Bondi, Siegmund

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”.
Bondi, Siegmund
Date of birth 1877
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.
Mainz
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 Honduras
Fate perished

Bondi Siegmund (1877–1945) – an industrial trader

Born on 13 June 1877 in Mainz, Germany. The son of Marcus Bondi and Bertha née Hirsch. On 12 February 1909, he married Ernestine née Mosbacher. The spouses had four children: Hermann Samuel, Janette Yehudit, Felix and Bertha. Before the War, he lived in Vienna, and later emigrated to the Netherlands. He took up residence at 127 Amstellaan Street in Amsterdam.

At some point of the occupation he was probably hospitalized at the Central Israeli Hospital in Amsterdam. During the Jewish holy day of Yom Kippur, the Germans removed all the patients and transported them to the transit camp of Westerbork. From there, Siegmund Bondi was deported to the concentration camp of Bergen-Belsen. He died two days after the liberation of the camp, on 17 April 1945, due to illness.