Berta Bergman Explained

Berta Bergman
Birth Name:Berta Bergmann
Birth Date:10 May 1894
Birth Place:Sarajevo, Condominium of Bosnia and Herzegovina, Austria-Hungary
Death Date:15 January 1945 (aged 51)
Death Place:Jasenovac concentration camp
Death Cause:Murdered in the Holocaust
Alma Mater:University of Vienna
Occupation:Medical physician
Years Active:1918-1945

Berta Bergman (née Bergmann; 10 May 1894-15 January 1945) was a Bosnian Jewish physician and partisan. She is also well known for being the first woman to finish high school in Bosnia.[1]

Early life

Berta Bergman was born 10 May 1894 in Sarajevo, Austria-Hungary (modern day Bosnia and Herzegovina) to a family of German-speaking Jews. The eldest of four daughters, her mother Ernesta and her father Joseph were Ashkenazi Jews from Vienna. Both moved to Sarajevo during the Austro-Hungarian occupation of Bosnia as her father worked as a railway engineer for the Imperial Royal Austrian State of Railways.[2] Despite the family having a strong financial income, Bergman's mother vowed to secure a higher education for her daughters.[3]

The girls first attended gymnasium in Mostar to achieve this. Berta and her older sister Marija made headlines when in 1905, they became the first female pupils in Mostar Gymnasium.[4] In February 1912, the Croatian newspaper Narodna obrana published a report saying that Berta was the first female in Bosnia and Herzegovina to graduate from school.[5] She went on to study medicine at the University of Vienna, graduating in 1918. All her younger sisters would also receive their degrees. Her sister Marija became the first Bosnian woman to be awarded a doctorate.

Career

Bergman's career as a pediatrician took her across the newly established Kingdom of Yugoslavia, including Banja Luka and Mostar. After quitting her position in Banja Luka, Bergman was awarded money for her hard work and self-sacrifices. She then worked in Mostar where she became head of a successful children's polyclinic.[1]

Invasion and death

After the invasion of Yugoslavia by Nazi Germany in April 1941 and the establishment of the Independent State of Croatia, a fascist puppet state, on the territory which included Bosnia and Herzegovina, Bergman lost her job. Her sister Marija and Marija's family were deported to the Rab concentration camp, while the 49-year-old doctor Bergman joined the Partisan guerrilla resistance movement. She provided the Partisan fighters with medical care, supplies and first aid lessons. She was imprisoned twice; the capture on 15 January 1945 led to her deportation to Jasenovac concentration camp, where she was killed by the Ustaše.[6]

Notes and References

  1. Book: Husnija Kamberović . Bosna i Hercegovina 1941: Novi pogledi. 9 . Institut za istoriju . 2012 . Sarajevo. sh. 125–126.
  2. Web site: dr Berta J. BERGMAN - Partizansko spomen-groblje . 2024-07-02 . en-US.
  3. Danon. Cezar. Sjećanja . Glasnik Jevrejske zajednice Bosne i Hercegovine. February 2000. Sarajevo. sh. Jevrejski Glas.
  4. Web site: 123. godišnjica djelovanja čuvene mostarske gimnazije. 23 April 2016. 22 September 2016. sh. https://web.archive.org/web/20161020164255/http://dnevni-list.ba/web1/123-godisnjica-djelovanja-cuvene-mostarske-gimnazije/. 20 October 2016. dead.
  5. Book: Anita Dremel. Lada Čale Feldman. Lidija Dujić. Rada Borić. Sandra Prlenda. Maša Grdešić. Renata Jambrešić Kirin. Uzduž i poprijeko: brak, zakon i intimno građanstvo u povijesnoj i suvremenoj perspektivi. Centar za ženske studije . 2015 . Zagreb. sh. 107.
  6. Danon . Jakov . Stošić . Verica . 2010 . Memoari na holokaust Jevreja Krajine . sh . Banja Luka . Jevrejska opština Banja Luka . 185.