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  • NEWS - Zwei Jahre Jugendstrafe auf Bewährung: Urteilsspruch gegen den 93-jährigen ehemaligen SS Wachmann im KZ Stutthoff
    DUK10134270_011
    NEWS - Zwei Jahre Jugendstrafe auf Bewährung: Urteilsspruch gegen den 93-jährigen ehemaligen SS Wachmann im KZ Stutthoff
    Zwei Jahre Jugendstrafe auf Bewährung: Urteilsspruch gegen den 93-jährigen ehemaligen SS Wachmann im KZ Stutthoff

    / 230720

    *** Pronouncement of judgment at the trial against defendant former SS guard Bruno D. at Stutthof concentration camp at the Large Criminal Division 17 of the district court Hamburg Criminal Court on July 23, 2020. - The defendant arrives with his daughter and granddaughter *** Local Caption *** 13013588 ***

    (c) Dukas

     

  • NEWS - Zwei Jahre Jugendstrafe auf Bewährung: Urteilsspruch gegen den 93-jährigen ehemaligen SS Wachmann im KZ Stutthoff
    DUK10134270_010
    NEWS - Zwei Jahre Jugendstrafe auf Bewährung: Urteilsspruch gegen den 93-jährigen ehemaligen SS Wachmann im KZ Stutthoff
    Zwei Jahre Jugendstrafe auf Bewährung: Urteilsspruch gegen den 93-jährigen ehemaligen SS Wachmann im KZ Stutthoff

    / 230720

    *** Pronouncement of judgment at the trial against defendant former SS guard Bruno D. at Stutthof concentration camp at the Large Criminal Division 17 of the district court Hamburg Criminal Court on July 23, 2020. - The defendant arrives with his daughter and granddaughter *** Local Caption *** 13013591 ***

    (c) Dukas

     

  • NEWS - Zwei Jahre Jugendstrafe auf Bewährung: Urteilsspruch gegen den 93-jährigen ehemaligen SS Wachmann im KZ Stutthoff
    DUK10134270_009
    NEWS - Zwei Jahre Jugendstrafe auf Bewährung: Urteilsspruch gegen den 93-jährigen ehemaligen SS Wachmann im KZ Stutthoff
    Zwei Jahre Jugendstrafe auf Bewährung: Urteilsspruch gegen den 93-jährigen ehemaligen SS Wachmann im KZ Stutthoff

    / 230720

    *** Pronouncement of judgment at the trial against defendant former SS guard Bruno D. at Stutthof concentration camp at the Large Criminal Division 17 of the district court Hamburg Criminal Court on July 23, 2020. - The defendant arrives with his daughter and granddaughter *** Local Caption *** 13013589 ***

    (c) Dukas

     

  • NEWS - Zwei Jahre Jugendstrafe auf Bewährung: Urteilsspruch gegen den 93-jährigen ehemaligen SS Wachmann im KZ Stutthoff
    DUK10134270_008
    NEWS - Zwei Jahre Jugendstrafe auf Bewährung: Urteilsspruch gegen den 93-jährigen ehemaligen SS Wachmann im KZ Stutthoff
    Zwei Jahre Jugendstrafe auf Bewährung: Urteilsspruch gegen den 93-jährigen ehemaligen SS Wachmann im KZ Stutthoff

    / 230720

    *** Pronouncement of judgment at the trial against defendant former SS guard Bruno D. at Stutthof concentration camp at the Large Criminal Division 17 of the district court Hamburg Criminal Court on July 23, 2020. - *** Local Caption *** 13013593 ***

    (c) Dukas

     

  • NEWS - Zwei Jahre Jugendstrafe auf Bewährung: Urteilsspruch gegen den 93-jährigen ehemaligen SS Wachmann im KZ Stutthoff
    DUK10134270_007
    NEWS - Zwei Jahre Jugendstrafe auf Bewährung: Urteilsspruch gegen den 93-jährigen ehemaligen SS Wachmann im KZ Stutthoff
    Zwei Jahre Jugendstrafe auf Bewährung: Urteilsspruch gegen den 93-jährigen ehemaligen SS Wachmann im KZ Stutthoff

    / 230720

    *** Pronouncement of judgment at the trial against defendant former SS guard Bruno D. at Stutthof concentration camp at the Large Criminal Division 17 of the district court Hamburg Criminal Court on July 23, 2020. - The defendant arrives with his daughter and granddaughter *** Local Caption *** 13013594 ***

    (c) Dukas

     

  • NEWS - Zwei Jahre Jugendstrafe auf Bewährung: Urteilsspruch gegen den 93-jährigen ehemaligen SS Wachmann im KZ Stutthoff
    DUK10134270_006
    NEWS - Zwei Jahre Jugendstrafe auf Bewährung: Urteilsspruch gegen den 93-jährigen ehemaligen SS Wachmann im KZ Stutthoff
    Zwei Jahre Jugendstrafe auf Bewährung: Urteilsspruch gegen den 93-jährigen ehemaligen SS Wachmann im KZ Stutthoff

    / 230720

    *** Pronouncement of judgment at the trial against defendant former SS guard Bruno D. at Stutthof concentration camp at the Large Criminal Division 17 of the district court Hamburg Criminal Court on July 23, 2020. - *** Local Caption *** 13013595 ***

    (c) Dukas

     

  • NEWS - Zwei Jahre Jugendstrafe auf Bewährung: Urteilsspruch gegen den 93-jährigen ehemaligen SS Wachmann im KZ Stutthoff
    DUK10134270_005
    NEWS - Zwei Jahre Jugendstrafe auf Bewährung: Urteilsspruch gegen den 93-jährigen ehemaligen SS Wachmann im KZ Stutthoff
    Zwei Jahre Jugendstrafe auf Bewährung: Urteilsspruch gegen den 93-jährigen ehemaligen SS Wachmann im KZ Stutthoff

    / 230720

    *** Pronouncement of judgment at the trial against defendant former SS guard Bruno D. at Stutthof concentration camp at the Large Criminal Division 17 of the district court Hamburg Criminal Court on July 23, 2020. - The defendant arrives with his daughter and granddaughter *** Local Caption *** 13013590 ***

    (c) Dukas

     

  • NEWS - Zwei Jahre Jugendstrafe auf Bewährung: Urteilsspruch gegen den 93-jährigen ehemaligen SS Wachmann im KZ Stutthoff
    DUK10134270_004
    NEWS - Zwei Jahre Jugendstrafe auf Bewährung: Urteilsspruch gegen den 93-jährigen ehemaligen SS Wachmann im KZ Stutthoff
    Zwei Jahre Jugendstrafe auf Bewährung: Urteilsspruch gegen den 93-jährigen ehemaligen SS Wachmann im KZ Stutthoff

    / 230720

    *** Pronouncement of judgment at the trial against defendant former SS guard Bruno D. at Stutthof concentration camp at the Large Criminal Division 17 of the district court Hamburg Criminal Court on July 23, 2020. - The defendant arrives with his daughter and granddaughter *** *** Local Caption *** 31122661

