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Numerous stories have been written and information has been well-documented
about the diverse populations responsible for the growth of Tucson, AZ .
Included are the contributions and influences of native American
cultures, Spanish Conquistadors, Catholic missionaries, and early Anglo settlers - among whom were Jewish pioneers.
Descendants of conversos, those Jews who were forced to convert to Catholicism during the century of the Spanish Inquisition,
now live throughout the Southwest, including Tucson. They are questioning
their families' practice of Jewish customs and rituals.
During the twentieth century, thousands of Jewish families, who trace their
heritage back to Germany and the ghettos and shtetls of Eastern Europe,
have chosen to call Tucson their home.
Their parents, grandparents, and great-grandparents arrived in the industrial port
cities of the East and Gulf coasts in the late 19th and early 20th
centuries. Many continued across the continent to establish new
lives in all areas of the United States. Within two or three generations,
some of their children and grandchildren found their way to the American
Southwest. The migration of Jewish populations accelerated after
World War II. In spite of the harsh environmental conditions and
lack of air conditioning, thousands of people, including many Jews,
with bronchial and rheumatic diseases chose Tucson as their home.
To earn their livings, they opened businesses and provided services
for the growing population. In more recent years, descendants of Eastern
European Jewry have continued to arrive in the Arizona "Sunbelt" to enjoy
their retirement years. The most recent group of new Tucsonans trace
their Jewish heritage back to the U.S.S.R.
This is the story of one such family. In less than one century,
the descendants of Schmerko and Rochla Wiernik can trace the migration
of their family from Russian shtetls to many geographical areas in the
United States - including Tucson, AZ.
Welcome to the Wernick Family Record of Remembrance.
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Barbara and Irwin an e-mail message
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