One note of Theresienstadt ,Czechoslovakia , Concentration Camp currency,1943 ,20 Kronen, Condition: Very Fine+ (VF) ,See scan.See below some information related found on the web.
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has the signature of Jakob Edelstein, the "Oldest of the Jews" (Der Aelteste der Juden in Theresienstadt) and an important historical figure, bears the vignette of Moses with the Ten Commandments and a Star of David.
.......money that is claimed to be part of the propaganda presented to the Red Cross committee. In fact, despite the claims that these were just papers without any real value and were never used, ex-residents of Theresienstadt describe how they each received 50 crowns every month free with which to buy things.[16]
See some related information from the web:
Historical note
On November 24, 1941, the Germans established a Jewish ghetto in the fortress town of Terezin, Czechoslovakia. Known by its German name, Theresienstadt, it functioned as a ghetto and transit camp on the route to Auschwitz, until its liberation on May 8, 1945.
Currency used in Theresienstadt (Terezin) was designed by Czech artist Peter Kien, who was interned there and later died in Auschwitz. On the front of each bill was an engraved portrait of Moses holding the Ten Commandments in Hebrew.
"When Kien initially submitted his designs to Reinhard Heydrich, they were rejected. Because Heydrich objected to the fact that Moses looked too Aryan, the notes were modified to show Moses with more strongly stereotyped Semitic features; the design had to conform to the Nazi vision of Jewish appearance. The final design shows Moses with a long hooked nose and curly hair. Heydrich also demanded that the hand of Moses cover the commandment that stated "Thou Shalt Not Kill." (From Life in the Ghettos During the Holocaust, edited by Eric J. Sterling.)
Theresienstadt was originally a fortress in Czechoslovakia built in 1870, which later became a town of 3,500 inhabitants. Unfortunately the Nazis crammed up to 53,000 in this small area at one time - this caused disease and great suffering for the unfortunate detainees. Out of the 144,000 that passed into this camp during the war, there were only 17,247 survivors. 15,000 children also lived at the camp - very few survived. It was at first a 'model' camp to make the world believe that this was merely a holiday camp for cultured Jews. Later it became a transition camp - 88,000 people were transported to extermination camps from here.
In the summer of 1942, the Nazis decided to create a ghetto bank, with each resident receiving a fixed amount of money depending in which of five categories such resident belonged.The currency was designed by Peter Kien and printed by the National Bank in Prague.Reinhard Heydrich was SS Deputy Reich Protector in Bohemia & Moravia and he ordered that the picture of Moses be changed to conform to the Nazi caricature of a Jew.The other side of the scrip contains the printed signature of Jakob Edelstein as the "Eldest of the Jews in Theresienstdat."The notes are dated January 1, 1943, but did not go into circulation until May, 1943.
History of Ghetto
Theresienstadt
Gate leads outside the walled town of
Theresienstadt
Americans normally think of a "ghetto" as a section of a
large city that is a rundown, dilapidated, rat-infested slum inhabited by one
ethnic group that has been forced to live there because of discrimination or
institutionalized racism. In former times in Europe, "ghetto" was the term for a
walled section of a city where the Jews were forced, according to the laws of
the city, to live separately from the Christians. Because of over-crowding and
isolation, these ghettos usually turned into slums. So when the Germans turned
the town of Theresienstadt into a Jewish ghetto in November 1941, this was not
by any means a Nazi innovation. Even before the word ghetto came into use, and
long before the Nazis came upon the scene, the Jews were eventually segregated
into a ghetto in almost every city where they settled. Usually they were already
living in a separate part of the city, known as the Jewish quarter. These
segregated quarters became ghettos only after walls were erected, a curfew for
the Jews was established, and the Jews were forced to wear distinctive clothing
to instantly identify themselves to non-Jews.
The word "ghetto" derives from the name of an area of the
city of Venice where the city's foundries were located. In the Venetian dialect,
a foundry was known as a "geto" which meant a workshop or a factory. The word
"geto" was derived from the verb "gettare" which means "to cast" as in to cast
iron in a foundry.
After the Jews were expelled from Spain in 1492 and from
Portugal in 1497, many of them settled in Venice. In 1516, a city decree forced
the Jews of Venice to live on a small island with only two access points which
were sealed off at sunset. This island had previously been the area of the
"gheto nuovo" or new workshops.
