 
              
              
            Julia and Michael Nelki, 1954
 
              
              
            Alice Witte, née Nelki
 
              
              
            Fenner Brockway
 
              
              
            Bertha (Beate) Marcus, née Russo
 
              
              
            Mathilde Russo
 
              
              
            Isaak Russo
 
              
              
            Jakob Julius & Dorothea (Koch)
 
              
              
            Fritz Nelki with his dad Hermann - WW1
 
              
              
            Ernestine with her youngest child, Wolf, my dad
 
              
              
            Jakob Julius Nelki
 
              
              
            Louis Nelky, my great great grandad
Erna Nelki, 1930, my mum, aged 16
 
              
              
            Benno Russo
 
              
              
            Karl & Moritz Russo
 
              
              
            Fritz Nelki
 
              
              
            Hermann Nelki
 
              
              
            Clara & Benno Russo in 1936
 
              
              
            Alice Nelki, my aunt
 
              
              
            Lina née Halibut
 
              
              
            Jaques Russo
 
              
              
            Grete Swede, née Russo
 
              
              
            The children of Moritz & Marie Russo
 
              
              
            Elisabeth Russo
 
              
              
            Otto Nelki
 
              
              
            The Hungarian Nelkys
 
              
              
            Benno Russo, 1904
 
              
              
            Ernestine & Hermann Nelki on their wedding day 1890
 
              
              
            Clara Russo, née Jaffe
 
              
              
            Erna Nelki with Ziomek in Wernigerode, 1995
 
              
              
            Ernestine Russo, age 19
 
              
              
            Lilo Hardel
 
              
              
            Prof Nati Steinberger
 
              
              
            Max Nelki, 1939
 
              
              
            Josef Nelky, Hungary
 
              
              
            Alice Nelki, killed in Riga
 
              
              
            Edith (née Nelki) & Siegfried Schmulewitz, murdered in Auschwitz
 
              
              
            Fritz - left with friend
 
              
              
            Gabi, Otto's wife
 
              
              
            Otto Nelki
 
              
              
            Klara & Karl Russo
 
              
              
            Leopold, Sara & their household
 
              
              
            Leopold & Sara Nelki
 
              
              
            Otto, aged 2
 
              
              
            Wolf
 
              
              
            Fritz - centre
 
              
              
            Ilse (Wolf's sister who died aged 10 in 1917) with Hedwig, her nanny
 
              
              
            Otto interned in Hutton, drawn by Eugen Hirsch
 
              
              
            Ilse (Wolf's sister who died aged 10 in 1917)
 
              
              
            Hans, Wolf's brother who died aged 3 of scarlet fever
This website is dedicated to archiving my father’s research about the family Nelki, and ensuring that my book Villa Russo: A Jewish Story (Villa Russo: Eine Deutsche Geschichte) is accessible.
Villa Russo
By Julia Nelki
My book, Villa Russo, brings together my father’s work on the family’s past and how our family was affected by the Holocaust. It centres on a Villa in former East Germany and our ongoing connection with the family who live there now. The link with, and support for communist East Germany and socialist ideas that survived in spite of how they had been interpreted, is a perspective often not told.
Villa Russo and other publications relating to the family can be purchased here.
Containing photographs, personal documents, newspaper articles and other media relating to the Nelki family.
Also an expanding section on Stolpersteine as the work grows.
Many of the Nelki photographs are interesting in themselves as a reflection of the times they were taken (many in the 19th/20th centuries).
Some have been restored by Andra Nelki.
Message from author Julia Nelki
Creator of the Nelki family website and author of Villa Russo.
Contact Julia here.
I’m glad you’ve found my website. Perhaps you stumbled across it. Stumbling stones – ‘stolpersteine’ – are powerful physical memorials to the Jews who were killed in the Holocaust or who had to flee. They are brass plaques set into the pavement in front of the last home the victims lived in before they were forced to leave. There are many for members of my family.
The family trees that I have created focus on my father’s side because that’s where most of the stories come from. They represent only a tiny portion of my family and other branches have their own tales to tell. Our origins are Ashkenazi (Jews from Germany and Eastern Europe) on one side, and Sephardic (Jews from Portugal and Spain) centuries ago on the other.
My parents, Erna (née Liesegang) and Wolf Nelki who was Jewish, were both political refugees from Berlin in the 1930s. They were idealists and as young adults they lived through an important period of history when socialism seemed a real possibility. Instead, their dreams of a fairer society were cruelly shattered by the rise of Nazi fascism after 1933. Barbarism took over, an organised, state-controlled barbarism such as had never been seen before. Many of my parents’ friends, as well as members of my dad’s family, were killed. Others became refugees.
As a result of the Second World War, my father started researching what had happened to all these people and in the process he traced his family back many generations, uncovering the effects on them, and on other Jews, of long-standing anti-Semitism. He became particularly interested in how poor Jews had survived when they had no civil rights or permission to work.
What shocked me was how, even after the war and after the collapse of communism in the East, the stories of what happened to Jews were covered up, suppressed. Perhaps it isn’t surprising. It must be hard for people, and whole communities, to face up to what they, or their parents’ generation, had allowed to happen.
And it’s still happening today: people seeking asylum, refugees and outsiders are often excluded, stigmatised and persecuted rather than welcomed, and the stories of their sufferings go untold, ignored or deliberately concealed.
 
             
            