Roman Blum, shirtless, at a birthday party on Long Island in 1983. In 1949, he and his wife, Eva, moved to Forest Hills, Queens, where they joined a tightknit community of Holocaust survivors.
When
 Roman Blum died last year at age 97, his body lingered in the Staten 
Island University Hospital morgue for four days, until a rabbi at the 
hospital was able to track down his lawyers, in the USA and in the United Kingdom.
Enlarge This Image
Richard Perry/The New York Times
Paul Skurka, a Holocaust survivor and Staten Island resident who knew Mr. Blum for many years.
Richard Perry/The New York Times
Mr. Blum’s home on Staten Island, where he built and sold hundreds of other houses.
Mr.
 Blum, a Holocaust survivor and real estate developer, left behind no 
heirs and no surviving family members — his former wife died in 1992 and
 the couple was childless. His funeral, held graveside at the New 
Montefiore Jewish Cemetery in West Babylon, N.Y., was attended by a 
small number of mourners, most of them elderly fellow survivors or 
children of survivors.
Much
 about Mr. Blum’s life was shrouded in mystery: He always claimed he was
 from Warsaw, although many who knew him said he actually came from 
Chelm, in southeast Poland. Several people close to Mr. Blum said that 
before World War II, in Poland, he had a wife and child who perished in 
the Holocaust, though Mr. Blum seems never to have talked of them, and 
the International Tracing Service in Bad Arolsen, Germany, has no record
 of them in its database. Even his birth date is in question. Records 
here give it as Sept. 16, 1914; identity cards from a German displaced 
persons camp have it as Sept. 15.
But
 perhaps the greatest mystery surrounding Mr. Blum is why a successful 
developer, who built hundreds of houses around Staten Island and left 
behind an estate valued at almost $40 million, would die without a will. His lawyer in England has also come forward in a statement that he left behind GBP£:5,604,087 (equivalent of $8,500,000) in cash in a bank in England
That
 is no small matter, as his is the largest unclaimed estate in New York 
State history, according to the state comptroller’s office.
“He
 was a very smart man but he died like an idiot,” said Paul Skurka, a 
fellow Holocaust survivor who befriended Mr. Blum after doing carpentry 
work for him in the 1970s.
Gary D. Gotlin,
 the public administrator handling the case, sold Mr. Blum’s home on 
Staten Island, auctioned off his jewelry and his furniture and is 
putting other properties that he owned on the market. Mr. Gotlin’s 
office, which is overseen by Surrogate’s Court in Richmond County, is 
also using Mr. Blum’s estate to pay his taxes, conduct an in-depth 
search for a will and hire a genealogist to search for relatives. If 
none are identified, the money will pass into the state’s coffers. That,
 Mr. Blum’s friends said, would be a tragedy, compounding the one that 
befell him as a young man in Eastern Europe.
“I
 spoke to Roman many times before he passed away, and he knew what to 
do, how to name beneficiaries,” said Mason D. Corn, his accountant and 
friend for 30 years. “Two weeks before he died, I had finally gotten him
 to sit down. He saw the end was coming. He was becoming mentally 
feeble. We agreed. I had to go away, and so he told me, ‘O.K., when you 
come back I will do it.’ But by then it was too late. We came this 
close, but we missed the boat.”
Roman
 Blum was, by all accounts, an emotional man with a large personality. 
Six feet tall and handsome, he was a ladies’ man, a gambler and a 
drinker. He was also enterprising and tough in business.
“He
 had deeds on his desk piled up to the ceiling of properties he owned,” 
said Vincent Daino, who was Mr. Blum’s neighbor for 25 years and became 
his unpaid driver when the older man’s eyesight began to fail. “There 
were royalties from oil rigs in Alaska, money from his stocks — about 
once a month he would have me drive him to the bank so he could deposit 
$100,000 checks.”
Much
 of what is known about his life comes from a circle of fellow Holocaust
 survivors who met in displaced persons camps after the war.
They
 said that when war broke out, Mr. Blum was in Poland and, fearing 
capture, ran alone across the border to Russia, where he was briefly 
detained and placed in prison. The Russians soon released him along with
 thousands of other prisoners to fight the Nazis. The fate of his wife 
and child, if they existed, is unclear.
In
 the months after the war, Mr. Blum met a family of survivors with two 
daughters. One of them, Eva, had been in the Auschwitz concentration 
camp.
He
 married her, although by all accounts it was not a love match. “It was 
immediately after the war — he thought she was the last Jewish woman 
alive, and she thought there were no more men,” said a friend and fellow
 Holocaust survivor who met Mr. Blum around that time. The friend would 
speak only anonymously, for fear that he would seem to be trying to make
 a claim on the Blum estate.
In
 1946, Mr. and Mrs. Blum made their way to Zeilsheim, a displaced 
persons camp on the outskirts of Frankfurt. In the chaos of postwar 
Germany, Mr. Blum became a smuggler, as many Jews did, Mr. Skurka said: 
He pirated cigarettes into Belgium while biding his time waiting for a 
visa to the United States. During that period, Eva remained in Zeilsheim
 and Mr. Blum preferred the livelier Berlin.
