United States Holocaust Memorial Museum The Power of Truth: 20 Years
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Meet our Survivor Volunteers

Eve Kristine Vetulani

“During the war he asked my mother, ‘Can you take a Jewish woman into your house?’ and, no, he asked me, if my mother would take this Jewish woman, and I said no, never tell her that she is Jewish. This grandmother did not want to go with her Jewish children to Italy, she said I’m too old I am going to die here, I’m not going any place, I love this city, okay. And the cook was left with her, but then when she came to live with us the cook would always come to deliver food so that my mother really didn’t have to do anything except make the toilet paper. But everything else was delivered. And so he was also the one who, she stayed. And I was already in Germany and she died peacefully in our house and nobody knew. Except that I had to teach her, my uncle said, you have to teach her prayers, Catholic prayers, the first thing they do they ask you about the Christian Catholic holidays, and the years of this and that.”
(postwar testimony)

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Margit Meissner (Morawetz)
Margit Meissner (Morawetz)
Margit Meissner (Morawetz)

Born February 26, 1922, in Innsbruck, Austria

Margit was born on February 26, 1922, in Innsbruck, Austria. Her father, Gottlieb Morawetz, was a banker from an observant Jewish Bohemian family. Margit’s mother Lilly was from a family of assimilated Viennese Jews. Both of her parents were well-educated and Margit and her older brothers Felix, Paul and Bruno grew up speaking Czech, French, English and German. When Margit was an infant, her father took a job in Prague, and the family moved to the busy metropolis.

Margit’s father died of an embolism in 1932, and from the age of ten, Margit was raised by her mother, with the help of a governess. By 1934, Margit and her friends began to notice a troubling rise in antisemitism in western and central Europe. In 1938, nearby Austria had submitted to Nazi rule, and violence against Jews was on the rise. Margit’s mother decided that it would be safer for Margit to leave Prague, so she was sent to secondary school in Paris, France where she studied dressmaking. A year later, Margit’s mother joined her there. It was not long, however, before the threat that they had fled from in Prague had caught up with them.

In May of 1940, Margit’s mother received an order from the French police ordering her to report to an assembly point in the south. Margit was left to figure out a way to get both herself and her mother out of France. With no other way to leave the city, Margit bought a bicycle and, following the throngs of people fleeing Paris, rode almost 20 miles to a school in the town of Etampes, where other refugees were congregating. There, she learned that her mother had been sent to Camp de Gurs, a detention facility near the Spanish border. Margit got back on her bicycle and set off to find her mother. Her timing was lucky; shortly after Margit left the school, the building was blown up by German forces. Eventually, Margit was able to get a train ticket south to Salies-de-Bearn, a town near Gurs where some friends were staying.

In June, 1940, France surrendered to Germany. In the confusion that ensued over the following weeks, Margit’s mother was able to leave Camp de Gurs and join Margit in Salies-de-Bearn. Together, they snuck out of occupied France to Marseilles. From Marseilles, they fled, via Spain and Portugal, to the United States, and settled with Margit’s brother, Felix, in New York.

Margit and her first husband Otmar traveled extensively, living in the United States, Europe, and the Middle East. Throughout these years, Margit worked in several jobs, including a stint as a German Youth Activities specialist, reeducating Hitler youth. Margit and Otmar eventually divorced, and in 1953, Margit married Frank Meissner. The two settled in Bethesda, Maryland, and had a son named Paul, and a daughter, Anne. Frank died of cancer in 1990. Today, Margit continues to live in Bethesda. Her memoir, Margit’s Story, was published in 2003.

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