Ernest G. Heppner

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  • Original author: USHolocaustMemorialMuseum
  • Created Date: 03 Aug 2009
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  • Page views: 2,049 total (17 this week)

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Ernest G. Heppner

| Breslau, Germany

Ernest was one of three children born to a Jewish family in the commercial city of Breslau, which had one of the largest Jewish communities in Germany. His father, a World War I veteran, owned a factory that made matzah, the unleavened bread used during the Jewish holiday of Passover. Ernest was 12 when Hitler took power in 1933.

1933-39: I often got in trouble at school because people called me names. "Christ-killer" and "your father kills Christian babies for Passover" were common taunts. Many thought the Nazis were a passing political fad but by 1935 their laws were menacing. Signs appeared declaring, "Jews are forbidden." In 1938, after our synagogue was burned (during Kristallnacht), we realized we had to flee Germany. Since my family could only get two tickets, Mother and I boarded a ship for Asia, leaving our family behind.

1940-44: I ended up in Japanese-controlled Shanghai, the only place refugees could land without a visa. There, as a volunteer driving a truck for the British army's Shanghai Volunteer Force, I got meals and was better off than many other refugees. After Pearl Harbor, in December 1941, conditions among the city's refugees worsened--American relief funds, the refugees' lifeline, could not reach Shanghai. In 1943, under pressure from Germany, the Japanese set up a ghetto.

Ernest spent two years in the Shanghai ghetto before the city was liberated in 1945. After the war, he worked for the U.S. Air Force in Nanking, China, for several years, and later emigrated to the United States.  

    Describes the Shanghai ghetto and its Japanese overseer
Personal stories
 
 
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