Home No Child's Play
Claudine Schwartz-Rudel was seven years old when she fled from Paris to Southern France with her parents. Before they left Paris, Claudine's parents gave her a doll named Colette opening Tens of thousands of Jews sought shelter in lofts, cellars, bunkers, sewers, and similar places. Many equipped themselves with forged papers, while children were often concealed with Christian families. The survival ratio was low: most fugitives were discovered and murdered. The number of Jews who survived by going underground is estimated in the thousands.
Before the War
In the Shadow of the War
Ghettos
In Hiding
Toward a New Life
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chessboard

Herbert Odenheimer

Herbert Odenheimer, today Ehud Loeb, a Holocaust survivor who was a ward of the children’s home at Chateau Chabbanes in France during the war, visited the “No Child’s Play” exhibition when it first opened. He was particularly drawn to the chessboard which seemed strangely familiar to him. The board was signed at the bottom right-hand corner with the name “Herbert”.  A telephone call made to the OSE in France – a Jewish relief organization that ran the home – verified that there had been only one Herbert at Chateau Chabannes during the war.  Loeb was astonished to realize that the chessboard he had made as a child was, so many years later,  part of the “No Child’s Play” exhibition at Yad Vashem. Throughout his life, Ehud Loeb has been involved in the art world. He is the former registrar at the Israel Museum in Jerusalem, where he lives today.

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