George Brady (Holocaust survivor)
George Brady | |
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Born |
Nové Město na Moravě, Czechoslovakia | February 9, 1928
Occupation | businessman, plumber |
Known for | Holocaust survivor |
Relatives | Hana Brady (sister) |
George Brady, O.Ont (born February 9, 1928) is a Holocaust survivor of both Theresienstadt (Terezin) and Auschwitz (Oswiecim, Poland), who became a Canadian businessman and was awarded the Order of Ontario.
Early life and the Holocaust
The son of Marketa and Karel Brady, and brother of Hana Brady, George Brady lived an ordinary childhood in interwar Czechoslovakia until March 1939, when Nazi Germany took control of Bohemia and Moravia. After that, his Jewish family 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 Nazi concentration camps. They perished in Auschwitz before the end of the Second World War. For a short time George and Hana stayed with an aunt and uncle; he was not Jewish, and thus the couple was a "privileged" mixed marriage and not subject to deportation. The children were deported during May 1942[1] to Theresienstadt, a ghetto-camp not far from Prague, Czechoslovakia, where George shared kinderheim L417 with around forty boys including Petr Ginz and Yehuda Bacon.
George and Hana remained in Theresienstadt until 1944, when they were sent in separate convoys to Auschwitz—George in September to the work camp and Hana in October, when she was soon executed in the gas chamber.[1] George survived Auschwitz because of his trade as a plumber.
Brady escaped during a death march to Germany during January 1945, the same month Auschwitz was liberated.[1]
Life after the Holocaust
Brady traveled by a long route until May 1945, when he reached his aunt and uncle in Nové Město and learned from them that his parents had died in Auschwitz.[1] He "escaped" Czechoslovakia to Austria in 1949 and moved to Toronto, Canada, in 1951.[1]
Brady has made a living from the plumbing trade, which he learned in Theresienstadt. Early in 1951 he established a plumbing company in Toronto with another Holocaust survivor.[1] He married and became a father to three sons and a daughter, Lara Hana Brady. He resides in Toronto.
Larry Weinstein's movie Inside Hana's Suitcase premiered in 2008 and won several festival awards.
Order of Ontario
Brady was made a member of the Order of Ontario in 2008.[2]
References
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 "Timeline". Hana's Story. Brady family (hanassuitcase.ca). Retrieved 2015-07-27.
- ↑ "2008 Appointees". Ontario Ministry of Citizenship and Immigration. Retrieved May 20, 2012.
- Other sources
- Karen Levine, Hana's Suitcase: A True Story (Toronto: Second Story Press, 2002), OCLC 48988742; U.S. edition 2003, Morton Grove, IL: Albert Whitman & Co., ISBN 0807531480, LCCN 2002-27439
External links
- Hana's Story (Brady family website)
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