Brno (1902-1932)
Before the War
Born on April 14, 1902, Elsa was the firstborn child of Eduard and Ema Skutecky, Moravian Jews. Elsa and her two siblings grew up in the flourishing city of Brno, Czechoslovakia. Czechoslovakia had gained its independence from the Austro-Hungarian Empire after World War I, and was composed of the

Elsa’s father owned a shipping business, and Elsa’s family led a life of privilege. With its independence in 1918, Brno also saw a surge in Czech schooling and culture. However, at the time of Elsa’s graduation, there were only 84 Czech-speaking schools in Brno. Still, Elsa was one of the many children to attend a German-language secondary school, from which she graduated in 1920. Her brother may have gone to the new Czech University, which opened in 1919. Elsa enjoyed time with her family, as well as time out on the town. Elsa would have done her food shopping in Brno’s market district, going to the fruit and vegetable markets on Na bastach Street and Novobranska Street.
Elsa had gotten married and moved with her husband to Bratislava. However, her stint in Bratislava was brief; the marriage failed and Elsa returned to Brno in 1926, where she opened a millinery shop. Like her father, Elsa was gifted in the art of enterprise.
Brno was quickly becoming a more heavily industrialized city in the beginning of the century. Its biggest industries were metalworking and textiles. However, Brno’s industries were hard-hit in the economic crisis of the 1930’s. World War II also disrupted business in Brno. Jewish businesses were reposed by the state and Czech businesses were diverted to war production; any resistance was suppressed.
Politics in Brno at this time foreshadowed the dark years to come. Various Czech parties (The Czechoslovak National Socialist Party, Czechoslovak Social Democratic Workers' Party, Communist Party of Czechoslovakia, Czechoslovak People's Party) contended for power between the years 1920-1935, each gaining its moment in the spotlight. However, in 1935 the German Sudeten Party gained a foothold; the influence of this party would lead to the occupation of Czechoslovakia by Germany in 1939.
Olomouc and Brno (1933-1942)
Occupied Bohemia-Moravia

Hitler had felt the right to annex Czechoslovakia, the population of which was 25% German, into the Third Reich. In 1938 Hitler issued the ultamatum that he would start a war in Europe unless the Sudetenland, the border province of Czechoslovakia that was heavily German, was annexed to Germany. In the year 1938, Sudentenland was ceded to Germany when the world powers signed the Munich Pact that agreed to Hitler’s demands in an attempt to avoid conflict. Still, Hitler invaded Bohemia-Moravia in 1939, and it became a German protectorate.

Many business owners in the former Czechoslovakia lost their livelihood under German occupation, and the Kulkas were no exception. The Germans started their restrictions on Jews. Beginning in 1938 Jews had to register their property, which made it hard to get the collateral needed to emigrate, even though the Nazis formally encouraged emigration.
Had Elsa wanted to write to a friend in Omoluc to ask about his condition, she would have had to pick her words carefully. This is because shortly after the occupation of Czechoslovakia in 1939, the SS imposed what it called “currency control” of mail.

The Kulkas were evicted on January 2, 1940. Elsa’s brother and sister, also in Brno, chose to emigrate to Palestine. Robert, however, wanted to try to stay in Brno to save the family business. A year later, Elsa was forced to sell the shipping business that her father started from scratch for only 200 Czechhhoslovak crowns—only $10.

Terezín (March-May 1942)
The Privileged Ghetto
As a Czech and business owner, Elsa was a so-called “privileged” Jew, meaning that she and her family got the “privilege” of being sent to the Thereinstadt ghetto in Bohemia-Moravia with other “privileged” individuals—those who had



Despite their dire situation, the captives of Terezín kept their morale up and maintained their cultural life. Intellectuals gave lectures, orating to packed buildings. Artists produced drawings and paintings. Composers and actors taught their art and gave performances. Terezín even had a library of more than 60,000 books. The Jews also continued to defy the Nazi’s will by revering Jewish laws, holidays, and customs.

Located off of significant railroad tracks, Terezín was not only a ghetto; it was a way station. Residency in Terezín was temporary for everyone unfortunate enough to be sent there: Beginning in 1942 Terezín deported Jews by the thousands every month to their deaths in eastern European death camps Majdanek, Treblinka, Sobibor, and Auschwitz-Birkenau.

Ossowa (May-September 1942)
Extermination Through Work

The Nazis used Jewish slave labor as the manpower to produce all sorts of goods for the German war effort. Concentration camps manufactured everything from uniforms to cars to bombs. Much of the work was pointless, serving no purpose other than “extermination through work”—a Nazi philosophy quite contrary to the deceptive phrase “arbeit macht frei” (“work will make you free”) that was emblazoned over the entrances to many concentration camps. The work at labor camps was hard, and the Jew slaves were expected to work in harsh conditions and given little or no food. Prisoners tried to get indoor work if they could since it wasn’t as strenuous and meant that they could sometimes steal little scraps from the workroom. Outdoor work entailed hard labor like stone hauling in any season or weather, every day. As a woman, Elsa wouldn’t have automatic assignment to lighter work. The Nazis were trying to work the Jews to death, no matter their gender.

Afterwards
Although Elsa didn’t survive the war, some very lucky Jews did. After Germany’s capitulation the concentration camps and ghettos were liberated. Many people went to DP (Displaced Persons) camps, some of which were horrifyingly on the same sites as ghettos had once been, where they received food, healthcare, and clothing. Their homes and money lost, their families slaughtered, the survivors of the Holocaust faced a new set of problems. Where could they go and how could they start their lives anew? With the resurgence of Zionism, some Jews were able to return to the Jewish homeland in Palestine. However, this was a British protectorate and Britain was very staunch about enforcing immigration quotas. Anti-Semitism raged through most of Europe, so some Jews sought asylum overseas. Jews went to the US and Canada, although immigration quotas for Jewish refugees were limited in these countries as well. The Dominican Republic accepted the largest about of Jews, and became a popular destination point. Other Jews went to Australia, New Zealand, South America, and a few even went to China. These Holocaust survivors would forever live with the scars, both physical and mental, of their horrible experience. Most have tattoos of serial numbers and vivid memories of murder. As they will always remember, it is important that we who follow them never forget the atrocities of the Holocaust, and work to make sure that this history is never repeated.