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Relatives of Romaschenko Helena

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Old 9th December 2005, 08:28
Kadehke Kadehke is offline
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Kadehke
I am looking for information about the grandmother of my husband. Her name is Helena Romaschenko who emigrated to Belgium. She lived in Ukraine and married a Belgian man (Corneel Dillen) on 05/05/1945, I believe in Germany.

Her fathers name was Wassil Romaschenko (don't know if the first name is written right), born in 1901. Her mothers name was Nadikow Anna, born on 14/11/1901 in Mariopol.

Is there anyone who can give me any information about her family. I presume that most of them already died.


you can email me at stamboom20@hotmail.com
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Old 24th January 2006, 20:13
Hannia Hannia is offline
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Was Helena (possibly given name Olena?) from Mariopol, the large city in Ukraine or one of the several same-name villages in Eastern or Western Ukraine?

Before starting any search in Ukraine it would be wise to have an exact place of birth.

Chances are excellent that Helena wrote home upon her arrival in Germany. POST CARDS IN KIEV ARCHIVES might be helpful in ascertaining exact place of origin.
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Part 1: Postcards Home: Postcards of Ukrainian Forced Labor Workers from Nazi Germany

In spring 1942, Germany began to draft occupied populations as forced laborers. SS General Sauckel, leader of the bureau in charge of this forced labor group, had visited Ukraine many times in order to establish a continuous flow of Eastern workers (Ostarbeiters) of both sexes between the ages of 15 and 60 years old. In total there were 20,000 forced labor camps spread across the Reich. The marketplaces for the sale of forced laborers (arbeitsamt) were set up in Germany, where workers from eastern countries were sold legally to the businessmen and farmers. The German authorities introduced a special brand-sign "OST" ("East") for "eastern workers," which they had to wear on the right side of the chest.

Collection R-4826, entitled "Letters from Soviet citizens deported to Nazi Germany for forced labor to their relatives in Kyiv oblast," has been in storage since 1945. During their period of residence in the Reich, Ostarbeiters were permitted to write their relatives in the Ukraine. Their letters, however, never reached their intended destinations. Instead they were directed into a secret archive and kept "under arrest" until the early 1990s, when the entire collection was finally declassified.

The collection of postcards contains the testimonies of Ukrainian, most of whom had been forcibly removed to Germany. The letters were typically written on special postcards that consisted of two parts. The first part had the address in Ukraine where it was being sent along with the Ostarbeiter's letter. The second part contains the return address filled in and was intended for a reply letter from Ukraine. There are also ordinary postcards without the additional reply card and ordinary letters on paper. Local authorities restricted the number of letters sent from Germany to two or three per month. The correspondence usually got past the German censors, even though it vividly describes the conditions in Germany, the kind of work, way of life, spare time, treatment of Ostarbeiters by the Germans, and relations with representatives of other nations (Frenchmen, Poles, Belgians, and others). Many letters are highly emotional as the writers express their longing to return home and concern about relatives and friends.

The collection's documents are organized by geographic district and settlement.

Gale - PSM - Catalog
http://www.gale.com/servlet/ItemDeta...pe=4&id=189856
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http://www.mifamilyhistory.org/dpcamps/belgium.html

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