    (c) Dukas

     

  • NEWS - Zwei Jahre Jugendstrafe auf Bewährung: Urteilsspruch gegen den 93-jährigen ehemaligen SS Wachmann im KZ Stutthoff
    DUK10134270_003
    NEWS - Zwei Jahre Jugendstrafe auf Bewährung: Urteilsspruch gegen den 93-jährigen ehemaligen SS Wachmann im KZ Stutthoff
    Zwei Jahre Jugendstrafe auf Bewährung: Urteilsspruch gegen den 93-jährigen ehemaligen SS Wachmann im KZ Stutthoff

    / 230720

    *** Pronouncement of judgment at the trial against defendant former SS guard Bruno D. at Stutthof concentration camp at the Large Criminal Division 17 of the district court Hamburg Criminal Court on July 23, 2020. - The defendant arrives with his daughter and granddaughter *** Local Caption *** 13013587 ***

    (c) Dukas

     

  • NEWS - Zwei Jahre Jugendstrafe auf Bewährung: Urteilsspruch gegen den 93-jährigen ehemaligen SS Wachmann im KZ Stutthoff
    DUK10134270_002
    NEWS - Zwei Jahre Jugendstrafe auf Bewährung: Urteilsspruch gegen den 93-jährigen ehemaligen SS Wachmann im KZ Stutthoff
    Zwei Jahre Jugendstrafe auf Bewährung: Urteilsspruch gegen den 93-jährigen ehemaligen SS Wachmann im KZ Stutthoff

    / 230720

    *** Pronouncement of judgment at the trial against defendant former SS guard Bruno D. at Stutthof concentration camp at the Large Criminal Division 17 of the district court Hamburg Criminal Court on July 23, 2020. - The defendant arrives with his daughter and granddaughter *** Local Caption *** 13013586 ***

    (c) Dukas

     

  • NEWS - Zwei Jahre Jugendstrafe auf Bewährung: Urteilsspruch gegen den 93-jährigen ehemaligen SS Wachmann im KZ Stutthoff
    DUK10134270_001
    NEWS - Zwei Jahre Jugendstrafe auf Bewährung: Urteilsspruch gegen den 93-jährigen ehemaligen SS Wachmann im KZ Stutthoff
    Zwei Jahre Jugendstrafe auf Bewährung: Urteilsspruch gegen den 93-jährigen ehemaligen SS Wachmann im KZ Stutthoff

    / 230720

    *** Pronouncement of judgment at the trial against defendant former SS guard Bruno D. at Stutthof concentration camp at the Large Criminal Division 17 of the district court Hamburg Criminal Court on July 23, 2020. - *** Local Caption *** 13013592 ***

    (c) Dukas

     

  • REPORTAGE - Portraits von Holocaust-Überlebenden
    DUK10131401_022
    REPORTAGE - Portraits von Holocaust-Überlebenden
    Exclusive: Please credit Avigail Uzi/Yedioth Aharonot
    Israel Out - No syndication in Israel
    Joseph Szewiatowicz was born in Proszowice, Poland. Was in the Krakow ghetto and in labor camps in Plaszow and in the UK. In November 1943 he was sent to Auschwitz-Birkenau and from there to Furstengrube to work in a coal mine.
    In January 1945 he left for the death march. He was in Dora and another labor camp and was released in Bergen-Belsen.
    Shiatowitz survived with his sister. His mother and two brothers perished (his father passed away when he was three) in Bergen-Belsen
    Meet Biattowitz his wife, the late Pella Zippora Somer, herself a survivor of Auschwitz, and the two married in Bergen-Belsen.
    He immigrated to Israel in 1948, worked in carpentry, and lived for 23 years in the U.S. Shabatowitz widower, father of two children and grandfather six grandchildren and seven great-grandchildren. He lives in Givat Shmuel.
    The fear of not leaving: "To tell every detail is impossible. Anyone who wouldn't understand. I don't understand either. I start talking and I cry. We were in the trailer. Not often for Birkenau, but back and forth with the train. To punish us. Fear left us. Take cows for slaughter. What does the cow know? That's how it was with us. We didn't know what this is Birkenau, what is Auschwitz. They say, 'You've all gone so easy. We went easy because they were smart. There is a museum in Auschwitz, with suitcases. They said, 'Take it the best things, you go to work, write it down the inscription on the suitcase."
    Auschwitz-Birkenau: We came to Birkenau. Shouts, people
    An SS with dogs shouted at us, "Rouse, Rouse."
    We jumped like goats from the carriages. And life began. Jews in striped clothes they spoke Yiddish. They said, 'Let them see wherever they go. ' Pointed up, we picked up the eyes to the chimneys, the stench of the bones. And we already understood what's going on".
    Bergen-Belsen: "Compared to Bergen-Belsen, Auschwitz was a pension. Because in Aus

    (c) Dukas

     

  • REPORTAGE - Portraits von Holocaust-Überlebenden
    DUK10131401_009
    REPORTAGE - Portraits von Holocaust-Überlebenden
    Exclusive: Please credit Avigail Uzi/Yedioth Aharonot
    Israel Out - No syndication in Israel
    Joseph Szewiatowicz was born in Proszowice, Poland. Was in the Krakow ghetto and in labor camps in Plaszow and in the UK. In November 1943 he was sent to Auschwitz-Birkenau and from there to Furstengrube to work in a coal mine.
    In January 1945 he left for the death march. He was in Dora and another labor camp and was released in Bergen-Belsen.
    Shiatowitz survived with his sister. His mother and two brothers perished (his father passed away when he was three) in Bergen-Belsen
    Meet Biattowitz his wife, the late Pella Zippora Somer, herself a survivor of Auschwitz, and the two married in Bergen-Belsen.
    He immigrated to Israel in 1948, worked in carpentry, and lived for 23 years in the U.S. Shabatowitz widower, father of two children and grandfather six grandchildren and seven great-grandchildren. He lives in Givat Shmuel.
    The fear of not leaving: "To tell every detail is impossible. Anyone who wouldn't understand. I don't understand either. I start talking and I cry. We were in the trailer. Not often for Birkenau, but back and forth with the train. To punish us. Fear left us. Take cows for slaughter. What does the cow know? That's how it was with us. We didn't know what this is Birkenau, what is Auschwitz. They say, 'You've all gone so easy. We went easy because they were smart. There is a museum in Auschwitz, with suitcases. They said, 'Take it the best things, you go to work, write it down the inscription on the suitcase."
    Auschwitz-Birkenau: We came to Birkenau. Shouts, people
    An SS with dogs shouted at us, "Rouse, Rouse."
    We jumped like goats from the carriages. And life began. Jews in striped clothes they spoke Yiddish. They said, 'Let them see wherever they go. ' Pointed up, we picked up the eyes to the chimneys, the stench of the bones. And we already understood what's going on".
    Bergen-Belsen: "Compared to Bergen-Belsen, Auschwitz was a pension. Because in Aus

