George Brady
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George Brady, brother of Hana Brady (Bradova), was born in 1928, in Nove Mesto, Czechoslovakia. He is the son of Marketa and Karel Brady, and is a Holocaust survivor of both Theresienstadt (Terezin) and Auschwitz (Oswiecim, Poland).
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[edit] Early life and the Holocaust
Brady lived an ordinary childhood in interwar Czechoslovakia until March, 1939, when Nazi Germany took control of Bohemia and Moravia. After that, his family, who was Jewish, encountered increasing restrictions and persecution by the German occupiers. By the year 1942, Brady's parents had been separated from their children and sent to prisons and concentration camps. They perished in Auschwitz before the end of the Second World War. George and Hana stayed with an aunt and uncle (the uncle was not Jewish, and thus the couple was a "privileged" mixed-marriage and not subject to deportation) for a short time until they too were deported to Theresienstadt, a ghetto-camp not far from Prague, Czechoslovakia. George and Hana remained in Theresienstadt until 1944, when they were sent in separate convoys—George to the work camp and Hana to the death camp of Auschwitz. George survived Auschwitz, and after learning that his immediate family was dead, eventually immigrated to Canada.
[edit] Life after the Holocaust
Brady has made a living from the plumbing trade, which he learned in Theresienstadt. He established a plumbing company with another Holocaust survivor in early 1951 in Toronto, where he now resides. Brady later married and became a father to three sons, and much later to a daughter named Lara Hana.
[edit] References
- Karen Levine, Hana's Suitcase—A True Story. Albert Whiteman & Co., Morton Grove, IL., 2003.