2025 is the 80th Anniversary of the end of World War 2, the end of Nazi Germany and the end of the Holocaust.
Here are some of the Victims of
the Germans (Jews, Non-Jews, Slavs, Homosexuals, Jehovah’s Witnesses, Roma and
Sinti, etc.)
Each Victim was a Person who a
Family and a Story.
Karl Stojka
Born: April 20, 1931 in
Wampersdorf, Austria
Karl was the fourth of six
children born to Roman Catholic parents in the village of Wampersdorf in
eastern Austria. The Stojkas belonged to a tribe of Roma ("Gypsies")
called the Lowara Roma, who made their living as itinerant horse traders. They
lived in a traveling family wagon, and spent winters in Austria's capital of
Vienna. Karl's ancestors had lived in Austria for more than 200 years.
1933-39: Karl grew up used to
freedom, travel and hard work. In March 1938 his family's wagon was parked for
the winter in a Vienna campground, when Germany annexed Austria just before his
seventh birthday. The Germans ordered his family to stay put. Karl's parents
converted their wagon into a wooden house, but he wasn't used to having
permanent walls around him. His father and oldest sister began working in a
factory, and Karl started grade school.
1940-44: By 1943 Karl's family
had been deported to a Nazi camp in Birkenau for thousands of Roma. Now they
were enclosed by barbed wire. By August 1944 only 2,000 Roma were left alive;
918 of them were put on a transport to Buchenwald to do forced labor. There the
Germans decided that 200 of them were incapable of working and were to be sent
back to Birkenau. Karl was one of them; they thought he was too young. But his
brother and uncle insisted that he was 14 but a dwarf. Karl got to stay. The
rest were returned to be gassed.
Karl was later deported to the
Flossenbürg concentration camp. He was freed near Roetz, Germany, by American
troops on April 24, 1945. After the war, he returned to Vienna.
He died in 2003.
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