    (c) Dukas

     

  • REPORTAGE - Portraits von Holocaust-Überlebenden
    DUK10131401_007
    REPORTAGE - Portraits von Holocaust-Überlebenden
    Exclusive: Please credit Avigail Uzi/Yedioth Aharonot
    Israel Out - No syndication in Israel
    Joseph Szewiatowicz was born in Proszowice, Poland. Was in the Krakow ghetto and in labor camps in Plaszow and in the UK. In November 1943 he was sent to Auschwitz-Birkenau and from there to Furstengrube to work in a coal mine.
    In January 1945 he left for the death march. He was in Dora and another labor camp and was released in Bergen-Belsen.
    Shiatowitz survived with his sister. His mother and two brothers perished (his father passed away when he was three) in Bergen-Belsen
    Meet Biattowitz his wife, the late Pella Zippora Somer, herself a survivor of Auschwitz, and the two married in Bergen-Belsen.
    He immigrated to Israel in 1948, worked in carpentry, and lived for 23 years in the U.S. Shabatowitz widower, father of two children and grandfather six grandchildren and seven great-grandchildren. He lives in Givat Shmuel.
    The fear of not leaving: "To tell every detail is impossible. Anyone who wouldn't understand. I don't understand either. I start talking and I cry. We were in the trailer. Not often for Birkenau, but back and forth with the train. To punish us. Fear left us. Take cows for slaughter. What does the cow know? That's how it was with us. We didn't know what this is Birkenau, what is Auschwitz. They say, 'You've all gone so easy. We went easy because they were smart. There is a museum in Auschwitz, with suitcases. They said, 'Take it the best things, you go to work, write it down the inscription on the suitcase."
    Auschwitz-Birkenau: We came to Birkenau. Shouts, people
    An SS with dogs shouted at us, "Rouse, Rouse."
    We jumped like goats from the carriages. And life began. Jews in striped clothes they spoke Yiddish. They said, 'Let them see wherever they go. ' Pointed up, we picked up the eyes to the chimneys, the stench of the bones. And we already understood what's going on".
    Bergen-Belsen: "Compared to Bergen-Belsen, Auschwitz was a pension. Because in Aus

    (c) Dukas

     

  • REPORTAGE - Portraits von Holocaust-Überlebenden
    DUK10131401_037
    REPORTAGE - Portraits von Holocaust-Überlebenden
    Exclusive: Please credit Avigail Uzi/Yedioth Aharonot
    Israel Out - No syndication in Israel
    Moshe (Fish) Dagan was born in Piotrkow, Poland.
    Survived together with his sister) who immigrated to Israel before
    The War (Parents, Second Sister and Two Brothers)
    They perished in the Holocaust. Dagan was in the Piotrkow ghetto and worked
    In forced labor. Later he was sent to the camp
    Work from there to Auschwitz-Birkenau. In January 1945 he went on the march
    Death through the Czech Republic towards Austria, to the Mauthausen concentration camp.
    Two days later he went to the Melk camp. After two months, he was transferred
    To the Ebensee camp, where he was released. He immigrated to Israel in 1947. Was a section head
    Acquisitions at the Whistler Nuclear Research Center.
    Dagan is married, the father of two children, the grandfather of seven grandchildren and four great-grandchildren.
    The deportation: "They took Dad, Mom and my sister to Treblinka. Dad
    He said to me: 'You will save yourself and I will keep mum and me
    Your little sister. ' Those were his last words. "
    Death: "I was with my brother in a labor camp. In the morning I tell him David,
    get up. He didn't get up. He died at night and I didn't even know. There is
    together. I got up, went to work. I had to go. I'm back
    It wasn't there anymore. Evacuate it. "
    Germany: Many times I said I would not go to Germany. at the end
    I drove. I wanted to see what it looked like. I didn't take any compensation
    From Germany. I did not want. I said I didn't want to sell the blood
    My family's money. When I wanted, it was already late. I drove
    In a special way. From Paris to Germany, by train. The conductor comes in,
    Came to check tickets, saw his hat, I didn't have one anymore
    Patience and I wanted to go home. That was in 1964. "
    Message: "I won." *** Local Caption *** 30923708

    (c) Dukas

     

  • REPORTAGE - Portraits von Holocaust-Überlebenden
    DUK10131401_015
    REPORTAGE - Portraits von Holocaust-Überlebenden
    Exclusive: Please credit Avigail Uzi/Yedioth Aharonot
    Israel Out - No syndication in Israel
    Oscar Klein was born in Munkács, Czech Republic. Was in the Burgesses ghetto in Hungary. Sent in 1944
    He was transferred to Auschwitz-Birkenau and five days later he was transferred to Auschwitz. Was in the Yavishowitz camp.
    On January 18, he left for the death march from Auschwitz. Discharged from Buchenwald in April 1945
    From his surviving family. His parents and siblings perished. Immigrated to Israel in 1947 after seven months in the camp
    Detention in Cyprus. Studied and worked at Wingate as responsible for youth groups and coaches. Widower, father
    For three and grandchildren. Lives in Netanya.
    Birkenau: "We split into two columns. I was with my brother, hand in hand
    mother. I didn't know what Auschwitz was. My dad was up front with my grandfather,
    And I and mother were standing in the second row. I gave a run to Dad, and Mum
    Shout, "Oscar, stay here! Be with us. ' I didn't even turn around
    The head, I ran to Dad and stood next to him. Mengele took Grandpa out, and we,
    Dad and I, we went to Birkenau. I remember seeing what was being done there.
    There was a huge pit and a stench. I knew it was some kind of meat. I asked Dad what
    It. The first time I ever saw him cry. I realised. I had nothing
    Ask more. "
    Narrator: "We did the number for us in Auschwitz. From the moment you don't have a number
    There. Neither Oscar nor Oscar Klein. The number. I was 3619 Dad
    Was after me, 3620. "
    Death march: "At 7 pm we left Auschwitz. We didn't know where we were
    Going. First rest was in Gleiwitz. Three in the morning. They all lie down.
    Feet, feet and snow. I was with my friend hand in hand. I told him: 'You know, if we lay in the snow
    We are dead and we will not feel dead. In the snow dead with a smile. We need to be on our feet. '
    So we slept next to a wall, and that's how we did the rest. He kept waking me up and I woke him up. "
    Survival: "I dropped it. It was

    (c) Dukas

     

