Observer News Enterprise

“Lighting the Way: The remarkable story behind a North Carolina treasure” held at the Executive Mansion

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More than 50 years ago, an impressive crystal chandelier was delivered in a nondescrip­t box to the North Carolina Executive Mansion. The chandelier was a gift from Mrs. Karoline Horowitz, a North Carolina resident who settled in western North Carolina in the 1940s with her husband, Peter, and sixyear old son, Bob, after a daring escape from Europe and the Nazis.

Today, Bob Horowitz joined Governor Roy Cooper, First Lady Kristin Cooper and Department of Natural and Cultural Resources Secretary Reid Wilson at a special event at the Executive Mansion to share stories of his family’s history and the incredible journey of this chandelier, which has become a part of

North Carolina history. Dr. Chris Patti, a professor of communicat­ions at Appalachia­n State University who specialize­s in oral history interviews of Holocaust survivors led the discussion.

“We thought, maybe the state would be interested,” Bob Horowitz said of his family’s gift. “North

Carolina has treated us well. We came as refugees and became part of the community.”

The chandelier, which still hangs in the state dining room of the Mansion, was owned by Mrs. Horowitz’ parents, Gustav and Selma Strauss, two of the six million Jews who perished in the Holocaust. After the war, Mrs. Horowitz was miraculous­ly able to recover some of her family’s heirlooms, including the crystal chandelier, and have them sent to the family’s new home in western North Carolina. The chandelier was later donated to the state and is believed to have been installed in the Mansion sometime in the 1960s.

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