However, even before the word ghetto came into use, the
Jews, particularly in Poland, were confined to walled sections of the city where
they lived. In 1492 the Jews of Krakow in Poland were put into a walled-off
section after they were accused of setting fires in the city. There were no
walled Jewish ghettos in the Old Reich, as Germany proper was called, during
Hitler's regime. Hitler sent the German Jews to the Lodz ghetto, located in what
had formerly been Poland or to Theresienstadt, located in what was formerly the
country of Czechoslovakia.
After the Nazis invaded Poland and then occupied the
country, they initially put the Polish Jews into ghettos, using the excuse that
had been used for centuries, that the Jews were responsible for spreading
disease. Later, these ghettos became a convenient way to concentrate the Jews in
one location for eventual transport to the concentration camps for extermination
in Hitler's "Final Solution to the Jewish Question."
On October 10, 1941, the Germans initially decided to make
Theresienstadt into a ghetto for selected Jews in the German Protectorate of
Bohemia and Moravia, and in the Greater German Reich, which included Austria and
part of western Poland. The Jews who were to be sent to Theresienstadt included
those over 60 years old, World War I veterans, prominent people such as artists
or musicians, very important persons, the blind, the deaf, and the inmates of
the Jewish mental hospitals and the Jewish orphanages.
The first Jews, who were brought to Theresienstadt on
November 24, 1941, were 342 men who were housed in the Sudeten barracks on the
west side of the old garrison, from where one can see the Sudeten mountain range
near the border between Germany and the Czech Republic. This first transport,
called the Aufbaukommando, was brought there to prepare the 10 barracks
buildings for the rest of the Jews who would soon follow. On December 4, 1941
another transport of 1,000 Jews who were to form the Jewish "self-government" of
the ghetto was sent to Theresienstadt. These two early transports became known
as AK1 and AK2.
A short time after the construction crews had prepared the
barracks, 7,000 Jews from Prague and Brno in what is now the Czech Republic
arrived in the ghetto; men and women were put into separate barracks and they
were not allowed to mix with the townspeople. On Feb. 16, 1942, the 3,500
townspeople were given notice that they had to evacuate the town by June 30th.
At that time, the whole town was converted into a prison camp for the
Jews.
Even before the transports departed to Theresienstadt, the
Jewish Council of the Elders (Ältestenrat) was appointed in Prague to do the
ghetto administration. The Nazis gave oral orders to the Council each day and
the Jewish "self-government" informed the prisoners of the order of the
day.
There were three Jewish Elders (Judenältester) who served
in turn as the head of the ghetto "self-government." The first was Jakob
Edelstein, who served as the ghetto Elder from December 4, 1941 to November 27,
1943. He was arrested for falsifying camps records and was sent to the Small
Fortress across the river from the ghetto. From there he was transferred to
Auschwitz where he was first put on trial in a Nazi court and was then executed
at the infamous "black wall" on June 20, 1944 after being forced to watch as his
wife and son were being shot.
The second Jewish leader of Theresienstadt was Dr. Paul
Eppstein who was taken to the Small Fortress on September 7, 1944 and
immediately shot without the benefit of a trial because he too disobeyed the
orders of the Nazis. The last Jewish leader of the ghetto was Dr. Benjamin
Murmelstein, who served from Sept. 7, 1944 until the end of the war. The ghetto
guards were 150 Czech policemen; there was also an unarmed Jewish ghetto guard
unit which helped to maintain order in the ghetto. On the wall near the entry
door to the Museum in the Magdeburg building, there is a plaque which lauds the
Jewish leaders in the ghetto for their resistance against the Nazis, even though
it meant death for two of the Elders.
Plaque on wall of Museum in honor of Jewish
leaders who resisted the Nazis
By the time that the Nazis started deporting the Jews from
Germany, there were less than 200,000 of them left in the country; all the
others had already emigrated to escape the Nazi persecution. Forty percent of
the remaining Jews in Germany were over 60 years old, as the children and young
people had been the first to leave. After Austria became part of the Greater
German Reich in March 1938, the Jews were forced to emigrate to any country that
would take them, and only 15,000 old people were allowed to remain. All of these
elderly Austrian Jews were deported to Theresienstadt where their mortality rate
was the highest of all.
