Los Angeles Times

Nicholas Goldberg: My mother fled the Nazis. Now I've become an Austrian citizen. Here's why

My mother and grandmother fled Vienna in September 1938. I don't know whether they left by car or by train or whether it was day or night, but according to my grandmother's fading brown passport with the swastika on front, they crossed out of Nazi territory into France near Strasbourg on Sept. 14. They made their way to Boulogne-sur-Mer, where they embarked for Great Britain on the 17th. They ...
People watch' Zeituhr 1938' a projection on the facade of the Austrian Chancellery that retraces the dark moments leading to the Nazi takeover by Adolf Hitler in 1938, one day ahead of the 80th anniversary of Austria's annexation, on March 11, 2018, in Vienna, Austria.

My mother and grandmother fled Vienna in September 1938.

I don't know whether they left by car or by train or whether it was day or night, but according to my grandmother's fading brown passport with the swastika on front, they crossed out of Nazi territory into France near Strasbourg on Sept. 14. They made their way to Boulogne-sur-Mer, where they embarked for Great Britain on the 17th. They crossed the Channel and arrived at the seaside town of Folkestone. Five months later they sailed for the United States.

My grandmother, Margarete Beigel, was 35 at the time,

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