  • REPORTAGE - Portraits von Holocaust-Überlebenden
    DUK10131401_034
    REPORTAGE - Portraits von Holocaust-Überlebenden
    Exclusive: Please credit Avigail Uzi/Yedioth Aharonot
    Israel Out - No syndication in Israel
    Moshe (Fish) Dagan was born in Piotrkow, Poland.
    Survived together with his sister) who immigrated to Israel before
    The War (Parents, Second Sister and Two Brothers)
    They perished in the Holocaust. Dagan was in the Piotrkow ghetto and worked
    In forced labor. Later he was sent to the camp
    Work from there to Auschwitz-Birkenau. In January 1945 he went on the march
    Death through the Czech Republic towards Austria, to the Mauthausen concentration camp.
    Two days later he went to the Melk camp. After two months, he was transferred
    To the Ebensee camp, where he was released. He immigrated to Israel in 1947. Was a section head
    Acquisitions at the Whistler Nuclear Research Center.
    Dagan is married, the father of two children, the grandfather of seven grandchildren and four great-grandchildren.
    The deportation: "They took Dad, Mom and my sister to Treblinka. Dad
    He said to me: 'You will save yourself and I will keep mum and me
    Your little sister. ' Those were his last words. "
    Death: "I was with my brother in a labor camp. In the morning I tell him David,
    get up. He didn't get up. He died at night and I didn't even know. There is
    together. I got up, went to work. I had to go. I'm back
    It wasn't there anymore. Evacuate it. "
    Germany: Many times I said I would not go to Germany. at the end
    I drove. I wanted to see what it looked like. I didn't take any compensation
    From Germany. I did not want. I said I didn't want to sell the blood
    My family's money. When I wanted, it was already late. I drove
    In a special way. From Paris to Germany, by train. The conductor comes in,
    Came to check tickets, saw his hat, I didn't have one anymore
    Patience and I wanted to go home. That was in 1964. "
    Message: "I won." *** Local Caption *** 30923700

    (c) Dukas

     

  • REPORTAGE - Portraits von Holocaust-Überlebenden
    DUK10131401_035
    REPORTAGE - Portraits von Holocaust-Überlebenden
    Exclusive: Please credit Avigail Uzi/Yedioth Aharonot
    Israel Out - No syndication in Israel
    David Dogo Lightner was born in Nerjaja, Hungary. In June 1944 he sent with his family to Auschwitz-Birkenau after a month in the ghetto. January 1945 went on the death march. He was in the Mehhausen and Gunskirchen camps.
    There, in early May 1945, he was released. In 1949 he immigrated to Israel and was one of the founders of Moshav Nir Galim. In 2004, he was one of the beacon peaks at Holocaust Martyrs 'and Heroes' Memorial Day. Married, father of two daughters, grandfather to ten grandchildren and great-grandchildren.
    Start: "I start my story like this: 'My uncle is called
    Leitner but everyone calls me Dogo. Every man has a name given to him
    His parents and we gave him death camps. That's why I have another name going with me since I am 14 and a half years old and it is written on my body: 14671 B. "
    Songs: "We were singing all the time. While working. I worked at Shays Commando, Commando shit, sewer. We got a tanker and moved between the camps.
    I'm up to my knees in the stool. Fills buckets. Moves from hand to hand
    Twenty children and spills in the tanker. And I keep singing! The sewer
    There is a grove.
    . Before the crematorium 5
    L-5
    We poured between crematorium 4
    Thousands are waiting for a place to murder them. Children, elders. There they sit.
    We know what awaits them. Then the foreman said, 'Children,
    Now sing strong. ' And we sang, so loud. We danced around the tanker, to try to encourage them, who will not suspect that they are going to murder them. "
    Mengele: “Dr. Mengele makes a selection. Bring him a hammer and a nail,
    A piece of plank. He does a 'soccer gate'. Whoever is lower than the plank
    The top goes off. Mengele is God. He states the words we are
    Prayers on Yom Kippur; Who will live and who will die. I filled up
    The shoes are in stones to look taller and I was able to move.
    25 children, my friends, did not pass the selection. We hear

    (c) Dukas

     

  • REPORTAGE - Portraits von Holocaust-Überlebenden
    DUK10131401_033
    REPORTAGE - Portraits von Holocaust-Überlebenden
    Exclusive: Please credit Avigail Uzi/Yedioth Aharonot
    Israel Out - No syndication in Israel
    Sarah Schaffer was born in the city of Shervar, Hungary. Daughter of another
    Depreciating Kluger, of which only she and her twin Lea) lychee, who
    A cow was 8737 A) surviving the Holocaust because they were taken
    To Dr. Mengele's horror attempts.
    In March 1944, the Germans occupied Hungary, the father of
    Shaffer was taken to labor camps from which he did not return, and the twins
    And their pregnant mother was transferred to the Auschwitz-Birk-extermination camp
    Nao, where they were separated, and the mother was sent to her death. The sisters survived
    Dr. Mengele's inferno, and when the camp was released
    By the Russians, in January 1945, they returned by road
    To Hungary and there they met their mother's brother, who took care of her
    Their cost to the earth. They arrived in Israel in 1947, for a boarding school
    Children in Ra'anana, and at graduation, Shaffer worked as a nurse
    In a drop of milk. Later she married Eliezer, also a survivor
    The Holocaust, and the two are white parents and two daughters. To the couple
    Improve 11 grandchildren and 10 great-grandchildren, and for that, their pride, especially
    Due to the military service of the offspring. The family lives
    In Moshav Nir Galim.
    Transport: "It was July 6, 1944,
    A particularly warm day. We were loaded onto a freight train
    Of beasts, with no windows and awful crowding,
    No sitting, no food or water.
    We could barely breathe. Mom, who was
    Pregnant, silent, and the people in the trailer worried
    Lest you give birth. To Auschwitz-Birkenau
    We arrived at Tu Tammuz and Nazi soldiers waited
    We are on a big ramp, with sticks in our hands
    And next to them wild barking dogs. They shouted
    Let's hurry: 'Schnell, Schnell'. "
    Doctor Mengele: "The Angel of Death
    The Jews' stood on the ramp with a serious face
    And stick with his hand. Separate us, the twins, our mother,
    Sent to the crematorium with children,

    (c) Dukas

     

  • REPORTAGE - Portraits von Holocaust-Überlebenden
    DUK10131401_026
    REPORTAGE - Portraits von Holocaust-Überlebenden
    Exclusive: Please credit Avigail Uzi/Yedioth Aharonot
    Israel Out - No syndication in Israel
    Oscar Klein was born in Munk?cs, Czech Republic. Was in the Burgesses ghetto in Hungary. Sent in 1944
    He was transferred to Auschwitz-Birkenau and five days later he was transferred to Auschwitz. Was in the Yavishowitz camp.
    On January 18, he left for the death march from Auschwitz. Discharged from Buchenwald in April 1945
    From his surviving family. His parents and siblings perished. Immigrated to Israel in 1947 after seven months in the camp
    Detention in Cyprus. Studied and worked at Wingate as responsible for youth groups and coaches. Widower, father
    For three and grandchildren. Lives in Netanya.
    Birkenau: "We split into two columns. I was with my brother, hand in hand
    mother. I didn't know what Auschwitz was. My dad was up front with my grandfather,
    And I and mother were standing in the second row. I gave a run to Dad, and Mum
    Shout, "Oscar, stay here! Be with us. ' I didn't even turn around
    The head, I ran to Dad and stood next to him. Mengele took Grandpa out, and we,
    Dad and I, we went to Birkenau. I remember seeing what was being done there.
    There was a huge pit and a stench. I knew it was some kind of meat. I asked Dad what
    It. The first time I ever saw him cry. I realised. I had nothing
    Ask more. "
    Narrator: "We did the number for us in Auschwitz. From the moment you don't have a number
    There. Neither Oscar nor Oscar Klein. The number. I was 3619 Dad
    Was after me, 3620. "
    Death march: "At 7 pm we left Auschwitz. We didn't know where we were
    Going. First rest was in Gleiwitz. Three in the morning. They all lie down.
    Feet, feet and snow. I was with my friend hand in hand. I told him: 'You know, if we lay in the snow
    We are dead and we will not feel dead. In the snow dead with a smile. We need to be on our feet. '
    So we slept next to a wall, and that's how we did the rest. He kept waking me up and I woke him up. "
    Survival: "I dropped it. It was

