loved ones missing since the Holocaust.

The tracing services are free of charge and use the worldwide network of Red Cross and Red Crescent societies, the Magen David Adom in Israel, as well as museums, archives and international organizations to help find information about someone's loved one.

HOW TO BEGIN YOUR SEARCH

If someone is interested in trying to find a loved one, they can contact their local Red Cross chapter. These searches are complex and can take a year or more to find results. Information has been found in more than 79 percent of cases such as documentation outlining deportation to another country, or in some, confirmation of death. Some, like Saul Dreier, have been lucky to find their loved ones and reunite after so many years of separation.

Originally from here

Posted on Shalom Adventure by: Jeffrey Allen

Related Articles

More From Shoah

Children During the Holocaust

Children were especially vulnerable in the era of the Holocaust. The Nazis advocated killing…
Children During the Holocaust

NIcholas Winton Honored

Sir Nicholas Winton saved the lives of hundreds of young Jewish people.
NIcholas Winton Honored

Why the Holocaust Was Possible

Contrary to the views of some authors, anti-Semitism alone was not responsible for the…
Why the Holocaust Was Possible

Gertrude Luckner

Gertrud Luckner was born in the year 1900 in Liverpool. Soon she comprehended the reach of the…
Gertrude Luckner

Rescue

Despite the indifference of most Europeans and the collaboration of others in the murder of…
Rescue

Holocaust Glossary

The following is intended to provide a frame of reference for discussion. Anti-Semitism…
Holocaust Glossary

Through Children's Eyes

Diary portions illuminate a view of the world seen through the eyes and lives of Jewish…
Through Children's Eyes

Edith Goldberg

Edith Goldberg spent her early life in Teschenmoschel, a small village near Kaiserslautern,…
Edith Goldberg

Holocaust Remembrance

"It should not be forgotten. There was no reason for what was done to the people in this world."
Holocaust Remembrance

Publish the Menu module to "offcanvas" position. Here you can publish other modules as well.
Learn More.


donation