The first name that the Nazis gave to the garrison town,
which had been renamed Terezin by the Czechs, was Theresienbad, which means Spa
Theresien, implying that it was a spa town where people could take mineral
baths. Then the name was changed to Reichsaltersheim, or State Old People's
Home. Some of the unsuspecting elderly Jews in Germany actually paid for an
apartment in the ghetto and signed contracts for housing, food and medical
treatment which was to be provided. They were very disappointed when they got to
Theresienstadt and learned that it was nothing like the spa town or old folks
home that they were expecting and that they were not going to have luxury
accommodations, even though they had paid. Since they were too old to work,
their rations were less than the amount given to the workers, and their
mortality rate was extremely high.
Theresienstadt is frequently referred to as the "Paradise
Ghetto," although this was never a name used by the Nazis. For most of its
existence, the Theresienstadt ghetto was called the Jewish Self Administration
or Jüdische Selbstverwaltung.
Besides the ordinary people who were sent to the Nazi
concentration camps, there were also many well known and prominent Jews, who
were incarcerated along with the others. In every camp where these prominent
people were confined, they were given privileged treatment and Theresienstadt
was no exception.
Important people, such as Rabbi Dr. Leo Baeck of Berlin,
whom the Nazis called "the Pope of the Jews," were given private apartments in
Theresienstadt. The rest of the Jews were housed in large barrack rooms where
they were crowded together into three rows of triple decker wooden bunk beds. As
the ghetto filled up, the newcomers were forced to live in attic space without
heat, running water or toilets.
Each transport to the camp contained around 1,000 Jews.
Upon arrival, the Jews went through a checkpoint, which was called die Schleuse,
which means the lock as in a lock on a canal. Here they were searched for items
that were forbidden in the camp. After that, the men and women were assigned to
separate barracks. The barracks were named after towns in Germany, for example,
the Dresden and Magdeburg barracks for the women, the Hanover barracks for men
and Hamburg barracks for women. The Magdeburg barracks also housed the offices
of the Jewish "self-government."
Gate into Dresden barracks for women which
has an inner courtyard
The first transport to be sent to the east from
Theresienstadt consisted of 2,000 Jews who were sent to Riga on January 9, 1942
from the Bohusovice station. According to Holocaust historian Martin Gilbert,
all 2,000 were taken to the nearby Rumbuli forest where they were shot. The most
horrible aspect of this is that the Jewish "self-government" in the camp was
initially in charge of selecting the people for the transports, although they
did not know what their fate would be at that time. Unwittingly, they sent the
young able-bodied Jews to their deaths, thinking that they were sending workers
to labor camps in the east.
A total of 44,693 Jews from Theresienstadt were sent to
Auschwitz, where all but a few of them perished. On September 8, 1943, a
transport of 5,006 Czech Jews was sent to Auschwitz where they were put into a
"family camp" which was liquidated six months later. There were 22,503 Jews from
Theresienstadt who were transported to unknown destinations in the
east.
In keeping with the stated policy at the Wannsee
Conference on January 20, 1942, Hitler's plan was to evacuate all the Jews to
the east. Eight thousand were sent from Theresienstadt to Treblinka and 1,000 to
Sobibor, two death camps that were right on the border between German occupied
Poland and the Soviet Union. Another 1,000 were transported from the
Theresienstadt ghetto to a concentration camp near the village of Maly
Trostenets, just outside of Minsk in what is now Belarus, better known to
Americans as White Russia. Two thousand Jews from the ghetto were sent to
Zamosc, 3,000 to Izbica and 3,000 to Lublin, all of which were cities near the
eastern border of occupied Poland.
Although the Theresienstadt ghetto was originally supposed
to be a home for elderly Jews, the Nazis began including some of the older
inmates in the transports to the east after the camp population on September 18,
1942 had reached 58,497, its highest number of prisoners. With such horrendous
overcrowding, the death toll was around 4,000 just for the month of September in
1942 and most of the dead were elderly people. Between September 19, 1942 and
October 22, 1942, there were 11 transports carrying ghetto inmates from
Theresienstadt to other camps farther east in order to relieve the
overcrowding.
In the northwest section of the old garrison town, there
is a building, called the Bauhof by the Nazis, that was used in the ghetto for
craft workshops. It is the yellow building shown in the photograph below. To the
right you can see part of the old fortifications; the road shown in the
photograph goes through an opening in the fortifications here.
