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Tove Bamberger’s Danish Rescue

29/10/23

29. October 2023

 

Talk

Tove Bamberger (née Schonbaum) was born in Copenhagen in 1934 and raised as a secular Jew until Hitler issued a deportation order for all Danish Jews. Tove will discuss her story of escape and return, her life in Sweden, and what her life was like after World War II in this Danish Rescue Stories Survive program

Tove Bamberger (née Schonbaum) was born in Copenhagen in 1934 and raised as a secular Jew. When the Germans invaded Denmark in April 1940, life in the country continued largely unchanged until September 1943, when Hitler issued a deportation order for all Danish Jews. Tove’s family, along with 95% of Danish Jews, fled to Sweden on a fishing boat. Tove attended a Danish school set up for the refugees in Sweden, and when the war ended her family returned to their home in Copenhagen. There, she married Niels Bamberger, who had experienced the same rescue and return. In 1955, after Tove’s high school graduation, Tove and Niels immigrated, settling in Washington Heights, New York, where they raised two daughters.

Tove will discuss her story of escape and return, her life in Sweden, and what her life was like after World War II in this Danish Rescue Stories Survive program.

This program is a part of the Museum’s series of programming around our upcoming exhibition Courage to Act: Rescue in Denmark, the Museum’s first exhibition for visitors 9 and up about the incredible story of the Danish Rescue. Doors open at 10:30 AM ET. The Museum is free with event attendance on Sundays until 5:00 PM with Jewish and Russian fare on offer from LOX Cafe.

Read more here 

Date: October 29, 2023 at 11:00AM (ET) (in-person & virtual)

Place: Edmond J. Safra Plaza 36 Battery Place, New York, NY 10280

Language: English

Price: Free with museum admission.

Arranged by: Museum of Jewish Heritage – A living memorial to the Holocaust (New York) & Consulate General of Denmark in New York

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