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I announced uncle Izso, they moved to Brasso, rented the pub, and it worked very well indeed. They were in Brasso during the war as well, uncle Izso and his wife too died there after the war, but I couldn’t tell more precisely when. Klari too died in Brasso, she was married about two times.
Luci got married quite late, after World War II, to a Jewish boy from Nagyvarad, but their marriage lasted only for a few weeks. The autumn festivals were near, she told her husband that she would go home to her parents for the festivals, and she never went back. She left for Israel, she still lives there in the same town with her brother, Gabi [Gabor].
One of my father’s younger sisters was called Berta Marmorstein– she remained Marmorstein. Aunt Berta got married to a boy from Pest, they lived in Budapest. Their daughter is Aliz, who is still alive, thanks’ God, she was born in 1913, she is 92 years old.
She got married to a catholic man, to Istvan Bogdan, but he didn’t observe [religion], because he was a great communist. He was a clerk in the Manfred Weiss Aircraft Factory [1] [2], and there the workers were great communists anyway.
Their daughter, Eva Bogdan is a teacher of German and French language in Budapest, she was born there, and she lives there. She was married, she has two children, one of them is Peter, he’s twenty-seven or twenty-eight years old now, he’s engaged in music, that’s all I know about him.
Luci got married quite late, after World War II, to a Jewish boy from Nagyvarad, but their marriage lasted only for a few weeks. The autumn festivals were near, she told her husband that she would go home to her parents for the festivals, and she never went back. She left for Israel, she still lives there in the same town with her brother, Gabi [Gabor].
One of my father’s younger sisters was called Berta Marmorstein– she remained Marmorstein. Aunt Berta got married to a boy from Pest, they lived in Budapest. Their daughter is Aliz, who is still alive, thanks’ God, she was born in 1913, she is 92 years old.
She got married to a catholic man, to Istvan Bogdan, but he didn’t observe [religion], because he was a great communist. He was a clerk in the Manfred Weiss Aircraft Factory [1] [2], and there the workers were great communists anyway.
Their daughter, Eva Bogdan is a teacher of German and French language in Budapest, she was born there, and she lives there. She was married, she has two children, one of them is Peter, he’s twenty-seven or twenty-eight years old now, he’s engaged in music, that’s all I know about him.
Period
Location
Romania
Interview
Alice Kosa