Before his death in 1939, at age 72, he helped bring more than 200 German-Jewish refugees to Los Angeles.
After that the community grew even more due to the influx of dozens of German-Jewish refugees.
(The recording is a translation of an interview with a German-Jewish refugee from the Second World War.)
In spring 1933 he joined the foundation of an international aid-committee for German-Jewish refugees.
The 1930s saw a growth of the Jewish community because of a small influx of German-Jewish refugees.
She was born in London, the child of two German-Jewish refugees from National Socialist Germany.
Safe in America, they cling to other German-Jewish refugees, gathering together to sing old, familiar songs.
Starting in 1957, it has been used as a synagogue and community center by local German-Jewish refugees.
Even in 1943, when there was enough going on in the world to distract a German-Jewish refugee like him, he published four books.
Most of the neighbors in those days, of course, were German-Jewish refugees from Hitler.