    (c) Dukas

     

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    haelion Moses was born in Thessaloniki, Greece. His father died before the war
    While his sister and mother perished in the Holocaust. He wrote in memory of his sister,
    Nina-Esther, a poem called "The Girl from the Lager," though Nina
    Did not enter the camp and there was no camp (German camp) (even
    One Day. She was taken straight to the crematoria. "To Nina Esther, who
    Animals led, and when they reached Lager to the kiln they cast. "" I think
    It should be the Holocaust anthem, "he says.
    In 1946, Moses made aliya to Eretz Israel. Served in the army, and reached the rank
    Lieutenant Colonel, and Colonel Regiment. The Supreme is a member of Yad Vashem's Executive,
    And lit a holocaust on Holocaust Martyrs 'and Heroes' Memorial Day 2017
    He has two children, grandfather of six grandchildren and nine great-grandchildren, and lives in Bat Yam.
    Consult: A: "At midnight the train stopped. They said no
    A quarter of groups. Men with working ability in one group. Group
    A second of elders and children, the third of women who can work,
    And fourth, old men and women with children. There was a huge mess. Suddenly
    A family needs to break up. Shouts, riots, crying. But the Germans
    There were already experienced, and by the end there were four teams. Grandpa went with the old man
    Hood. My uncle and I went to a group of those who could work.
    My mom and cousin, who was with a baby, went to the group
    Third. Then the question came up what to do with my sister Nina. She
    She was 16 and a half and could work with the other women. But we are
    We didn't want to say goodbye, and at that moment we condemned her to death. "
    Auschwitz: "In Auschwitz I met a friend who came from Birkenau. I told him,
    'Have you seen my mother? Are you my sister? ' He told me that Birkenau had
    Gas chambers and incinerators, and from day one they killed everyone. I did not want
    to believe. I told him, 'Ar

    (c) Dukas

     

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    Sarah Schaffer was born in the city of Shervar, Hungary. Daughter of another
    Depreciating Kluger, of which only she and her twin Lea) lychee, who
    A cow was 8737 A) surviving the Holocaust because they were taken
    To Dr. Mengele's horror attempts.
    In March 1944, the Germans occupied Hungary, the father of
    Shaffer was taken to labor camps from which he did not return, and the twins
    And their pregnant mother was transferred to the Auschwitz-Birk-extermination camp
    Nao, where they were separated, and the mother was sent to her death. The sisters survived
    Dr. Mengele's inferno, and when the camp was released
    By the Russians, in January 1945, they returned by road
    To Hungary and there they met their mother's brother, who took care of her
    Their cost to the earth. They arrived in Israel in 1947, for a boarding school
    Children in Ra'anana, and at graduation, Shaffer worked as a nurse
    In a drop of milk. Later she married Eliezer, also a survivor
    The Holocaust, and the two are white parents and two daughters. To the couple
    Improve 11 grandchildren and 10 great-grandchildren, and for that, their pride, especially
    Due to the military service of the offspring. The family lives
    In Moshav Nir Galim.
    Transport: "It was July 6, 1944,
    A particularly warm day. We were loaded onto a freight train
    Of beasts, with no windows and awful crowding,
    No sitting, no food or water.
    We could barely breathe. Mom, who was
    Pregnant, silent, and the people in the trailer worried
    Lest you give birth. To Auschwitz-Birkenau
    We arrived at Tu Tammuz and Nazi soldiers waited
    We are on a big ramp, with sticks in our hands
    And next to them wild barking dogs. They shouted
    Let's hurry: 'Schnell, Schnell'. "
    Doctor Mengele: "The Angel of Death
    The Jews' stood on the ramp with a serious face
    And stick with his hand. Separate us, the twins, our mother,
    Sent to the crematorium with children,

    (c) Dukas

     

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    Oscar Klein was born in Munk?cs, Czech Republic. Was in the Burgesses ghetto in Hungary. Sent in 1944
    He was transferred to Auschwitz-Birkenau and five days later he was transferred to Auschwitz. Was in the Yavishowitz camp.
    On January 18, he left for the death march from Auschwitz. Discharged from Buchenwald in April 1945
    From his surviving family. His parents and siblings perished. Immigrated to Israel in 1947 after seven months in the camp
    Detention in Cyprus. Studied and worked at Wingate as responsible for youth groups and coaches. Widower, father
    For three and grandchildren. Lives in Netanya.
    Birkenau: "We split into two columns. I was with my brother, hand in hand
    mother. I didn't know what Auschwitz was. My dad was up front with my grandfather,
    And I and mother were standing in the second row. I gave a run to Dad, and Mum
    Shout, "Oscar, stay here! Be with us. ' I didn't even turn around
    The head, I ran to Dad and stood next to him. Mengele took Grandpa out, and we,
    Dad and I, we went to Birkenau. I remember seeing what was being done there.
    There was a huge pit and a stench. I knew it was some kind of meat. I asked Dad what
    It. The first time I ever saw him cry. I realised. I had nothing
    Ask more. "
    Narrator: "We did the number for us in Auschwitz. From the moment you don't have a number
    There. Neither Oscar nor Oscar Klein. The number. I was 3619 Dad
    Was after me, 3620. "
    Death march: "At 7 pm we left Auschwitz. We didn't know where we were
    Going. First rest was in Gleiwitz. Three in the morning. They all lie down.
    Feet, feet and snow. I was with my friend hand in hand. I told him: 'You know, if we lay in the snow
    We are dead and we will not feel dead. In the snow dead with a smile. We need to be on our feet. '
    So we slept next to a wall, and that's how we did the rest. He kept waking me up and I woke him up. "
    Survival: "I dropped it. It was

    (c) Dukas

     