Bauhof where workshops were located near
Litomerice gate
According to the Ghetto Museum, in 1945 a homicidal gas
chamber was built in a corridor of the town's fortifications wall near the
Litomerice gate, which is right by the Bauhof building, shown in the photograph
above. (Click here to see a map of the ghetto. The Bauhof building is number 14 on the
map.) According to Martin Gilbert, this gas chamber was never
"activated."
The homicidal gas chamber is directly across from the
Jäger (Hunter) barracks, an identical building on the opposite side of the town,
which was used as a disinfection station where the prisoners and their clothing
were deloused. The prisoners were disinfected by being completely submerged in a
tub containing a chemical which would kill the lice on their bodies. At the same
time, their clothing was disinfected by hot steam, and they would have to put
their clothes back on while they were still wet and then return to their
barracks. The oldest inmates of the ghetto were housed in the Jäger barracks so
they wouldn't get chilled by walking through the cold in wet clothes. Behind the
Jäger barracks is the Südberg or South Hill where a a soccer field was built for
the inmates.
The ghetto inmates became aware of the Theresienstadt
homicidal gas chamber and were planning to blow it up, but the war ended just in
time to save the Theresienstadt Jews from being gassed right in the ghetto. In
October 1944, the Jews at Birkenau (Auschwitz II) did manage to blow up one of
the homicidal gas chambers and shortly thereafter, Heinrich Himmler is believed
to have ordered the gassing operation to be stopped. The gas chambers at
Auschwitz-Birkenau were converted into air raid shelters, since the Allies had
begun bombing the camp, after taking aerial photos which showed extensive
munitions factories there.
The photograph below shows the fortifications on either
side of the Litomerice gate on the northwest side of Theresienstadt. When
Theresienstadt was a ghetto for the Jews, this road was closed off and there was
no traffic through the garrison town.
The Litomerice gate is an opening between the
fortifications walls
There were rumors circulating in all of the major Nazi
concentration camps toward the end of the war that Hitler had given the order
for all the inmates to be killed before the arrival of the Soviet or American
soldiers. This was believed to be the purpose for building a gas chamber at
Theresienstadt in 1945 at the tail end of the war. At Auschwitz, the inmates
were given the choice to stay in the camp, or to follow the Germans on a death
march to the camps in the west before the Soviet army arrived. Very few stayed
behind, except those who were too old or too sick to walk, because the prisoners
believed that they would be killed if they stayed.
After April 20, 1945, there were 13,454 of these wretched
survivors from Auschwitz and other camps who poured into Theresienstadt. Some
were housed in the Hamburg barracks, right by the railroad tracks. The others
were put into temporary wooden barracks outside the ghetto, which were taken
down soon after the war. Some of the newcomers had been evacuated from
Buchenwald on April 5th just before the camp was liberated by American troops on
April 11, 1945. Before the Americans arrived, Hitler himself had given the order
to evacuate the Jews from Buchenwald in an effort to prevent them from exacting
revenge on German citizens after they were freed. Some of them arrived at
Theresienstadt in terrible condition after they had been traveling by train for
two weeks without food. After the liberation of Buchenwald, some of the
prisoners, who had not been evacuated, commandeered American army jeeps and
weapons, then drove to the nearby town of Weimar where, in an orgy of revenge,
they looted German homes and shot innocent civilians at random; this was the
type of thing that the Nazis were trying to prevent by evacuating the
concentration camps before they were liberated.
According to Holocaust survivor Ben Helfgott, who was one
of the prisoners brought to Theresienstadt in the last days of the war, the
inmates of the Theresienstadt ghetto went on a rampage as soon as they were
released. They looted homes, beat to death an SS guard from the ghetto, and
attacked the ethnic Germans who were now homeless refugees, fleeing to Germany,
after being driven out of the Czech provinces of Bohemia and Moravia.
Some of the people who arrived from the evacuated camps
were former inmates of Theresienstadt who were now returning. Others were Jews
who had been in the eastern concentration camps for years. On May 3, 1945, the
ghetto was turned over to the Red Cross by Commandant Karl Rahm.
According to Martin Gilbert in his book "Holocaust
Journey," Rahm told the Red Cross that he had received orders from Berlin to
kill all the inmates in the ghetto before the Russians arrived, but he had
disobeyed the order. Because of this, Gilbert wrote, Rahm was allowed to leave
the camp unmolested on the day before the Russians arrived on May 8, 1945. He
was later captured and tried in a Special People's Court in nearby Litomerice;
he was held in the Small Fortress until he was executed in 1947.