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・ Erika Glässner
・ Erika González
・ Erika Grahm
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Erika Heymann
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・ Erika Höghede
・ Erika J. Waters
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・ Erika Jo
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・ Erika Johnson


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Erika Heymann : ウィキペディア英語版
Erika Heymann

Erika Heymann (née Erika Lasallelie Geck, born Offenburg, Germany 1895, died Amsterdam April 6, 1950) was a German woman posthumously granted the status of Righteous Among the Nations by Yad Vashem for helping several Jews hide during the German occupation of the Netherlands.〔(''Righteous Among the Nations'', Yad Vashem ), accessed on September 15, 2014〕
==Early life==
Erika Heymann was born in Offenburg, Germany in 1895. She was the daughter of Adolf and Marie Geck, the third of five children. Erika’s father was a socialist and her mother a Catholic. Erika was not particularly religious and thought of herself as a lover of nature (naturfreunde in German).
In 1921 Erika Geck married Stefan Heymann, a veteran of the German Army in World War I and communist. Erika and Stefan lived in Mannheim, were active in civic and labor union affairs, and contributed articles for the communist daily on topics ranging from politics to the performing arts. Two children were born to the couple at this time: Sonja in 1922 and Dieter in 1927.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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