Schoolgirl who died in Holocaust, little known until last year, mourned in ceremony - Action News
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Schoolgirl who died in Holocaust, little known until last year, mourned in ceremony

More than two dozen relatives from around the world meet for the first time at a memorial ceremony for Karolina Cohn, a Jewish girl from Frankfurt who perished in the Holocaust more than 70 years ago.

Archeologists last year unearthed a silver pendant engraved with birthdate of Karolina Cohn

Members of the scattered Cohn family lay flowers after German artist Gunter Demnig put down four 'stumbling stones' in Frankurt on Monday to commemorate Jewish schoolgirl and Holocaust victim Karolina Cohn and her family. (Alex Grimm/Getty Images)

More than two dozen relatives from around the world met Monday for the first time at a memorial ceremony for Karolina Cohn, a Jewish girl from Frankfurt who perished in the Holocaust more than 70 years ago.

Four little brass plaques for Karolina, her sister and parents were laid in front of the Frankfurt location where the family lived before they were deported on Nov. 11, 1941, when Karolina was 12.

"It's pretty remarkable, that this little girl brought together this broken-up, fragmented family," said Mandy Eisemann, a relative from the United States, who took part in the ceremony and afterward laid pink roses on the shiny plaques known as Stolpersteine,or stumbling stones.

A replica of Karolina Cohn's pendant, displayed on Monday. (Arne Dedert/dpa via AP)

The story of Karolina's life and death had been all but erased by the Nazis, until archeologists last year unearthed a silver pendant engraved with her birthdate and birthplace at the grounds of the former Sobibor death camp in eastern Poland.

With the help of Nazi deportation lists, researchers identified Karolina as the owner of the amulet. It's almost identical to one belonging to famous Jewish diarist Anne Frank, though it's not clear if the two girls knew each other. Both were born in Frankfurt in 1929.

Mandy Eisemann from Dickerson, Md., mourns while carrying son Levi after German artist Gunter Demnig laid four 'stumbling stones' to commemorate Karolina Cohn and her family in Frankfurt on Monday. (Alex Grimm/Getty Images)

The triangle-shaped pendant was found by an Israeli-Polish archeologists' team under the ruins of a hut where the women's hair was shaved before they were led to the gas chambers.

It's not clear if Karolina was ever taken to Sobibor or if she gave the amulet to somebody else who brought it there. All traces of Karolina disappear after she and her family were deported to the Minsk Ghetto in late 1941.

Many relatives unaware of connection

After the pendant was linked to the German girl last year, a genealogist started tracking down family members and found about 40 relatives in Israel, the U.S. and South America. Many of them had never heard about Karolina and her family, but more than two dozen accepted an invitation from the Jewish Claims Conference to meet in Germany for the ceremony and a reunion.

"It's a heart-warming emotion to meet family who were strangers to us before today," said Barry Eisemann, Mandy'sfather. "But it's a heart-wrenching emotion ... to know that Karolina and the entire family perished in the Holocaust."

A detailed view of German artist Gunter Demnig's four 'stumbling stones' to commemorate Karolina Cohn and her family. (Alex Grimm/Getty Images)

Holding a replica of the pendant, Greg Schneider, vice-president of the Jewish Claims Conference, reminded the more than 100 participants atthe ceremony thatKarolina was one of 1.5 million children who were killed in the Holocaust.

"It's almost too painful to think about what was done to this girl," he told The Associated Press in a phone interview Sunday. "But we don't have the moral right to forget Karolina."