The Jewish Chronicle

Mum’s life? The whole world is now piecing it back together

Beba Epstein’s son found out about his mother’s pre-Shoah life via a newspaper article. A new exhibition tells her heartbreak­ing story

- BY JENNI FRAZER

WHEN LOS Angeles lawyer Michael Leventhal saw a picture of an 11-year-old girl on the front page of the New York Times in 2017, he couldn’t believe it. That was his mother, Beba Epstein, who had died in 2012, a Holocaust survivor about whose early life he knew very little.

Beba’s picture was there because her lively account of her family life in prewar Vilna, Lithuania, written in Yiddish, had emerged among 170,000 documents re-discovered in Lithuania by YIVO, the Institute for Jewish Research. YIVOwasfou­ndedinViln­aandmovedt­o NewYorkdur­ingtheSeco­ndWorldWar. Mr Leventhal called Jonathan Brent, chief executive of YIVO in New York. Even more astonishin­gly, it emerged that YIVO held more than 50 letters written by his father — Polishborn Lee Leventhal, who had escaped to Mexico City in 1932— to Beba in the early days of their courtship and marriage.

Today, Beba’s story is the focus of a unique Holocaust-education project launched by YIVO, an online interactiv­e museum aimed at helping people — and young people in particular — connect with the pre-war lives of European Jews. And one of the first places to take advantage of the Beba Epstein story — told in a series of cheerful, cartoon images mixed with real-life pictures of Vilna as it was — was Solihull School in the British Midlands.

Mark Penney, head of the junior school at Solihull, was enthusiast­ic about the YIVO exhibition, entitled “The Extraordin­ary Life of An Ordinary Girl”.

He said: “What is exciting about this is that it is a gift to educators. It removes all barriers, it’s age appropriat­e, and a boontodire­ctedlearni­ng.Theyounges­t children can participat­e, whereas those working for their

GCSEs can dig a bit deeper. I don’t know another resource like it.”

The digital museum, curated by Karolina Ziulkoski and created with input from the Leventhal family, allows viewers a virtual “walk” a r o u n d p r e - war Vilnius, taking in Beba’s school and the city synagogue that she, her parents, her two brothers and sister attended. Break-out boxes threaded through t he e x hi bi t gi v e deeper background to Beba’s story.

Her memoir may have been written as part of a competitio­n held for schoolchil­dren by YIVO in 1933, though Mr Brent says they are not sure. Funny andcharmin­g,shetellshe­rreadersho­nestly what she is like: a “naughty child” who breaks plates in her parents’ china cabinet, fights with her cousin and her siblings, and is “very loved at home, but theydon’tspoilme—onlywhenI’msick — then I get special privileges”.

When the Germans entered Vilna, Beba, the eldest of the four children, was about 17. “The day after her high school graduation,” says Ms Ziulkoski, “everything happened very fast. The Germans establishe­daghetto.Herfathert­hought that because she was blonde and blueeyed, she could pass for non-Jewish. He hadanon-Jewishfrie­ndwhohadbe­enin the Russian army in the First World War, and sent Beba to hide with him.”

The rest of the family went to the ghetto and letters went back and forth between them and Beba. But the letters stopped after about two months, and the teenager left her hiding-place in the officer’sattictogo­backtotheg­hettoand find her family. “But once she was there she found her whole family had been killed”. Almost certainly, YIVO researcher­sbelieve,theEpstein­swereamong­the thousandso­f VilnaJewsm­urderedint­he Ponar forest, just outside the city.

Amongthose­intheVilna­ghettowere the so-called “Paper Brigade”, a group of dedicated Jews who did everything possible to save the priceless documentat­ionof theLithuan­ianJewishc­ommunity. It is thought that Beba’s “autobiogra­phy” — which she had undoubtedl­y forgottenh­avingwritt­en—wasinclude­d in that material.

A great deal of the Paper Brigade collection was hidden after the war by a Lithuanian­librarian,AntanasUlp­is,who squirrelle­d the books and documents into a church basement in the face of a Soviet crackdown on the possession of religious material. This cache was what was re-discovered in 2017, and included Beba’s memoir, found “in almost pristine condition”.

WhentheVil­naghettowa­sliquidate­d in1943,thenextpar­tof Beba’swarbegan. She briefly worked outside the ghetto,

including as a maid in the city’s Gestapo headquarte­rs. Those Jews remaining after the dissolutio­n of the ghetto, including Beba, were sent to a variety of concentrat­ion camps. She survived three, including the last one, Stutthof, “the most brutal”, was put out to sea by the Nazis in a mined boat, and then rescued, suffering from typhus, by British soldiers.

After recuperati­ng in Sweden, Beba made her way to New York, where she hadanuncle,LasarEpste­in,aprominent member of the Bund, or Jewish Labour Movement, whose papers are preserved in the YIVO archives.

When her memoir was first found, YIVO originally thought that Beba Epstein had not survived. It was Mr Leventhal’s phone call which helped them put the pieces together.

This exhibition is a gift to educators’

 ??  ?? The cable sent by Paul Olberg to Beba’s uncle, Lasar Epstein, after she was discovered alive in Sweden. Lasar had asked Paul to locate his niece so he could make contact
The cable sent by Paul Olberg to Beba’s uncle, Lasar Epstein, after she was discovered alive in Sweden. Lasar had asked Paul to locate his niece so he could make contact
 ??  ?? Left: a crowd in central Vilnius commemorat­es Lithuania’s lost Jews, and (above) Beba Epstein
Left: a crowd in central Vilnius commemorat­es Lithuania’s lost Jews, and (above) Beba Epstein
 ?? PHOTOS: COURTESY OF YIVO INSTITUTE FOR JEWISH RESEARCH ??
PHOTOS: COURTESY OF YIVO INSTITUTE FOR JEWISH RESEARCH

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