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Salzburg DP Camp
        in Austria, 1945-
      Salzburg; DP Hosp. (U.S. zone)
        - In the town of  Salzburg were five DP camps: Riedenburg (Machne Yehuda) on
        the "Neutorstrasse, Ecke Moosstrasse."
Camp Herzl (Franz-Josefs-Kaserne*) between Schrannengasse and Paris-London-Strasse.
Camp Mülln 6 DP in Müllner Hauptstrasse 38.
Beth (Beit) Bialik in the part of Salzburg, called Maxglan. See photos
Beth Trumpeldor in the part of Salzburg, called Gnigl, and
New Palestine (called later Parsch) in the Wiesbauerstrasse 9 in Salzburg-Parsch (Parsch is also the part of Salzburg)
 Other DP camps in the country (province) of Salzburg, outside the city of  Salzburg
        were called: Puch bei Hallein and
        Lager** GIVAT AVODA (in the Wallnerkaserne) opened in summer
        1946 in the small vollage called "Saalfelden" am Steinernen Meer.
*Kaserne means barracks; **Lager means camp
Salzburger Landesarchiv City Archive: Archiv der Stadt Salzburg mit Archiv des Salzburger Museums
        Carolino-Augusteum, Schloss,
        Museumsplatz 6, 
        5010 Salzburg
 Erzbistum Salzburg, Konsistorialarchiv,
        Kapitelplatz 2, 
        5010 Salzburg
 Erzabtei St. Peter, Archiv, St. Peter,
        Postfach 113, 
        5010 Salzburg
 Universität Salzburg, Universitätsarchiv, 
        Residenzplatz
        1, 
        Postfach 505, 
        5010 Salzburg
 UNRRA/IRO
        Homes for Children
      Salzburg
        photos, http://www.stadt-salzburg.at 
        Photos
        outside of Salzburg
                
                
FL Salzburg Kurhaus bombed ruins
      
Important history: 3,500 Ukrainians (2,000 Poles) protested with 5 days of hungar strikes, silent mourning, religious services and hymns prepared for martydom because 130 had been evicted from the camp for refusal to go before pro-Soviet screening commission to give info which may have endangered their loved ones back home. Screenings were cancelled (Wyman, p.59).,
 Some Ukrainian documentation at Shevchenko Scientific Society Library http://www.shevchenko.org/
        Jews were  in Salzburg camp also.
 Hi Olga,
        I found your website about DP Camps in Austria and read it with great interest.
        I lived in Rositten Kasserne in Salzburg for five years, ending in August, 1951, when my family  emigrated to the U.S.  I was six years old at that time.  I returned to Salzburg and found Rositten Str., and asked about a refugee camp in the area in the late 1940's and was told that there was indeed a camp at this site.  It is now a very stylish townhouse complex. 
I have memories of going to kindergarten in the camp and attending first grade at Reis Schule in Salzburg. Also, I recognize the names of Steiermark and Parsch, as my family told me that we also lived there at one time. If you have any info about Rositten Kaserne, I'd like to know. Thank You, Irmgard Kauk Spencer
 9/27/05 
        Olyu....My mother, Salomea Drozdowska was in a displaced persons camp in Salzburg. She was from Ukraine...Lviv to be exact. Can you guide me on how I might find any information about my mother, who is now 94 years old and can't remember anything? I would truly be grateful for any advice you can give. I will be in Salzburg in November and would like to get whatever information I can then. Best regards....
        Andriy J. Semotiuk, semotiuk@ aol.com 
 12/19/05
        Hello Olga, 
        I am attaching  scans of two watercolour sketches done in 1946 at Lager
        Parsch. These were brought to UK post-war by my late Austrian Mother-in-Law.
        As you can see the artist was quite accomplished. If you could point
        me towards any information regarding the artist or the time I would be
        most grateful, maybe one of your contacts would recognise them. One of
        the sketches shows what appears to be a memorial with Hohensalzburg in
        the background. The other shows an insect band which I find familiar
      - probably from my childhood.
Best Regards, David Harri, email: david@vertexplus.co.uk
10/23/06
4/5/11  wrote:
        French:
        Bonjour Madame 
        J'ai découvert à la mort de papa, des lettres d'un monsieur
        GRESNOW Alex
        il vivait avec sa famille au camp numéro 7 à Salzburg
        (juin 1949)
         je pense que le petit enfant sur la photo de Saalfeden est son fils :j'ai
        une photo ou la ressemblance est frappante. Mon papa Ivan Kononow était
        Ukrainien il a était fait prisonnier à Dnipropetrovk
        en mai 1942 il avait 16 ans A la libération des camps ( il ne nous
        a jamais dit ou il était
        détenu ) il s'est engagé dans la légion étrangère à Innsbruck
        sous le nom de komonoff Valentin d'origine Polonaise J'ai des documents que
        j'aimerai partager , j'aimerai beaucoup retrouver des gens qui l'on connu
        ,ainsi que alex GRESNOW et Alex KAGASECHEK qui l'a suivit à la légion
        je vous remercie pour tout ce travail que vous faites ;vous donnez envie
        de retrouver ses origines
      
Computer Translation to English: 
        Hello Madam
        J' discovered with death of dad, letters of a Mr GRESNOW Alex he lived with
        his family with the camp number 7 in Salzburg (June 1949)  I think that
        the small child on the photograph of Saalfeden is his son: j' have a photograph
        and the resemblance is striking. My dad Ivan Kononow was
        Ukrainian he was made prisoner with Dnipropetrovk in May 1942 when he was
        16 years old. With the release of the camps (it us forever known as or it
        was held) he was engaged in the foreign legion with Innsbruck under the name
        of Komonoff Valentine of origin Polonaise J' have documents that j' will
        like to divide, j' will like much to find people who l' one known, like Alex
        GRESNOW and Alex KAGASECHEK who l' has followed to the legion I thank you
        for all this work which you made; you give desire for finding its origins
      
Alain HEYRAUD helainheyraud@wanadoo.fr
RE: Archpriest Vitaly Sahaydakivsky,
      My grandmother was a Polish DP of Ruthenian ethnicity who met her husband in a Salzburg DP camp. They were married in 1947 in an Orthodox Christian wedding conducted  by Archpriest Vitaly Sahaydakivsky, who was later an important figure in the Ukrainian Church in America. I am trying to track down their marriage certificate, if you have any ideas about how to do this I would be very grateful! All my very best,
Follow up: 8/11/2017
      Thank you for your kind reply. I wrote to the Landesarchiv a few days ago, and they told me to write to the Salzburg Standesamt (civil registry), who then told me that if it was an Orthodox wedding, I should write to either the Romanian or the Russian church in Salzburg. So I found an email address for the Russian church and have written to them, although I'm not certain whether Fr. Vitaly Sahaydakivsky would have been within the ROCOR jurisdiction in 1947 -- he later helped found a Ukrainian church in America which I think was independent of the official UOC (http://orthodoxhistory.org). 
This is the email address I used: standesamt@stadt-salzburg.at
      Full address:
        STADT:SALZBURG Magistrat, Einwohner- und Standesamt 
        Mirabellplatz 4 
        Postfach 83 
        5024 Salzburg 
        Tel:  +43 662 8072 3513 
        Fax:  +43 662 8072 2060 
      Web: www.stadt-salzburg.at 
      Alexis A 
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