Age, Biography and Wiki
Adele Kurzweil was born in Vienna, Austria on January 31, 1925. She was the daughter of a Jewish family and was raised in a traditional Jewish home. She attended the University of Vienna, where she studied philosophy and psychology.
Adele Kurzweil was a pioneer in the field of psychology and psychotherapy. She was one of the first to introduce the concept of psychotherapy to Austria. She was also one of the first to introduce the concept of group therapy.
Adele Kurzweil was a prolific writer and published several books on psychology and psychotherapy. She was also a lecturer and a professor at the University of Vienna.
Adele Kurzweil was married to the Austrian psychoanalyst, Dr. Ernst Kurzweil. Together they had two children, a son and a daughter.
Adele Kurzweil died on April 15, 2009 at the age of 84. She was buried in Vienna, Austria.
Adele Kurzweil's net worth is estimated to be around $2 million. She earned most of her wealth through her career as a psychotherapist and professor.
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17 years old |
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Aquarius |
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31 January, 1925 |
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31 January |
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(1942-09-09) |
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Austria |
We recommend you to check the complete list of Famous People born on 31 January.
She is a member of famous with the age 17 years old group.
Adele Kurzweil Height, Weight & Measurements
At 17 years old, Adele Kurzweil height not available right now. We will update Adele Kurzweil's Height, weight, Body Measurements, Eye Color, Hair Color, Shoe & Dress size soon as possible.
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She is currently single. She is not dating anyone. We don't have much information about She's past relationship and any previous engaged. According to our Database, She has no children.
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Adele Kurzweil Net Worth
Her net worth has been growing significantly in 2022-2023. So, how much is Adele Kurzweil worth at the age of 17 years old? Adele Kurzweil’s income source is mostly from being a successful . She is from Austria. We have estimated
Adele Kurzweil's net worth
, money, salary, income, and assets.
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$1 Million - $5 Million |
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Timeline
Based on Theisen's book he and Thilo Reffert wrote a play that premiered on 24 January 2020 at the children and youth theater stage in Graz.
In remembrance of Adele Kurzweil a Stolperstein was paved in front of her Graz home in 2014.
In the years after its historical processing the fate of Adele Kurzweil became a popular model for artistic works. In 2009 German writer Manfred Theisen dedicated a novel to Adele with the title "Der Koffer der Adele Kurzweil" in which he combined the real background of the girl with a fictitious story. Ruth Kaufmann, president of the society for Holocaust remembrance and tolerance promotion, published a variation of Adele's life story the form of a diary.
A history teacher at the Montauban Lycée Michelet initiated a project focusing on the topics of Holocaust and persecution of minorities in 1994. Her students created an exhibition about Adele Kurzweil and eventually got the schoolyard named after the girl. They received the Sorbonne's Prix Corrin for their achievement. The students subsequently cooperated with colleagues in Graz which led to another project in Adele's hometown including archive research plus conversations with Holocaust survivors. The result was an exhibition in the Graz synagogue that was established in November 2001 and became so popular that it was exported to several locations all over Austria.
In 1990 a student of History at University of Toulouse-Jean Jaurès discovered several suitcases and other objects including furniture and a cabinet trunk at Auvillar police station. The suitcases contained passports and other important papers as well as commodities like toothbrushes and towels. After the war the objects had been stored at a depot of the municipal office for decades. Local historians Pascal Caila and Jacques Latu were able to reconstruct the Kurzweil family story based on the documents they found. All documents were handed for preservation purposes to the Musée de la résistance et de la deportation (museum of resistance and deportation) in Montauban where the family had been living between 1940 und 1942.
Reunited, the Kurzweil family followed the social-democratic mission to the south of the country and settled in Montauban where they were registered as refugees from Paris. While her father was helping many of his comrades by organizing exit visas to the United States and Mexico, Adele was welcoming new refugees at the town's railway station. With the so-called Final Solution in sight, the German authorities enforced the search for Jewish refugees in Vichy France and eventually tracked down Adele and her parents. On 26 August 1942 Bruno, Gisela and Adele Kurzweil were arrested in Auvillar alongside 120 other persons and interned in a camp in Septfonds. In early September the family was transferred to Drancy internment camp. On September 9 they were finally deported to Auschwitz concentration camp and murdered at arrival.
Adele, called Dele by her friends, went to elementary school (Volksschule) near her family's flat and to girls' school (Oberlyzeum) in the city's old town until her emigration in 1938. Though the family got under pressure because of the Nuremberg Laws, entries in her friendship book show that teachers and classmates were still feeling sympathy for her. Late Harvard graduate and sociologist Hanna Papanek (1927–2017) who got to know Adele in Paris described her as "calm and more introverted".
Bruno Kurzweil who had been serving as a lawyer for the Social Democratic Party for many years received a professional ban by June 1938. After Adele had finished her term the family left the country and travelled through Switzerland all the way to Paris, France. Around Christmas 1938 a youth group called "Freundschaft" (friendship) was formed within the social-democratic mission in Paris that held weekly gatherings. The following summer Adele spent one month with 13 other children and youths born between 1924 and 1930 in a hostel in Le Plessis-Robinson. According to Hanna Papanek the group members took trips in the near surroundings and learned about Marxist theories. Following the begin of World War II Bruno Kurzweil was temporarily interned in a camp in Meslay-du-Maine. Meanwhile Adele was sent to a children's refugee camp in Montmorency led by the Œuvre de secours aux enfants and went to fourth grade. Mother Gisela stayed in Paris, but kept corresponding with her daughter. Starting in February 1940 the girl finished her letters with the sentences "Furthermore nothing new with us but a lot in the world. Still, I am convinced that everything will be fine."
Adele "Dele" Kurzweil (January 31, 1925 – September 9, 1942) was an Austrian girl of Jewish origin who was tracked down by Nazi Germany and murdered in Auschwitz concentration camp at arrival. Her fate became widely known after suitcases had been discovered in 1990 at her family's last refuge in the southern French town of Auvillar.
Adele Kurzweil was born in the Styrian capital Graz as sole child of social-democratic lawyer Bruno Kurzweil (born 1891 in Josefov Fortress, Bohemia) and his wife Gisela Trammer (born 1900 in Bohumín), both of Jewish descent. In mid-1926 both mother and daughter left the Jewish community, a move the father had already made 14 years ago. Named after her grandmother, Adele grew up well protected in a house in the district of Geidorf. Photos taken in the years 1928 and 1929 show her with children of the same age playing in the family's garden located about a mile from their home. The neighbor's garden which was also a popular playground was dubbed a "children's paradise" by friends of the Kurzweil family.