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    David Dogo Lightner was born in Nerjaja, Hungary. In June 1944 he sent with his family to Auschwitz-Birkenau after a month in the ghetto. January 1945 went on the death march. He was in the Mehhausen and Gunskirchen camps.
    There, in early May 1945, he was released. In 1949 he immigrated to Israel and was one of the founders of Moshav Nir Galim. In 2004, he was one of the beacon peaks at Holocaust Martyrs 'and Heroes' Memorial Day. Married, father of two daughters, grandfather to ten grandchildren and great-grandchildren.
    Start: "I start my story like this: 'My uncle is called
    Leitner but everyone calls me Dogo. Every man has a name given to him
    His parents and we gave him death camps. That's why I have another name going with me since I am 14 and a half years old and it is written on my body: 14671 B. "
    Songs: "We were singing all the time. While working. I worked at Shays Commando, Commando shit, sewer. We got a tanker and moved between the camps.
    I'm up to my knees in the stool. Fills buckets. Moves from hand to hand
    Twenty children and spills in the tanker. And I keep singing! The sewer
    There is a grove.
    . Before the crematorium 5
    L-5
    We poured between crematorium 4
    Thousands are waiting for a place to murder them. Children, elders. There they sit.
    We know what awaits them. Then the foreman said, 'Children,
    Now sing strong. ' And we sang, so loud. We danced around the tanker, to try to encourage them, who will not suspect that they are going to murder them. "
    Mengele: “Dr. Mengele makes a selection. Bring him a hammer and a nail,
    A piece of plank. He does a 'soccer gate'. Whoever is lower than the plank
    The top goes off. Mengele is God. He states the words we are
    Prayers on Yom Kippur; Who will live and who will die. I filled up
    The shoes are in stones to look taller and I was able to move.
    25 children, my friends, did not pass the selection. We hear

    (c) Dukas

     

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    Itzhak Borla was born in Thessaloniki, Greece.
    A single relic. His parents and younger brother perished.
    Came to Auschwitz from Thessaloniki on April '43 on the third shipment to Auschwitz from Greece. A step on the death march to Buchenwald. Was at a labor camp on the Dutch border and returned to Buchenwald, where he was released on April '45 to Israel a few months later and worked as a tourist guide.
    Married a second time, father of three children and grandfather of five grandchildren.
    Lives in Tel Aviv.
    First night: "We were dropped off on the ramp. I had a feeling I came to another planet, another planet: the cold, the dazzling lights, the flames I saw in the distance. There's a terrible picture I can't get out of your mind to this day. I saw an SS officer who saw a woman holding a baby. He took the baby to her, turned to the baby the legs, threw him in the trailer and killed him. And the mother falls and fainting. It's a picture that always haunts me."
    Selection: "You took my mother and brother straight away. I stood in the men's queue, next to dad, for work. I was 15 and a half years old but I was dressed as big and looked big for my age. The Nazi passed and shone on me.
    I got blinded. He left me in line."
    Buchenwald: "I don't believe in heaven and I don't in hell, but if hell exists, it is possible call him Buchenwald. Stacks of dead. We lay five people in one tombstone. When one wanted to move a bit, change posture, so all five had to move."
    Indifference: "When we liberated the camp was full of corpses, everywhere.
    You can get used to anything. You pass by piles of corpses and you don't see it. You're indifferent. After that they brought German civilians watching the camp. They were all crying. They said who knew about decrees against Jews but not about crematoria and cells the gases."
    Guilt: "After the release, it took me a few years to get out of it. Al

    (c) Dukas

     

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    David Dogo Lightner was born in Nerjaja, Hungary. In June 1944 he sent with his family to Auschwitz-Birkenau after a month in the ghetto. January 1945 went on the death march. He was in the Mehhausen and Gunskirchen camps.
    There, in early May 1945, he was released. In 1949 he immigrated to Israel and was one of the founders of Moshav Nir Galim. In 2004, he was one of the beacon peaks at Holocaust Martyrs 'and Heroes' Memorial Day. Married, father of two daughters, grandfather to ten grandchildren and great-grandchildren.
    Start: "I start my story like this: 'My uncle is called
    Leitner but everyone calls me Dogo. Every man has a name given to him
    His parents and we gave him death camps. That's why I have another name going with me since I am 14 and a half years old and it is written on my body: 14671 B. "
    Songs: "We were singing all the time. While working. I worked at Shays Commando, Commando shit, sewer. We got a tanker and moved between the camps.
    I'm up to my knees in the stool. Fills buckets. Moves from hand to hand
    Twenty children and spills in the tanker. And I keep singing! The sewer
    There is a grove.
    . Before the crematorium 5
    L-5
    We poured between crematorium 4
    Thousands are waiting for a place to murder them. Children, elders. There they sit.
    We know what awaits them. Then the foreman said, 'Children,
    Now sing strong. ' And we sang, so loud. We danced around the tanker, to try to encourage them, who will not suspect that they are going to murder them. "
    Mengele: “Dr. Mengele makes a selection. Bring him a hammer and a nail,
    A piece of plank. He does a 'soccer gate'. Whoever is lower than the plank
    The top goes off. Mengele is God. He states the words we are
    Prayers on Yom Kippur; Who will live and who will die. I filled up
    The shoes are in stones to look taller and I was able to move.
    25 children, my friends, did not pass the selection. We hear

    (c) Dukas

     

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    Benico Gihon was born in Thessaloniki, Greece. Survived along with his sister. His parents and five brothers and sisters perished. Gijon spent two months in the Thessaloniki ghetto, sent for seven months of forced labor, returned to the Thessaloniki ghetto and from there sent to Auschwitz-Birkenau. Was on the death march and in the Dachau camp.
    He was liberated in the Mildorf camp in April 1945. In 1948 he immigrated to Israel after a stay in a detention camp on Cyprus. Gijon lives in Ramat Gan,
    Widower, father of three sons) One of his sons served on the 13th Cruise and died after the military service (grandparents and grandchildren).
    Alberto: "From the ghetto we were transported by transport in the direction of Athens.
    We worked in the mountains. There my friend, Alberto, was executed. He tried to run away, grabbed him and hit him, put him near a hole. We were told 'this is what happens to those who want to escape.' And brought four
    Germans with guns fired at him. We saw how he held on a little bit, Then bends and falls and enters the pit."
    Hope: "We were always told, 'Finish the work here,
    your families are waiting for you. ' We returned to the ghetto after seven months. First, I looked for Dad and Mom. Then he learned
    We did what they did. Eliminate them and take them to the cemetery the Jews. "
    On the way to Auschwitz-Birkenau: we had eighty people in each car.
    His name inside the trailer was empty barrel and gave savory preserves of Sardines. The water was over. We began to suffer. Until the guys started to pee in a tin cup they gave us. We were in the little window of heaven
    The carriages the urine, which will cool down and we would drink. "
    Work: "In Birkenau I was in a construction commando. I worked in all kinds works. The wagons would come full. We would take fifty kilos of sacks of cement on the back and luggage ”.
    Leon: "Just before the release, L

    (c) Dukas

     

