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The Life of Lilli Tauber. Vienna. Map of Vienna during 1942. Economy. This is a Five Shilling. People living in Austria paid with shillings. This is a Wheelock white and pink dish. Many similar dishes were sold in Austria during the early to mid 1900’s. Timeline.
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Vienna Map of Vienna during 1942
Economy This is a Five Shilling. People living in Austria paid with shillings. This is a Wheelock white and pink dish. Many similar dishes were sold in Austria during the early to mid 1900’s.
Timeline 1946: Went to Prein with her Aunt Berta. March 13, 1927: Lilli Tauber was born. 1942: Aunt Paula and Uncle Gottfried were murdered. 1942: Traveled back to London. 1938:Father was arrested for being Jewish. 1953: Met her husband, Max Tauber. 1938:Lilli’s brother Eduard escaped to Palestine. 1942: Became a tailor’s apprentice. 1942: The ghettoes were slowly fading away. 1938: Lilli first encountered anti-Semitism.
Photos This is a letter Lilli Tauber wrote to her parents in 1940. These are Lilli Tauber’s parents, Wilhelm and Johanna Schischa, in the Opole ghetto where they lived. This is a post office in the Opole ghetto where Lilli’s parents lived.
(To the left) This is a picture of Lilli Tauber and other children in Brighton, Great Britain, in 1939. (Above) This is Harry Watts, a family friend of Lilli’s. (Above) Lilli Tauber and her brother, Eduard, take a picture together in 1927. (Above) This is a photo of Lilli Tauber in 1940.
(Below) This is Lilli Tauber’s uncle, Richard Schischa. (Ab0ve) This is Lilli’s grandmother Sofie Friedmann with her grandchildren, Eduard and Erika Sidon, his cousin. (Above) This is Johanna Schischa, with one of her close friends.
Politics -The type of government in Austria during the early nineteen hundreds was a federal democratic republic. -Their leader, or chancellor, was Kurt Schuschnigg.
Religion -In Austria, the religion with the most followers was Roman Catholicism. -In 1938, the Germans attacked, and took control of the Jews. They were punished for their beliefs, and many were held prisoner.
Housing -Although not all Jews were sent to concentration camps, many were forced to live in ghettos, just like Lilli Tauber’s parents. The rooms were very crowded due to the many people living in a single room. (Above) This is the room where Lilli Tauber’s parents lived. They shared this room with everyone else.
Education Education for Jewish children was the same as all the other children’s before the Germans invaded Austria. However, once the Germans invaded, the Jewish children were treated differently, and were forced to go to different schools. This happened to Lilli Tauber, who remembers a childhood friend who stopped talking to her overnight, and how her family’s treatment changed drastically.
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