Marģers Vestermanis

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Marģers Vestermanis
Born (1925-09-18) 18 September 1925 (age 98)
CitizenshipLatvian
Alma materUniversity of Latvia
Known forFounder of the museum Jews in Latvia
SpouseHava Vestermane
AwardsOrder of the Three Stars (2006)
Austrian Holocaust Memorial Award (2015)
Scientific career
FieldsHistory of Latvia

Marģers Vestermanis (born 18 September 1925) is a Latvian Holocaust survivor, historian, founder and former director of the museum Jews in Latvia.

Life[edit]

Youth and World War II[edit]

Marģers Vestermanis was born in Riga into a Latvian Jewish, German-speaking family as the youngest of three sons of a merchant and manufacturer.[1] He attended the Riga German Primary School No. 10 until 1933, and was later a student of the private, German (until 1934) and Latvian-language Jewish private gymnasium Ezra. In addition to that Vestermanis received religious education from a rabbi at the age of 6 until he turned 15.[1]

His father had most of his possessions confiscated by the Soviet authorities after Latvia's occupation in 1940. Upon the arrival of the Wehrmacht after the Nazi occupation of Latvia in 1941, the family was taken to the Riga Ghetto, where Marģers had to work as a homemaker, assisting the underground resistance movement of the ghetto at the same time. All members of the family and relatives, except Marģers, were killed in the Rumbula massacre in late 1941. After the ghetto was closed in 1943, he was interned in the Kaiserwald concentration camp. He was subjected to forced labor at the SS-Truppenübungsplatz Seelager and the neighboring camps Poperwahlen (Popervāle) and Dondangen (in Dundaga).[2] Sent on a death march towards Liepāja in late 1944, he was able to escape into the woods nearby Ugāle, where he later joined a group of Soviet partisans, with whom he spent the rest of the war.[1][3]

After World War II

After the war Vestermanis returned to Riga and married a school acquaintance, medical student Hava Šneura in 1949. He studied history in the Latvian State University and later worked in the Latvian State Historical Archive. He started to research the history of Latvian Jews, being able to conduct full-time research after the start of the process of the restoration of the independence of Latvia in the late 1980s. He organized the first gathering of Holocaust survivors of Riga in November 1988, and a year later in 1989 he founded the museum "Jews in Latvia", the first institution dedicated to Jewish history in Latvia since WWII, serving as its first director.[4] Until 1996, when the first permanent exhibition was unveiled, the museum worked only as a research center.[5]

In 1998 Vestermanis was appointed to the Commission of Historians at the Chancellery of the President of Latvia, which researched topics connected the politics of Nazi and Soviet occupation regimes on Latvia.[6] He has published a number of books and research papers about the history of the Jews and the Holocaust in Latvia, as well as worked as a consultant on Latvian documentaries and films dedicated to these topics (e.g. The Mover by Dāvis Sīmanis in 2018). He has been appointed as doctor honoris causa of the Latvian Academy of Sciences.[7]

Awards[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b c Margers Vestermanis: Versuch einer Selbstbiographie. In: Shalom. Das europäische jüdische Magazin, Heft Herbst 2000, accessed on May 1, 2014
  2. ^ "Data sheet".
  3. ^ "Eju tumšā mežā kā mājās - Rīgas Laiks ("Going into a dark forest like being home" - Interview with Marģers Vestermanis)". www.rigaslaiks.lv (in Latvian). 2017-01-01. Retrieved 2019-02-23.
  4. ^ "Museum "Jews in Latvia" | History of the museum". www.ebrejumuzejs.lv. Retrieved 2019-02-23.
  5. ^ "A legend of Latvia's Jewish community celebrates his 90th birthday". www.baltictimes.com. Retrieved 2019-02-23.
  6. ^ "Commission of Historians | Website of the President of Latvia". www.president.lv. Archived from the original on 2019-02-19. Retrieved 2019-02-23.
  7. ^ "Doctors honoris causa of the Latvian Academy of Sciences". Latvian Academy of Sciences. 2017-03-30.
  8. ^ Cornelius, Nadja. "Ein seltener Mensch".
  9. ^ "Par Triju Zvaigžņu ordeņa piešķiršanu". LIKUMI.LV (in Latvian). 2006-10-12. Retrieved 2019-02-23.
  10. ^ Latvian Academy of Sciences: Yearbook 2010–2011. Latvijas Zinātņu akadēmija, Riga 2011, S. 98.
  11. ^ "A legend of Latvia's Jewish community celebrates his 90th birthday". www.baltictimes.com. Retrieved 2016-01-28.