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    Benico Gihon was born in Thessaloniki, Greece. Survived along with his sister. His parents and five brothers and sisters perished. Gijon spent two months in the Thessaloniki ghetto, sent for seven months of forced labor, returned to the Thessaloniki ghetto and from there sent to Auschwitz-Birkenau. Was on the death march and in the Dachau camp.
    He was liberated in the Mildorf camp in April 1945. In 1948 he immigrated to Israel after a stay in a detention camp on Cyprus. Gijon lives in Ramat Gan,
    Widower, father of three sons) One of his sons served on the 13th Cruise and died after the military service (grandparents and grandchildren).
    Alberto: "From the ghetto we were transported by transport in the direction of Athens.
    We worked in the mountains. There my friend, Alberto, was executed. He tried to run away, grabbed him and hit him, put him near a hole. We were told 'this is what happens to those who want to escape.' And brought four
    Germans with guns fired at him. We saw how he held on a little bit, Then bends and falls and enters the pit."
    Hope: "We were always told, 'Finish the work here,
    your families are waiting for you. ' We returned to the ghetto after seven months. First, I looked for Dad and Mom. Then he learned
    We did what they did. Eliminate them and take them to the cemetery the Jews. "
    On the way to Auschwitz-Birkenau: we had eighty people in each car.
    His name inside the trailer was empty barrel and gave savory preserves of Sardines. The water was over. We began to suffer. Until the guys started to pee in a tin cup they gave us. We were in the little window of heaven
    The carriages the urine, which will cool down and we would drink. "
    Work: "In Birkenau I was in a construction commando. I worked in all kinds works. The wagons would come full. We would take fifty kilos of sacks of cement on the back and luggage ”.
    Leon: "Just before the release, L

    (c) Dukas

     

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    Benico Gihon was born in Thessaloniki, Greece. Survived along with his sister. His parents and five brothers and sisters perished. Gijon spent two months in the Thessaloniki ghetto, sent for seven months of forced labor, returned to the Thessaloniki ghetto and from there sent to Auschwitz-Birkenau. Was on the death march and in the Dachau camp.
    He was liberated in the Mildorf camp in April 1945. In 1948 he immigrated to Israel after a stay in a detention camp on Cyprus. Gijon lives in Ramat Gan,
    Widower, father of three sons) One of his sons served on the 13th Cruise and died after the military service (grandparents and grandchildren).
    Alberto: "From the ghetto we were transported by transport in the direction of Athens.
    We worked in the mountains. There my friend, Alberto, was executed. He tried to run away, grabbed him and hit him, put him near a hole. We were told 'this is what happens to those who want to escape.' And brought four
    Germans with guns fired at him. We saw how he held on a little bit, Then bends and falls and enters the pit."
    Hope: "We were always told, 'Finish the work here,
    your families are waiting for you. ' We returned to the ghetto after seven months. First, I looked for Dad and Mom. Then he learned
    We did what they did. Eliminate them and take them to the cemetery the Jews. "
    On the way to Auschwitz-Birkenau: we had eighty people in each car.
    His name inside the trailer was empty barrel and gave savory preserves of Sardines. The water was over. We began to suffer. Until the guys started to pee in a tin cup they gave us. We were in the little window of heaven
    The carriages the urine, which will cool down and we would drink. "
    Work: "In Birkenau I was in a construction commando. I worked in all kinds works. The wagons would come full. We would take fifty kilos of sacks of cement on the back and luggage ”.
    Leon: "Just before the release, L

    (c) Dukas

     

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    Arie Tabuch was born in Thessaloniki, Greece. Sent to Auschwitz on March '43, he was also in the Gross-Rosen camps and the concentration camp Sachsenburg. Moved to Mauthausen, where he was released in May
    '45. Migrated to Israel in January '47 after spending six months in a detention camp on Cyprus. Worked as a carpenter. Married, father of two daughters, grandfather of five grandchildren and 13 great-grandchildren.
    Hell: "How a 15-year-old young man can live in this hell of Auschwitz? Telling it is very easy, though go through it - a God who will never give such a thing again."
    Start: "I'll tell you about the first evening you train brought us to Auschwitz. Even the worst movie, the worst thing that could be in the world, can't describe humiliation, plagues and suffering. The choice the one with the finger, who goes to a labor camp and who goes crematorium, crematoriums. Choice of finger of one person, one animal, who could do the job you are my fate, the fate of everyone - whether he lives or will die."
    Shower: "We were undressed as we were born and let in us to the courtroom. There was a Polish guy, a gentleman, and there was a month march, falling snow, was a cold. And we're naked, and he takes a tube, cold water, ice water, and starts splashing we must. Hours, with the cold water. And we all cry, tremble, shout."
    Dad: "I was with my brother and my dad. My dad said,
    "If you get out of here, I want you to come back to Greece. Look there a picture of me, you'll have a picture of your dad. He did not survive. Two weeks later they took him."
    Freedom: "When the war was over, we were in the camp. Suddenly he came Jeep with guys, brigade. We almost passed out - from the hell we were in, to see Jewish officers." *** Local Caption *** 30923731

    (c) Dukas

     

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    Arie Tabuch was born in Thessaloniki, Greece. Sent to Auschwitz on March '43, he was also in the Gross-Rosen camps and the concentration camp Sachsenburg. Moved to Mauthausen, where he was released in May
    '45. Migrated to Israel in January '47 after spending six months in a detention camp on Cyprus. Worked as a carpenter. Married, father of two daughters, grandfather of five grandchildren and 13 great-grandchildren.
    Hell: "How a 15-year-old young man can live in this hell of Auschwitz? Telling it is very easy, though go through it - a God who will never give such a thing again."
    Start: "I'll tell you about the first evening you train brought us to Auschwitz. Even the worst movie, the worst thing that could be in the world, can't describe humiliation, plagues and suffering. The choice the one with the finger, who goes to a labor camp and who goes crematorium, crematoriums. Choice of finger of one person, one animal, who could do the job you are my fate, the fate of everyone - whether he lives or will die."
    Shower: "We were undressed as we were born and let in us to the courtroom. There was a Polish guy, a gentleman, and there was a month march, falling snow, was a cold. And we're naked, and he takes a tube, cold water, ice water, and starts splashing we must. Hours, with the cold water. And we all cry, tremble, shout."
    Dad: "I was with my brother and my dad. My dad said,
    "If you get out of here, I want you to come back to Greece. Look there a picture of me, you'll have a picture of your dad. He did not survive. Two weeks later they took him."
    Freedom: "When the war was over, we were in the camp. Suddenly he came Jeep with guys, brigade. We almost passed out - from the hell we were in, to see Jewish officers." *** Local Caption *** 30923728

    (c) Dukas

     

