Wellisch, Emil
Birth Name | Wellisch, Emil |
Gender | male |
Events
Event | Date | Place | Description | Notes | Sources |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Birth | Emil Wellisch was born in Galicia, while his grandfather was temporarily there on business |
Event Note In the 1890s, Emil Wellisch's family moved to Wien. |
|||
Marriage | Emil Wellisch married Jolan Deutsch |
|
|||
Transport |
Event Note Emil Wellisch paid a sum of money to one of the Zionist organizations, and Heinrich Wellisch completed the formalities, and, on December 24, 1939, left for Bratislava, where the transport was to be assembled, in two transit camps, one with about 350 Jews from Czechoslovakia, the other with an equal number from Wien.
|
||||
Boat | 1940 | Donaudampfschiffahrtsgesellschaft Danube Steamship Company transported Maapilim from Wien and Bratislava, down the Danube on four steamers |
Event Note David Shpitzer, his wife,and son, Dan, arrived at Bratislava, but the Danube River was frozen, so they waited until September to sail to Tulcea. On August, 1940, Esther Leinhardt Langsam, and her sons, Oscar and Herman, left with 500 others, the last to successfully leave, on a train to Bratislava, and boarded a steamship that sailed down the Danube River to Tulcea. In September, 1940, Jiri Polacek left on the last transport from Bohemia and Moravia, to Tulcea. On September 2, 1940, Emil Gregr organized the illegal transport of ten fellow Jews from Praha via Wien for Palestine. In October, 1940, Hugo Hornung sailed from Bratislava to Tulcea. |
||
Boat | October 7, 1940 | אטלנטיק SS Atlantis MV Atlantic | Atlantic sailed from Tulcea for Palestine |
Place Note
In late 1940, while the Germans were trying to deport the Jews of Europe, rather than exterminating them, and Adolf Eichmann headed The Committee for Sending Jews Overseas, Berthold Storfer, a Jewish businessman, worked under Adolf Eichmann. and organized two groups of transports, one organized on behalf of the Jewish community of Wien, and the second, organized with Betar. On October 7, 1940, Mordechai and Pesa Rypinsky, and children Hella and Yitzchak, sailed on Atlantic אטלנטיק from Tulcea for Palestine.
On October 7, 1940, Emil and Jolan Wellisch sailed on Atlantic אטלנטיק from Tulcea for Palestine. On October 7, 1940, Hugo Hornung sailed on Atlantic אטלנטיק from Tulcea for Palestine. On October 7, 1940, Esther Leinhardt Langsam and her two sons, Oscar and Herman, sailed on Atlantic אטלנטיק from Tulcea for Palestine. |
|
Boat | December 9, 1940 | 1,584 Maapilim on Atlantic were transported to Mauritius on two Dutch passenger ships and arrived at Port Louis on December 27 |
Event Note On December 9, 1940, Hugo Hornung sailed from Haifa to Port Louis, to be interned at Beau Bassin. On December 9, 1940, Mordechai and Pesa Rypinsky, and their children, Hella and Yitzchak, sailed from Haifa to Port Louis, to be interned at Beau Bassin. On December 9, 1940, Emil and Jolan Wellisch, and their son, Heinrich, sailed from Haifa to Port Louis, to be interned at Beau Bassin. On December 9, 1940, Esther Leinhardt Langsam, and her son, Oscar, sailed from Haifa to Port Louis, to be interned at Beau Bassin. |
||
Camp | December 28, 1940 | Beau Bassin, Mauritius | 1,584 Maapilim on Atlantic were interned at Beau Bassin by the British |
Event Note
1,584 of the passengers aboard Atlantic were deported to Mauritius, where they spent the rest of the war in a detainment camp in Beau Bassin. On December 28, 1940, Hugo Hornung was interned by the British at Beau Bassin. On December 28, 1940, Mordechai and Pesa Rypinsky, and their children, Hella and Yitzchak, were interned by the British at Beau Bassin. On December 28, 1940, Springmann-Ribak, and daughter, Rachel, were interned by the British at Beau Bassin. On December 28, 1940, Emil and Jolan Wellisch, and their son, Heinrich, were interned by the British at Beau Bassin. On December 28, 1940, Esther Leinhardt Langsam and her son, Oscar, were interned by the British at Beau Bassin, until August, 1945. |
|
Boat | August, 1945 | Franconia | Franconia sailed from Port Louis for Palestine |
Event Note
After the end of hostilities, the refugees interned at Beau Bassin were allowed to enter Palestine , or return to their lands of origin, and the majority chose Palestine. In August, 1956, Emil and Jolan Wellisch, among the last 1,300 internees at Beau Bassin, sailed to Palestine on Franconia. |
|
Aliyah | August, 1945 |
Event Note Emil and Jolan Wellisch settled in Kiryat Haim קריית חיים. |
|||
Emigration | 1951 | The Wellisch family left Israel and went to Canada |
|
Families
Married | Wife | Deutsch, Jolan |
Children |
Pedigree
- Wellisch, Emil
- ', ['', u'Deutsch, Jolan', ''], ['
- ', ['
- ', ['', u'Wellisch, Heinrich Henry', ''], ' '], '
']]
-
[['