Conditions Governing Access
Conditions Governing Use
Preferred Citation
Biographical / Historical
Scope and Contents
Contributing Institution:
Oskar Schindler Archives
Title: Cantor Leopold and Isabelle Szneer collection
source:
Szneer, Leopold
source:
Szneer, Isabelle
Identifier/Call Number: 2020.006.h.r
Physical Description:
2.38 Linear Feet
Date (bulk): 1906-1960
Condition Description: Good
Abstract: The collection contains scrapbooks, photographs, documents, and books, belonging to Cantor Leopold Szneer and Isabelle Szneer.
Parents, family, and friends of Leopold and Isabelle are featured prominently as well. In addition, the collection comprises
prayer books, and prayer clothing including a Tallit and Shabbat apron, as well as, a parochet, the curtain that covers the
Torah.
Language of Material:
English
, French
, Hebrew
.
Conditions Governing Access
This collection is open for research use.
Conditions Governing Use
There are no restrictions on the use of this material expect where perviously copyrighted material is concerned. It is the
responsibility of the researcher to obtain all permissions.
Preferred Citation
[Item title/description; Box number/Folder number] Cantor Leopold and Isabelle Szneer collection (2020.006.h.r), Oskar Schindler
Archive, Chapman University, CA.
Biographical / Historical
Cantor Leopold Szneer
Cantor Leopold Szneer was born on December 21, 1921, in Munich, Germany. From a young age, he knew he wanted to become a Chazzan
(Cantor). He studied chazzanut and performed as a soloist in his synagogue's choir. Nazism's rise to power threatened to end
his dream. His Jewish school was closed, he and other Jewish children had to attend public schools, where they were confronted
with anti-Semitism.
In 1935, Leopold left Munich to attend a theological seminary in Frankfurt. However, under Nazi pressure, it closed in 1938.
On November 9, 1938, Kristallnacht erupted throughout the country, Leopold was arrested and sent to Dachau concentration camp
at the age of sixteen. After spending five weeks, the Jewish Federation and Red Cross were able to free him because he was
underage.
On December 20, 1938, Szneer's parents placed him on a Kindertransport to Belgium. The transport was a rescue effort to get
Jewish children safely out of the country. His sister Ester got a visa to go to England in early 1939. His parents and another
sister, Hanna, stayed in Munich until July 1939, and later joined Szneer. Unfortunately, German troops invaded Belgium on
May 10, 1940, and the family was in grave danger once again.
The family hid in a dog shelter but were discovered and sent to the transit camp Malines. Since it was days before Rosh Hashana,
Szneer gathered his father and ten men to form a High Holiday service in a hidden bunk. Denounced by a fellow prisoner, Szneer
and the entire camp were ordered to confess who had dared to pray. Szneer stepped forward, and the S.S. officer warned him,
"Here we do not pray."
In the next years, Szneer was located in the Breendonck concentration camp, including a time of solitary confinement. Eventually,
with the help of the resistance, he escaped, joined the partisan, and returned to Brussels, hiding for nine months in a small
attic until the city was liberated by the Allies. Only then did Szneer learn that his parents had been murdered at Auschwitz
in early 1944.
In 1946, Szneer met fellow survivor Isabelle Lubinewski who he married a year later. In 1952 the couple came to Los Angeles,
United States, and in 1953 Cantor Szneer led his first High Holiday service in his new home. He led services throughout the
L.A. region and was cantor at Congregation Mogen David in Los Angeles for more than 20 years. He also held High Holiday services
at the Writer's Guild for 25 years.
The Szneers have worked with local universities, synagogues, and schools to further Holocaust studies. Cantor Leopold Szneer
passed away on May 26, 2016.
Isabelle Szneer
Isabelle Szneer was born in Brussels, Belgium, on May 26, 1924. Her parents Charles and Hinda Lubinewski, had emigrated to
Belgium after World War I. Her family was considered stateless because the Belgian government refused to grant them citizenship.
Following the Nazi German invasion of Belgium on May 10, 1940, the Lubinewski family attempted to flee to southern France
but were unable to escape. Compelled to register as Jews, the family experienced growing harassment and isolation. On August
3, 1942, Isabelle, then eighteen years old, received a summons to report immediately to the transit camp Malines for deportation.
If she failed to obey, her father would be taken in her place. Desperate to keep his family together, Isabelle's father devised
a solution. If his daughter immediately married a Belgian citizen, she would no longer be subject to the order. An 80-year-old
resident of a retirement home agreed to the sham marriage, and the ceremony took place the following day. Isabelle was spared.
Sometimes separated, the family would spend the ensuing years in a succession of hiding places. The support from the Belgian
resistance enabled the family to survive until liberation in September 1944. On March 16, 1947, Isabelle wed Leopold Szneer.
Isabelle Szneer passed away on November 26, 2019.
Scope and Contents
The Cantor Leopold Szneer and Isabelle Szneer Collection is arranged into four series, photographs, documents, books, and
Jewish religious objects. The bulk dates are from 1906 to 1960, and the majority of photographs and documents span from 1920
to 1949. The photograph series is organized into subseries based on the individuals featured prominently in the photo. The
photographs and scrapbooks depict Leopold Szneer and Isabelle Szneer in their adolescence and as young adults. The photographs
portray families, relatives, and friends of the Szneers. Locations include Munich, Germany; Brussels, Belgium; London, United
Kingdom; and Los Angeles, United States. The documents in this collection are mostly identification papers and passports and
notably, include naturalization documents that allowed the Szneers to live legally in the United States. The religious items
are prayer books and prayer clothing, including a Tallit and Shabbat apron. The bulk of religious items are from before World
War II and survived the war, and were passed on to Isabelle and Leopold by various family members. Also, the collection contains
a parochet, the curtain that covers the Torah.
Subjects and Indexing Terms
Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945)
Holocaust survivors -- History -- 20th Century
Jewish women in the Holocaust
Holocaust victims
Kindertransports (Rescue operations)
Breendonk (Concentration camp)
Dachau (Concentration camp)
Judaism--Ritual objects.
Stateless persons--Europe.
Kristallnacht, 1938
Jewish refugees--United States--History--20th century.
Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945)--Belgium.
Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945)--Germany--Munich.
Holocaust, Jewish ( 1939-1945)--Germany--Frankfurt am Main.
Szneer, Leopold
Szneer, Isabelle