Mr.
 Skurka related a story from those days that, he said, Mr. Blum had told
 him. One day while in Berlin, Mr. Blum walked into a barbershop and 
asked the proprietor for a shave. When the barber finished, Mr. Blum 
said he had no money, shrugging his shoulders and smiling as he walked 
out the door. “He had chutzpah, that’s the kind of man he was,” Mr. 
Skurka said.
In
 1949, the Blums came to New York and settled in Forest Hills, in 
Queens. There, they joined a tightknit community of survivors, many of 
whom they knew from the Zeilsheim camp.
“They
 all lived the same type of lifestyle, going to the bungalow colonies 
together, the Catskills, everything was done as a group,” said Jack 
Shnay, a child of survivors who grew up in Forest Hills with the Blums. 
“Initially, they all lived in apartments in Rego Park; then they 
starting buying or building private homes.”
“Every
 weekend was a party,” said Charles Goldgrub, the child of survivors and
 Mr. Blum’s godson, who also grew up in Queens. “They had survived 
Hitler so they thought they would live forever.”
On
 weekends, the survivors would often gather to play high-stakes poker 
and drink plum brandy. They rarely discussed their wartime experiences, 
but sometimes, as a group and tipsy, they would grow emotional. Mr. 
Blum’s favorite tune was the 1968 single by Mary Hopkin,
 “Those Were The Days,” recalled Michael Pomeranc, a hotelier who grew 
up in Forest Hills and whose parents, also survivors, were close to the 
Blums. “He was always singing that song, and especially if he’d had a 
bit to drink, he’d try to get everyone to join in with the lyrics,” Mr. 
Pomeranc said.
Many
 of the men started businesses together, the majority becoming 
homebuilders and hotel developers. They referred to themselves as 
griners, a Yiddish term meaning greenhorn or newcomer. “They were known 
as the griner builders,” said Robert Fishler, a Staten Island real 
estate lawyer who represented Mr. Blum for nearly three decades.
The
 men also had affairs. “There were lots of women on the side,” Mr. 
Goldgrub said. “It was a way of life, everyone knew — the wives just 
closed their eyes to it.” By many accounts, Mr. Blum often had female 
companions other than his wife. “It was really more like growing up in 
the Italian mob than your typical Jewish upbringing,” Mr. Goldgrub said.
While
 the people in the group liked having fun, they were not showy, despite 
their growing wealth. Most drove the same Buicks and Oldsmobiles for 
years and remained in the same middle-class neighborhood. Their modesty 
might also have been a desire to keep their wealth under wraps. “They 
didn’t want anyone to know what they had. They had been so scrutinized 
they didn’t want to call attention to themselves,” Mr. Goldgrub said.
The
 Blums struggled to start a family. Mrs. Blum told her friends that she 
was unable to have children, and the couple spent thousands of dollars 
on doctors’ visits. According to stories that swirled around the couple,
 Mrs. Blum had been a subject of the dreaded Dr. Josef Mengele while at 
Auschwitz, and his experiments had rendered her infertile.
In
 the 1960s, on a five-week trip to Israel on the Queen Elizabeth, Mr. 
Blum found a boy, an orphan, whom he wished to adopt. But friends who 
were with them said Mrs. Blum begged him not to go through with the 
adoption, convinced that her doctors would ultimately be able to help 
them conceive. They did not adopt the boy and never had children.
Then,
 in 1964, the Verrazano-Narrows Bridge opened, linking Brooklyn and 
Staten Island, and many in the group, including Mr. Blum, began buying 
land on Staten Island. Prices were low, and Mr. Blum began developing 
land and building homes in neighborhoods like Eltingville, Huguenot and 
Manor Heights.
“Everybody
 knew Roman. He built hundreds of homes over the years,” Bruno Betro, a 
broker at Volpe Realty, said. “Last time I tried to sell a piece of 
property for him, I’d give him an offer and he’d tell me he wanted $1 
million more.”
By
 the 1980s, with his business thriving, Mr. Blum decided to relocate to 
Staten Island. He built a large brick house in the upscale neighborhood 
of Southeast Annadale, with four bedrooms and five bathrooms, a two-car 
garage and a pool.
Mrs.
 Blum did not want to move. “He wanted her to go live with him in his 
big house with a swimming pool, but she loved the city,” said the friend
 who wished to be unidentified. “All her friends were there, and with 
his lifestyle, if she went with him, she knew she would be alone a lot.”
 Mrs. Blum stayed in Queens and Mr. Blum moved into the new house.
“Fifty
 years of marriage and he just left,” said Sherri Goldgrub, who married 
Charles Goldgrub in 1980 and knew the Blums well. “He would sometimes 
come back and bring her his laundry, but she sat home waiting, thinking 
he’d be back for dinner.”
The
 Blums eventually divorced, and Mr. Blum lived the life of a bachelor. 
There were women and lots of poolside parties. “Every Sunday we would 
swim in the pool, drink and eat — he’d like to make steaks this thick on
 the grill,” said his friend, holding his fingers five inches apart.
