Paula Mermelstein, also known as Paulette, was the older child of Frieda and Max Mermelstein. She was born on January 10, 1934, in the bustling seaport of Antwerp, Belgium. Their father was a butcher, and although not rich, he was able to provide for his family’s needs.
Jews lived in Antwerp as early as 1526. Like the great majority of Antwerp’s 50,000 Jews, Paula’s parents were Eastern European immigrants who had left their native homelands to escape rising antisemitism and to live in the more tolerant society of Western Europe.
In the spring of 1940, Germany invaded Belgium, and the Mermelstein family escaped to France. However, France quickly came under German domination. Soon, the Nazis began rounding up Jews for deportation and death. For two years Paula and her family avoided capture, but eventually they were arrested and imprisoned at the Rivesaltes Internment Camp, where their stay was short.
Paula’s father managed to escape and join the Resistance, while Mrs. Mermelstein went into hiding in southwestern France.
Paula and her brother were sent to live at the children’s home in Izieu, France. The peaceful surroundings provided comfort and shelter for over 40 Jewish children whose lives had been disrupted by the war. However, the relative calm of the children’s home did not last very long.
On April 6, 1944, the Nazis raided the home and deported the children to Drancy Transit Camp. Paula’s mother was also arrested, probably because her address had been found in the raid on the children’s home. Paula, her brother and their mother were reunited at Drancy. On May 20, 1944, they were deported to Auschwitz Death Camp in Poland. Immediately upon arrival, they were sent to the gas chambers, where they were murdered.
Paula was 10 years old.
Paula was one of 1.5 million Jewish children murdered by the Nazis and their collaborators during the Holocaust.
A personal history from the Archives of the SIMON WIESENTHAL CENTER 1991-822 [001]