We Refugees Archive

  • Istanbul, present Refuge Metropolis between Normality and Precarity 31
  • New York City in the 1930s and 1940s “If you can make it here…” 71
  • New York today Still a city of promise? 35
  • Istanbul since 1933 Rescue with Reservations 54
  • Paris in the interwar period Capitale de Refuge 73
  • Berlin since the 2nd World War Exile, Transit, Emergency Shelter 93
  • Palermo today City of Accommodation? 44
  • Vilnius 1939/40 A Garden of Eden in Times of War? 57
  • The Decision to Flee and Experiences of Flight 134
  • New Beginnings and Visions for the Future 255
  • Support Networks 168
  • Questions of Identity: Continuities and Ruptures 200
  • Experiences of Discrimination and Exclusion 124
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Vilnius, Refuge?

Among the more than 10,000 Jews who were stranded in Vilnius in the fall of 1939 there was the librarian and political activist Herman Kruk from Warsaw. His exceptional diary records and press reports sketch a mosaic of the heterogenous society of refugees in Vilnius since the beginning of the war.

Should I Stay or Should I Go?

Mustapha F. came to Sicily from Gambia. He had to spend several months in different reception camps until he came to Palermo. Since then he has been going to school, learning Italian and, like many others, working part-time (often several jobs and usually without an employment contract).

Next Level Bad Girl

Fatima D. goes to school and receives training as a musician at the conservatory. Her future dream is to become a singer and musician. Her wish came about through a spontaneous encounter with a drum teacher who saw her playing the djembé.

Fleeing through Poland

On 21 December, 1939, Chaim-Leyb D. was interviewed by the "Committee to Collect Material about the Destruction of Polish Jewry, 1939" in Vilnius, Lithuania.

No Man’s Land

On 8 February, 1940, Pese R. entered the office of the "Committee to Collect Material about the Destruction of Polish Jewry, 1939" in Vilnius, Lithuania in order to give an interview. She was one of many Polish Jewish refugees who had found shelter in Vilnius.

Escape to Vilnius – The Journalist Train

Shortly after the German attack on Poland on September 1, 1939, it was decided within the first week of the war that the Polish government was to be withdrawn eastbound as Warsaw was threatened. The Polish press, among them representatives of the Jewish Polish press, was to be rescued as part of the evacuation plans.

Night Shift

Emmanuel comes from Ghana and has lived in Palermo since 1992. In the 27 years he has worked in various professions. Emmanuel could no longer pursue his profession as an industrial mechanic in Palermo and took a job as a night watchman in a flower shop.

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