Contribute to David van Stratum

What would you like to contribute

Herdenk David van Stratum

David van Stratum

Groningen, – Midden-Europa,

Reached the age of 25 years

Occupation: Presser

Stories

The fate of David van Stratum, his parents Mozes and Engeltje van Stratum and his sister Martha.

David van Stratum, born 8 September 1918, was a son of Mozes van Stratum and Engeltje Simmeren. He was unmarried and worked as presser in the clothing industry in Groningen. With his parents and elder sister he lived at Winschoterdiep 25 in Groningen City.

Early October 1942, the Germans held large-scaled round-ups on Jews, also in Groningen, whereby David van Stratum, his parents Mozes van Stratu…

Read more

David van Stratum's death certificate

David van Stratum died on 15 December 1942 in Reichsautobahnlager Annaberg, Upper Silesia, Germany (today Poland).

The official cause of death: body decay (allgemeine Körperverfall).

Source: the official death certificate issued by German authorities (Standesamt).

Read more

Mozes van Stratum and his family

In addition, Jokos files (numbers 60518, 54275) on this family or other family members are at the Amsterdam Municipal Archive. Access is subject to authorization from the Stichting Joods Maatschappelijk Werk.The Jokos files reveal that a claim was lodged for compensation for valuables surrendered to the Lippmann-Rosenthal looting bank (L-claim, number 11646/15956).

Read more

The death of David van Stratum

Research into the wartime civil registries of one of the civil registry offices in Upper Silesias (Poland) discovered many records that corresponded to deaths of inmates from the "Reichsautobahnlager Annaburg" and "Zwangsarbeitslager Niederkirch" camps.

A certificate of death for David van Stratum as discovered there, stated that he died on 15 December 1942  in Camp Annaberg. In it was mentioned a…

Read more

The Cosel period.

The period from 28 August to 12 December 1942 was known as the so-called Cosel period. Deportation trains  made a stopover at the freight station of Cosel, located 80 km west of Auschwitz. During that stop, boys and men who were considered fit for work by the Germans, were usually forcibly separated from their families and taken off the train and put to work in the surrounding labor camps of Upper

Read more

Address & residents

Family

Other family members