Emerich Roth

Emerich Roth, born 28 August 1924 in Sevlus in Czechoslovakia[1] (now Vynohradiv in Ukraine), is a Swedish-Czechoslovakian author, lecturer and social worker who has worked with spreading information about racism, violence and Nazi atrocities.[2][3][4]

Emerich Roth
Emerich Roth during the Göteborg Book Fair in September 2017

Biography

Roth grew up in Czechoslovakia with four younger sisters in a city of 15,000 inhabitants. When the Nazis arrived in the city, the city's 3,000 Jews were first forced to move to a makeshift ghetto, before the order came to move to "work for a shorter time in another country". After a several-day long train transport in overcrowded livestock carts without water and food, the train arrived at Auschwitz-Birkenau.[5]

Roth's mother and two of his little sisters Magdalena, 12, and Judit, 10, were immediately brought to the gas chambers, while his father, his sisters Edit, 17, and Elisabeth, 15, and Emerich himself were taken to labor camps. His father was murdered during one of the death marches at the end of the war, and his sister Edit died in another camp.

Roth was an inmate in five different concentration camps, and only he and his sister Elisabeth survived. After the war, Emerich was in bad shape and was 175 centimeters long and weighed only 34 kilos. He was in the hospital and received a letter from someone with the same last name, which was his cousin. The letter stated that his sister had survived and was in Sweden.

He came to Sweden in December 1950 and trained and worked for 30 years as a social worker.[6] During these years he chose not to tell about his experiences, but was greatly influenced by a Nazi demonstration in Stockholm in 1992.[5]

He has since 1993 visited at least 1,600 schools around Sweden with the aim of countering racism. He is one of the founders of the Holocaust Survivor Association. He founded the nonprofit Emerich Foundation in 1994, which aims to encourage young people to do "activities that counter violence and xenophobia and pave the way for a pleasant and humane school environment".

Emerich Roth has published several books on the theme of violence and racism, including Emerich är mitt namn: Hatet, förnedringen, kärleken (Emerich's My Name: Hate, Humiliation, Love). He has also starred in many video-recorded documentaries and educational films.

Awards

He has received several rewards for his work on informing about racism and abuse.

References

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