Czernowitzers…

That's how it goes sometimes, one love story ends, a new one begins. On July 9, 
1888 Iosif Hussar, the youngest son of Maria Hausthor, the sister of my 
great-grandfather Isak Hauster, married in Bucharest. Maria had meanwhile 
remarried and bore now the name Zucker. Eight years earlier, at the wedding of 
her eldest son Herman Hussar, she was still married to Adolf Hussar (Love Story 
- Part I). One could fill whole volumes about Iosif, he was a political 
dissident, was exiled in 1893 as a Jew = "Alien"; two years later he was 
allowed to return, but was arrested in 1917 - this time by the Germans - as an 
opponent of the regime. During the exile years in Munich he studied mechanical 
and electrical engineering, then translated Goethe, Tolstoy, Maupassant, Neruda 
and others, after all he was a printer and publisher. As editor of the 
bilingual weekly newspaper "Bursa" [The Stock Exchange], he came to 
international reputation as one of the most renowned Romanian journalists and 
publishers until his death in 1933. Even in death he remained a nonconformist. 
He was cremated at his own request in the Crematorium "Cenușa" [The Ashes]. For 
the Orthodox Church at that time, cremation was considered a pagan rite of 
heretical Freemasons:

https://hauster.blogspot.com/2023/06/love-story-part-ii-in-bucharest-3776-km.html

https://www.komoot.de/tour/1159606762?ref=itd&share_token=anbXsO1GVpOUt4YWWEs7GkY3n4Rov8yGVE4Rvf2IOt1RXEhPtu

The Crematorium is in danger of decay. It is still heritage-protected, but for 
how long? The same question arises for the remaining Old Town and the former 
Jewish Quarter, which will definitely not be able to withstand the urban 
development pressure for much longer. The three remaining synagogues are either 
surrounded by communist apartment blocks or dwarfed by modern steel and glass 
palaces. Skeletons of a completely different kind, for example that of a 
dinotherium, can be admired in the Grigore Antipa Museum of Natural History; an 
oasis of peace before plunging into the pulsating nightlife of Bucharest.

Edgar Hauster [iPad]
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