Susanne Goldfarb Oral History Interview 1980 | Wisconsin Historical Society

Historical Essay

Susanne Goldfarb - Oral History Interview, 1980

Susanne Goldfarb Oral History Interview 1980 | Wisconsin Historical Society
EnlargeHolocaust survivor Susanne Hafner Goldfarb at her Madison residence.

Susanne Goldfarb, 1980

Holocaust survivor Susanne Hafner Goldfarb at her Madison residence. View the original source document: WHI 56769

Susanne Goldfarb was a survivor of the Nazi Holocaust who settled in Madison, Wisconsin, after World War II.

Susanne Hafner Goldfarb was born in Vienna, Austria, on February 17, 1933. She was the only child of a middle-class Jewish family. Nazi Germany annexed Austria in March 1938. Rising anti-Semitism and the threat of war prompted her family to flee their homeland in early 1939.

Six-year-old Susanne and her family left Europe on a luxury liner bound for Shanghai, China. They found refuge with more than 20,000 other European Jewish exiles in the Japanese-occupied sector of that city. The refugees were able to create a mulitfaceted Jewish community in Shanghai.It included commercial, religious, cultural, and educational institutions. Susanne attended synagogue, studied in Jewish schools, and belonged to a Zionist social club.

The Hafners eked out a living by delivering bread in their neighborhood, the Hongkew district. In May 1943, Japanese authorities introduced anti-Semitic measures. The Hongkew district turned into a Jewish ghetto and all Shanghai Jews were restricted to this area.

As World War II unfolded, Shanghai came under increased assault from U.S. warplanes. Susanne's family worked as air raid wardens and suffered the terror of heavy bombing attacks. In August 1945, the U.S. liberated the Hongkew Ghetto. Soon after, China descended into civil war. In 1949 the Chinese Communists came to power. The Hafners, fearing persecution under the communist regime, immigrated to Israel in January 1949.

In 1953, the Hafners immigrated to New York City. They lived in an insulated community of Jewish refugees until 1969. In New York Susanne met Dr. Stanley Goldfarb, whom she married in 1963. The Goldfarbs moved to Madison, Wisconsin, in 1969. Susanne worked with the University of Wisconsin's Office of Foreign Students and Faculty until her death in June 1987.

Susanne Goldfarb, Oral History Interview

Listen to Susanne Goldfarb tell her story to the Wisconsin Historical Society interviewer.

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Hear the stories of 22 Holocaust Survivors and two American witnesses interviewed between 1974 and 1981.