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Hedi <I>Szmuk</I> Fried

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Hedi Szmuk Fried

Birth
Sighetu Marmaţiei, Municipiul Sighetu Marmaţiei, Maramureș, Romania
Death
19 Nov 2022 (aged 98)
Stockholms län, Sweden
Burial
Burial Details Unknown Add to Map
Memorial ID
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Born in 1924 in Sighet, in what was then Hungary and is now Romania, Hedi Fried survived Auschwitz as well as Bergen-Belsen, coming to Sweden in July 1945 with the boat M/S Rönnskär. She became a psychologist and advocate for Holocaust survivors. She created Cafe 84, a salon for survivors in Stockholm, and spoke widely about her experiences during the Holocaust, gathering some of the most common exchanges in "Questions I Am Asked About the Holocaust," published in English in 2019. "Your solidarity was boundless and no question too difficult to answer. You were brave, generous, dedicated and extremely wise," Christina Gamstorp, the director of Stockholm's Jewish museum, wrote in a remembrance. "Now your voice has fallen silent but not your message. It lives on in everyone who met you, in your texts, books, films and your belief that man is still good — and that it is possible to build a society free from antisemitism and racism, which threaten our entire existence." Fried, who had three children, died in November at 98.
Born in 1924 in Sighet, in what was then Hungary and is now Romania, Hedi Fried survived Auschwitz as well as Bergen-Belsen, coming to Sweden in July 1945 with the boat M/S Rönnskär. She became a psychologist and advocate for Holocaust survivors. She created Cafe 84, a salon for survivors in Stockholm, and spoke widely about her experiences during the Holocaust, gathering some of the most common exchanges in "Questions I Am Asked About the Holocaust," published in English in 2019. "Your solidarity was boundless and no question too difficult to answer. You were brave, generous, dedicated and extremely wise," Christina Gamstorp, the director of Stockholm's Jewish museum, wrote in a remembrance. "Now your voice has fallen silent but not your message. It lives on in everyone who met you, in your texts, books, films and your belief that man is still good — and that it is possible to build a society free from antisemitism and racism, which threaten our entire existence." Fried, who had three children, died in November at 98.

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