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  1. Margot Cecile Heumann (pronounced HOY-man; February 17, 1928 – May 11, 2022) was a German-born American Holocaust survivor. As a lesbian, she was the first queer Jewish woman known to have survived Nazi concentration camps. When Heuman was ten years old, she and her younger sister were expelled from public school for being Jewish.

  2. Margot Claire Heinemann (18 November 1913 – 10 June 1992) [1] was a British Marxist writer, drama scholar, and leading member of the Communist Party of Great Britain (CPGB). Early life. She was born at 89 Priory Road, West Hampstead, London NW6.

    • Communist activism, trade union activism, fellow of New Hall, Cambridge
  3. Margot was born in 1920 in Mainz, Germany. She was the daughter of Fritz Heimann and Hilda Rothschild. She fled the country in 1938 and arrived in New York on 26 May 1938 aboard the "Washington". She married David Duhl. They had two daughters, Sherry (born 1944) being the eldest. David died in 1953. Margot remarried with Norton S Lansing.

  4. Margot Heumann. Born: February 17, 1928. Hellenthal, Germany. children. Bergen-Belsen. The older of two girls, Margot was born to Jewish parents living in a village close to the Belgian border. The Heumanns lived above their general store. Across the street lived Margot's grandfather, who kept horses and cows in his large barn.

  5. 18 de fev. de 2022 · Margot Heuman’s life story presents a familiar Holocaust story in some ways, but confounds expectations in others. Born in 1928 in Germany, Margot grew up in a middle-class family in...

  6. LANSING, SHERRY LEE (1944– ), U.S. entertainment executive and producer. Lansing was born in Chicago, Illinois, to real estate developer David and Margot (née Heimann) Duhl. Her mother, a German Jew, had escaped Nazi Germany at 17. When Lansing was nine, her father died after a sudden heart attack.

  7. 11 de mai. de 2022 · Summarize this article for a 10 year old. SHOW ALL QUESTIONS. Margot Cecile Heumann ( pronounced [ hɔʏman] HOY-man; February 17, 1928 – May 11, 2022) was a German-born American Holocaust survivor. As a lesbian, she was the first queer Jewish woman known to have survived Nazi concentration camps.