Abraham-Frank, Emmy

Surname, Name
The spelling of names follows “Spis imion żydowskich” [The list of Jewish first names] (Warszawa 1928), as it was the only means to avoid the doubling of people on the list. Exception was made for famous individuals whose names are widely known in another form than that proposed in “Spis”.
Abraham-Frank, Emmy
Date of birth 1901
Location
The country with which the applicant was associated. This is most often the country of which he or she was a citizen. Many cases involve a presumption of the applicant’s citizenship. People named on the list have been assigned a citizenship according to the day of the outbreak of the Second World War in their countries of origin or residence (in the case of Austria and Czechoslovakia these dates are respectively March 11 and September 28, 1938; in the case of Germany the date is prior to the NSDAP coming to power). Cases of citizenship deprivation by European countries in the years 1918–1939 have not been included. The last known citizenship has been used for stateless individuals.
Brandoberndorf
State
The country with which the applicant was associated. This is most often the country of which he or she was a citizen. Many cases involve a presumption of the applicant’s citizenship. People named on the list have been assigned a citizenship according to the day of the outbreak of the Second World War in their countries of origin or residence (in the case of Austria and Czechoslovakia these dates are respectively March 11 and September 28, 1938; in the case of Germany the date is prior to the NSDAP coming to power). Cases of citizenship deprivation by European countries in the years 1918–1939 have not been included. The last known citizenship has been used for stateless individuals.
DE
Document passport of Paraguay
Fate perished

Abraham-Frank Emmy Sara (1901–1943)

Born on 31 January 1901 in the German village of Nieder-Ohmen, to the Frank family. On 22 May 1922, she married a merchant by the name of Ferdinand Israel Abraham. They had five children: Berthold, Edith Paula, Beate, Bertram and Siegbert.

Initially, they lived in the German village of Brandoberndorf, then they emigrated to the Netherlands. They settled in the building at 5 Jekerstraat in Amsterdam, where they set up a nursing home.

Emmy Abraham was in charge of the kitchen and looked after the building, with the assistance of one of her daughters, Edith Paula.

In June 1943, the Abraham family was arrested and deported to the Westerbork transit camp. On 20 July 1943, Emmy, her husband and their four children (Edith Paula, Beate, Bertram and Siegbert) were deported to the Theresienstadt concentration camp, and later to the extermination camp in Sobibór. They died on 23 July 1943.