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A Well-Read Woman

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21. RR diary, May 5, 1941.

22. RR oral history, USHMM.

23. RR oral history, USHMM.

CHAPTER 4

1. Willingham, Jews in Leipzig, pp. 88–99.

2. RR oral history, USHMM.

3. RR oral history, USHMM.

4. Willingham, Jews in Leipzig, p. 100.

5. RR oral history, USHMM.

6. RR oral history, USHMM.

CHAPTER 5

1. Ruth Rappaport, “Curriculum Vita,” circa 1958, RRC, USHMM.

2. Email from Angela Ruider (of the Zurich City Archives) to author, September 9, 2014.

3. RR diary, April 25, 1939.

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4. RR diary, April 25, 1939.

5. RR oral history, USHMM.

6. RR diary, May 8, 1939.

7. RR diary, May 10, 1939.

8. “Unter der Fahne der Heilsarmee” [Under the Salvation Army Flag], annual report for 1938, Switzerland National Salvation Army Headquarters, Bern, Switzerland.

9. Richard Röschard to SHEK, November 22, 1938, records of the Schweizer Hilfswerk für Emigrantenkinder [Swiss Aid Society for Immigrant Children], J2.55#1000/1246#132*, Pj-Ric, Ruth Rappaport file, Swiss Federal Archives (in citations hereafter, the Schweizer Hilfswerk für Emigrantenkinder, Swiss National Archives, Bern, Switzerland, will be referred to simply as SHEK).

10. Jewish Women: A Comprehensive Historical Encyclopedia, s.v. “Nettie Sutro-Katzenstein,” by Sara Kadosh, accessed October 8, 2018, http://jwa.org/encyclopedia/article/sutro-katzenstein-nettie.

11. Ruth Westheimer, All in a Lifetime (New York City: Grand Central Publishing, 1987); “300 Kinder Aktion” file, 1938–1939, SHEK.

12. Letter from Dr. Bertha Keller to Richard Röschard, December 7, 1938, Ruth Rappaport file, records of SHEK.

CHAPTER 6

1. Lore Segal, Other People’s Houses (New York City: New American Library, 1964).

2. Letter from Richard Röschard to Dr. Bertha Keller, December 28, 1938, Ruth Rappaport file, records of SHEK.

3. Letter from Dr. Bertha Keller to Richard Röschard, January 2, 1939, Ruth Rappaport file, records of SHEK.

4. Letter from Richard Röschard to Dr. Bertha Keller, January 6, 1939, Ruth Rappaport file, records of SHEK.

5. Some refugee children in Zurich were restricted from attending public schools, although some schools were created specifically for them at orphanages and camps. See Elsa Castendyck, “Refugee Children in Europe,” Social Service Review (University of Chicago Press) 13, no. 4 (1939): p. 595.



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