Difference between revisions of "Pankratz, Erika Tavonius (1908-2006)"

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  [[File:TavoniusErika1996.jpg|300px|thumb|right|''Erika Tavonius Pankratz, ca. 1996  
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[[File:TavoniusErika1996.jpg|300px|thumb|right|''Erika Tavonius Pankratz, ca. 1996'']]    Erika Tavonius Pankratz: medical doctor; born 7 December 1908 in [[Muntau (Molotschna Settlement, Zaporizhia Oblast, Ukraine)|Muntau]], [[Molotschna Mennonite Settlement (Zaporizhia Oblast, Ukraine)|Molotschna Colony]], [[Ukraine|Ukraine]], to Dr. [[Tavonius, Erich A. (1872-1927)|Erich Tavonius]] and Margarethe Baumann Tavonius of [[Halbstadt (Molotschna Mennonite Settlement, Zaporizhia Oblast, Ukraine)|Halbstadt]] and Muntau. Many Mennonite families will remember hearing how their parents and grandparents were treated by this wonderful Dr. Erich Tavonius at the [[Muntau Hospital (Molotschna Mennonite Settlement, Zaporizhia Oblast, Ukraine)|Muntau Hospital]] built in 1889. Erika died October 2006.
 
 
'']]    Erika Tavonius Pankratz: medical doctor; born 7 December 1908 in [[Muntau (Molotschna Settlement, Zaporizhia Oblast, Ukraine)|Muntau]], [[Molotschna Mennonite Settlement (Zaporizhia Oblast, Ukraine)|Molotschna Colony]], [[Ukraine|Ukraine]], to Dr. [[Tavonius, Erich A. (1872-1927)|Erich Tavonius]] and Margarethe Baumann Tavonius of [[Halbstadt (Molotschna Mennonite Settlement, Zaporizhia Oblast, Ukraine)|Halbstadt]] and Muntau. Many Mennonite families will remember hearing how their parents and grandparents were treated by this wonderful Dr. Erich Tavonius at the [[Muntau Hospital (Molotschna Mennonite Settlement, Zaporizhia Oblast, Ukraine)|Muntau Hospital]] built in 1889. Erika died October 2006.
 
  
 
In 1936 Erika Tavonius graduated with a medical degree i<ins cite="mailto:Sam%20Steiner" datetime="2008-02-04T14:48"></ins>n Simferopol. She first practiced medicine on the Volga, in Alexanderhöhe. She explained: " I was responsible for the well-being of the inhabitants of the 25 villages, the little hospital, and the orphanage for 30 preschool children, plus a cheese factory where I needed to examine the employees". To make matters worse, Erika said, "There was no telephone in the hospital, nor in the village. To reach the village, one had to walk across the cemetery and through a deep ravine where the wolves lived!"
 
In 1936 Erika Tavonius graduated with a medical degree i<ins cite="mailto:Sam%20Steiner" datetime="2008-02-04T14:48"></ins>n Simferopol. She first practiced medicine on the Volga, in Alexanderhöhe. She explained: " I was responsible for the well-being of the inhabitants of the 25 villages, the little hospital, and the orphanage for 30 preschool children, plus a cheese factory where I needed to examine the employees". To make matters worse, Erika said, "There was no telephone in the hospital, nor in the village. To reach the village, one had to walk across the cemetery and through a deep ravine where the wolves lived!"
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Dr. Erika Tavonius Pankratz died in Vineland on 24 September 2006. Her son Rudy predeceased her; her daughter Kaethe Lidkte lived in Vineland, Ontario in 2006.
 
Dr. Erika Tavonius Pankratz died in Vineland on 24 September 2006. Her son Rudy predeceased her; her daughter Kaethe Lidkte lived in Vineland, Ontario in 2006.
 
 
 
= Bibliography =
 
= Bibliography =
 
Interview with Erika Tavonius Pankratz in 1996.
 
Interview with Erika Tavonius Pankratz in 1996.
  