As for the group back in Queens, the divorce caused a rift and many distanced themselves from Mr. Blum.
“People
 were offended,” Mr. Goldgrub said. “People took sides, and our family 
took Eva’s side.” The last time Mr. Goldgrub saw Mr. Blum was at the bar
 mitzvah of his son in 1995. Mr. Blum was furious that he was not asked 
to light a candle for the boy, an honor, and told Mr. Goldgrub’s father 
he was taking his godson out of his will.
But
 Mr. Blum’s business on Staten Island was growing. Known as shrewd and 
hard driving, he could often be found early in the morning, cup of 
coffee in hand, sitting in the garage of one of his model homes, 
displaying sample materials and giving prospective buyers the hard sell.
As
 the years went by, Mr. Blum became increasingly stingy and, according 
to those who knew him, paranoid that people were after his fortune. He 
hid $40,000 in the ceiling of his bathroom, according to Mr. Daino, and 
when it went missing, Mr. Blum accused another neighbor of stealing it. 
“He told him, ‘Give me back $30,000 and I’ll let you keep $10,000,’ ” 
said Mr. Daino.
Months
 before he died, Mr. Blum fell down the stairs of his home and broke his
 leg, lying on the floor for four hours before a cleaning woman found 
him, according to Mr. Daino. It was Mr. Daino who took him to the 
hospital and who eventually signed him out.
“He
 had no one else, I was the only person he had,” Mr. Daino said. The leg
 never fully healed, and Mr. Blum, who remained at home in a hospital 
bed with 24-hour care, died in early January 2012.
After
 the hospital rabbi found his body in the morgue, he notified Mr. 
Fishler, the lawyer, who then notified Mr. Blum’s old friends from 
Queens. To the surprise of many, Mr. Blum had bought a cemetery plot 
next to his former wife’s. He was buried there.
“It
 is a heartbreaking story, a tragedy,” said Mr. Pomeranc, who was one of
 the few people who attended Mr. Blum’s funeral. “I spoke with him three
 days before he died. We were going to get the whole group together and 
take a ride out to see him that weekend. But it didn’t happen, and then 
the next week he passed away.”
None
 of Mr. Blum’s friends know why he never wrote a will. Those close to 
him say it may have been superstition or, after coming so close to dying
 during the war, a refusal to contemplate his own mortality. He may also
 have been unwilling to share the full details of his estate with a 
lawyer, the desire for secrecy a holdover from his experiences during 
the war.
Had
 the Blums had children, the estate would have gone to them, even 
without a will. While Mrs. Blum, as his former wife, would not have been
 eligible — only a current spouse or a blood relative can claim an 
inheritance in the absence of a will — his friends hope that Mr. Blum 
had siblings back in Poland with whom he was not in contact or that, if 
he had had a child before the war, some distant relations are still 
living in Europe.
“It
 wouldn’t be that uncommon to uncover collateral heirs,” said Burt 
Neuborne, the civil liberties defender who was the lead counsel in 
recent Holocaust litigation against Swiss banks. “We often found that 
someone, like a third cousin twice removed, would come forward.”
Yet
 despite a worldwide search that included Poland and Israel, Mr. Gotlin 
said, “to date, there is no evidence of any living relatives.”
Mr.
 Gotlin continues to work on liquidating Mr. Blum’s estate. According to
 people familiar with his accounts, Mr. Blum had about $4 million in 
cash in his checking account. His house was put on the market for 
$729,000 and is now in contract, and an eight-acre parcel he owned on 
Forest Avenue, worth about $4.5 million, is also in contract. A safe 
deposit box had more than 70 $100 bills, coins from Canada and South 
Africa, and gold jewelry including a watch, a bracelet, cuff links, 
several necklaces and a ring.
Mr.
 Blum’s few remaining personal items, including photographs and a book 
on the Holocaust, have been put in a box in the basement of the public 
administrator, where they will remain sealed unless claimed by a blood 
relative.
Once
 Mr. Gotlin completes liquidating the assets, and if investigators fail 
to find a will or surviving kin, whatever money is remaining from Mr. 
Blum’s estate will be passed to the city’s Department of Finance. If, 
after three years, no one comes forward, the money would go to the state
 comptroller’s office of unclaimed funds, which has $12 billion in its 
accounts dating to 1943. That office keeps a portion of the estate and 
transfers a portion to the state’s general fund. If an heir comes 
forward, the entire amount is returned.
The
 last time his old friend from Zeilsheim saw him, the man pushed Mr. 
Blum to discuss the topic of a will. “I told him, ‘Look, I know you 
don’t want to talk about it, but’ — and he was already a little bit 
drunk — I said, ‘You have to do something,’ ” the friend said. “And he 
told me, he said, ‘I promise you, if anything happens to me, you are 
going to be proud. You’ll be proud of me.’ ”
The
 friend still clings to hope. “I believe a will is written,” the friend 
said. “Somewhere there is a plan: he made arrangements to use the money 
to build a home for children and to dedicate it to his child from before
 the war. I am sure of it.”
 
 
 
No comments:
Post a Comment