Episodes
My mother begins her recollection of the Shoah with a conversation she had with a friend and fellow survivor.
Published 06/04/08
Leaving Poland for good, my mother travels looking for surviving family and friends. She finds very few, learns of the fate of many of them. Settling in a displaced persons camp in Wesbaden Germany, she meets my father and starts a new family before moving to America.
Published 06/04/08
Returning home after the war. My mother travels on foot and by train through war torn Germany and Poland. She finds other survivors, among them her younger sister Fay. Her homecoming is bitter sweet with the realization of how few survived and the hostile greeting the returning Jews received from the Polish townspeople.
Published 06/04/08
The labor camp at Neustadt is unexpectedly liberated when the German guards abandon the labor camp. The Germans move west to excape the advancing Russian army.
Published 06/04/08
My mother spent the last few months of the war in the labor camp at Neustadt, which is near Hamburg.
Published 06/04/08
With the Russian army nearing Auschwitz in January 1945, the Germans evacuate the camp and force march the prisoners to the concentration camp at Gross Rosen. Known as the Death March, it lasted many days with the prisoners walking through the bitter cold and heavy snow. Many did not survive, as the German guards killed any who stopped walking.
Published 06/04/08
Toward the end of 1944 my mother's kommando is moved from Birkenau to the main camp in Auschwitz.
Published 06/04/08
My mother bribes her way into the Blue Affect. It was the building where the clothes of Auschwitz's victims was sorted for use by the Germans.
Published 06/04/08
With the fires in Birkenue burning all the time, to dispose of the bodies of the murdered Jews, the ash turns the evening sky blood red. My mother describes this vision of hell that was Auschwitz.
Published 06/04/08
Yenta and Sara, my mother's 2 youngest sisters come to Birkenau. The three of them are reunited, but only for a short while as disease and the gas chamber take both of them.
Published 06/04/08
My mother is rescued from the gas chamber by Mala Zimetbaum. Later Mala Zimetbaum escapes from Auschwitz with a male accomplice. After a few days they are caught and executed in front of the whole camp.
Published 06/04/08
Needing labor, the Germans transfer my mother and a number of other inmates of Majdanek to the Birkenau section of Auschwitz. My mother works in a number of jobs in and around the camp.
Published 06/04/08
Packed into a crowded freight car my mother is sent from Warsaw to the Majdanek. Majdanek was the major concentration camp on the eastern side of Poland.
Published 06/04/08
In April 1943, the Germans conduct a final aktion to clear the Warsaw ghetto. The Jewish partisans of the ghetto create the Passover uprising and my mother goes into hiding with the other Jews in her building.
Published 06/04/08
An aktion was what the inhabitants of the ghetto called the German military operations to capture and remove the Jews from the ghetto. My mother describes the aktion that catches the last of the children and sends them to Treblinka.
Published 06/04/08
After most of the Jewish population of the ghetto was removed, my mother was assigned to a work detail that would go into the emptied sections of the ghetto and search through the apartments for any left over values (Werterfassung in German). The group would gathered anything that was of value to be carted away by the Poles and Germans.
Published 06/04/08
My mother and her daughter are captured in the Warsaw train station, trying to get to the east to find her brother. They are put in prison with other Jews caught outside the ghetto.
Published 06/04/08
Having no place left to hide near her home town, my mother and her daughter travel around Poland looking for a safe place from the Germans.
Published 06/04/08
The last Jews of the town and region are rounded up for deportation. My mother, fearing for the life of her daughter, goes into hiding. One of her sisters joins her as they move from place to place seeking refuge.
Published 06/04/08
With the Jews in larger cities being put into ghettos, the Jews in smaller towns are assembled to labor for the Germans and for deportation. The first deportations were to labor camps and to the larger ghettos. The later assemblies were to send them to death camps.
Published 06/04/08
After the Polish defeat in September 1939 the Germans occupied Poland and started to make the lives of Jews more and more difficult.
Published 06/04/08
The lives of my mother and her family in a small Polish town near the German border. Her town and region are one of the first to experience the strength and speed of the German attack that started World War 2.
Published 06/04/08