 
"Pankratz, Erika, M.D." <em>St. Catharines Standard</em> (26 September 2006)
 
"Pankratz, Erika, M.D." <em>St. Catharines Standard</em> (26 September 2006)
 
 
 
{{GAMEO_footer|hp=|date=2006|a1_last=Koop|a1_first=Astrid |a2_last=|a2_first=}}
 
{{GAMEO_footer|hp=|date=2006|a1_last=Koop|a1_first=Astrid |a2_last=|a2_first=}}

Latest revision as of 14:45, 23 August 2013

Erika Tavonius Pankratz, ca. 1996

Erika Tavonius Pankratz: medical doctor; born 7 December 1908 in Muntau, Molotschna Colony, Ukraine, to Dr. Erich Tavonius and Margarethe Baumann Tavonius of Halbstadt and Muntau. Many Mennonite families will remember hearing how their parents and grandparents were treated by this wonderful Dr. Erich Tavonius at the Muntau Hospital built in 1889. Erika died October 2006.

In 1936 Erika Tavonius graduated with a medical degree in Simferopol. She first practiced medicine on the Volga, in Alexanderhöhe. She explained: " I was responsible for the well-being of the inhabitants of the 25 villages, the little hospital, and the orphanage for 30 preschool children, plus a cheese factory where I needed to examine the employees". To make matters worse, Erika said, "There was no telephone in the hospital, nor in the village. To reach the village, one had to walk across the cemetery and through a deep ravine where the wolves lived!"

Erika’s son Rudy was born in 1938 after his father, Peter Ruppel, had been sent to Siberia. Erika then joined her sister in Sevastopol where her son Rudolf was born in 1938. By 1943, along with her son, and four motherless children she had taken in, Erika arrived in Heidelberg, a Lutheran village on the west bank of the Molotschna River. Next Erika found work at Waldheim, Molotschna with the German Red Cross.

Soon Erika, son Rudy and four daughters became part of the Great Trek to the West. The family arrived in the Warthegau in 1944, from here they traveled by train through Berlin to the home of Erika's cousin. Erika practiced medicine in Germany for three years after which she went to Paraguay and practiced first in the Fernheim Mennonite Colony for five years and then in Friesland Mennonite Colony during her final year in Paraguay.

At the end of 1954 Erika moved to Vineland, Ontario, Canada where she met an acquaintance, John A. Pankratz from Gnadenfeld, Molotschna Colony. Erika and John married in Kitchener on 12 November 1957 and moved to Reedley, California where Erika worked as a registered nurse in a state hospital for 27 years. In 1985, after the death of her husband, she returned to Waterloo to join her son Rudy.

When asked Erika if her father would have been pleased to know that two of his children had chosen to become doctors, Erika replied, "Not at all! Father didn't want his children to become medical doctors!" And then, with a twinkle in her bright blue eyes, she continued, "But much like children of today, we disregarded parental advice."

Dr. Erika Tavonius Pankratz died in Vineland on 24 September 2006. Her son Rudy predeceased her; her daughter Kaethe Lidkte lived in Vineland, Ontario in 2006.

Bibliography

Interview with Erika Tavonius Pankratz in 1996.

"Pankratz, Erika, M.D." St. Catharines Standard (26 September 2006)


Author(s) Astrid Koop
Date Published 2006

Cite This Article

MLA style

Koop, Astrid. "Pankratz, Erika Tavonius (1908-2006)." Global Anabaptist Mennonite Encyclopedia Online. 2006. Web. 24 Nov 2024. https://gameo.org/index.php?title=Pankratz,_Erika_Tavonius_(1908-2006)&oldid=95986.

APA style

Koop, Astrid. (2006). Pankratz, Erika Tavonius (1908-2006). Global Anabaptist Mennonite Encyclopedia Online. Retrieved 24 November 2024, from https://gameo.org/index.php?title=Pankratz,_Erika_Tavonius_(1908-2006)&oldid=95986.




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