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    Zvi Henrich Herschel Eichold was born in Zabierce, Poland and is the survivor the only one left of his family in the Holocaust.
    In July 1943, the Eichold family was deported from the Bedzin ghetto in southern Poland and came to Auschwitz-Birkenau, where his parents and nine brothers were exterminated
    Eichold. He remained in Auschwitz until October of that year, later went out to the Fintepchen labor camp, then stayed in the labor camp close the Hatchback. After surviving the death march too, Eichold left
    Free in 1945, in the German village of Cape Town. In March 1949, he rose to Israel and enlisted in the IDF. In Israel, Eichold founded the Sperry Company
    Hemed, "which is now part of" Yedioth Books, "his memoirs and stories
    His family documented in his book "From the Deep." Eichold is married, a father of three, a grandfather
    He has 15 grandchildren and great-grandchildren, lives in Bnei Brak.
    Cemetery: "When I visit Auschwitz I say I come to the house
    My family's graveyard. We were ten children, and I was the only one left
    The family. Everyone perished in Auschwitz. Soon after I came to Israel I saw little kids playing on the street. I figured out quickly that they were born after the Holocaust. I envied them with great envy. I was jealous of not knowing
    Talk about the kingdom of death, and the nature of a deep wound from time."
    Faith: "It was a daily war of survival. There was no time at all to think of anything but the existence of that moment. Not about the Almighty either.
    At the end of the war I was in the US Army camp and heard there was a synagogue on the spot. As a percent of excitement and excitement I left everything and ran
    pray. But after six years of ghettos, extermination camps, without parents, no brothers, I took the arrangement next, and my lips froze. No I was able to thank her. Today I can thank God, so I wasn't able. And despite the difficu

    (c) Dukas

     

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    Zvi Henrich Herschel Eichold was born in Zabierce, Poland and is the survivor the only one left of his family in the Holocaust.
    In July 1943, the Eichold family was deported from the Bedzin ghetto in southern Poland and came to Auschwitz-Birkenau, where his parents and nine brothers were exterminated
    Eichold. He remained in Auschwitz until October of that year, later went out to the Fintepchen labor camp, then stayed in the labor camp close the Hatchback. After surviving the death march too, Eichold left
    Free in 1945, in the German village of Cape Town. In March 1949, he rose to Israel and enlisted in the IDF. In Israel, Eichold founded the Sperry Company
    Hemed, "which is now part of" Yedioth Books, "his memoirs and stories
    His family documented in his book "From the Deep." Eichold is married, a father of three, a grandfather
    He has 15 grandchildren and great-grandchildren, lives in Bnei Brak.
    Cemetery: "When I visit Auschwitz I say I come to the house
    My family's graveyard. We were ten children, and I was the only one left
    The family. Everyone perished in Auschwitz. Soon after I came to Israel I saw little kids playing on the street. I figured out quickly that they were born after the Holocaust. I envied them with great envy. I was jealous of not knowing
    Talk about the kingdom of death, and the nature of a deep wound from time."
    Faith: "It was a daily war of survival. There was no time at all to think of anything but the existence of that moment. Not about the Almighty either.
    At the end of the war I was in the US Army camp and heard there was a synagogue on the spot. As a percent of excitement and excitement I left everything and ran
    pray. But after six years of ghettos, extermination camps, without parents, no brothers, I took the arrangement next, and my lips froze. No I was able to thank her. Today I can thank God, so I wasn't able. And despite the difficu

    (c) Dukas

     

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    Arie Tabuch was born in Thessaloniki, Greece. Sent to Auschwitz on March '43, he was also in the Gross-Rosen camps and the concentration camp Sachsenburg. Moved to Mauthausen, where he was released in May
    '45. Migrated to Israel in January '47 after spending six months in a detention camp on Cyprus. Worked as a carpenter. Married, father of two daughters, grandfather of five grandchildren and 13 great-grandchildren.
    Hell: "How a 15-year-old young man can live in this hell of Auschwitz? Telling it is very easy, though go through it - a God who will never give such a thing again."
    Start: "I'll tell you about the first evening you train brought us to Auschwitz. Even the worst movie, the worst thing that could be in the world, can't describe humiliation, plagues and suffering. The choice the one with the finger, who goes to a labor camp and who goes crematorium, crematoriums. Choice of finger of one person, one animal, who could do the job you are my fate, the fate of everyone - whether he lives or will die."
    Shower: "We were undressed as we were born and let in us to the courtroom. There was a Polish guy, a gentleman, and there was a month march, falling snow, was a cold. And we're naked, and he takes a tube, cold water, ice water, and starts splashing we must. Hours, with the cold water. And we all cry, tremble, shout."
    Dad: "I was with my brother and my dad. My dad said,
    "If you get out of here, I want you to come back to Greece. Look there a picture of me, you'll have a picture of your dad. He did not survive. Two weeks later they took him."
    Freedom: "When the war was over, we were in the camp. Suddenly he came Jeep with guys, brigade. We almost passed out - from the hell we were in, to see Jewish officers." *** Local Caption *** 30923730

    (c) Dukas

     

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    Arie Tabuch was born in Thessaloniki, Greece. Sent to Auschwitz on March '43, he was also in the Gross-Rosen camps and the concentration camp Sachsenburg. Moved to Mauthausen, where he was released in May
    '45. Migrated to Israel in January '47 after spending six months in a detention camp on Cyprus. Worked as a carpenter. Married, father of two daughters, grandfather of five grandchildren and 13 great-grandchildren.
    Hell: "How a 15-year-old young man can live in this hell of Auschwitz? Telling it is very easy, though go through it - a God who will never give such a thing again."
    Start: "I'll tell you about the first evening you train brought us to Auschwitz. Even the worst movie, the worst thing that could be in the world, can't describe humiliation, plagues and suffering. The choice the one with the finger, who goes to a labor camp and who goes crematorium, crematoriums. Choice of finger of one person, one animal, who could do the job you are my fate, the fate of everyone - whether he lives or will die."
    Shower: "We were undressed as we were born and let in us to the courtroom. There was a Polish guy, a gentleman, and there was a month march, falling snow, was a cold. And we're naked, and he takes a tube, cold water, ice water, and starts splashing we must. Hours, with the cold water. And we all cry, tremble, shout."
    Dad: "I was with my brother and my dad. My dad said,
    "If you get out of here, I want you to come back to Greece. Look there a picture of me, you'll have a picture of your dad. He did not survive. Two weeks later they took him."
    Freedom: "When the war was over, we were in the camp. Suddenly he came Jeep with guys, brigade. We almost passed out - from the hell we were in, to see Jewish officers." *** Local Caption *** 30923729

    (c) Dukas

     

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    Zvi Henrich Herschel Eichold was born in Zabierce, Poland and is the survivor the only one left of his family in the Holocaust.
    In July 1943, the Eichold family was deported from the Bedzin ghetto in southern Poland and came to Auschwitz-Birkenau, where his parents and nine brothers were exterminated
    Eichold. He remained in Auschwitz until October of that year, later went out to the Fintepchen labor camp, then stayed in the labor camp close the Hatchback. After surviving the death march too, Eichold left
    Free in 1945, in the German village of Cape Town. In March 1949, he rose to Israel and enlisted in the IDF. In Israel, Eichold founded the Sperry Company
    Hemed, "which is now part of" Yedioth Books, "his memoirs and stories
    His family documented in his book "From the Deep." Eichold is married, a father of three, a grandfather
    He has 15 grandchildren and great-grandchildren, lives in Bnei Brak.
    Cemetery: "When I visit Auschwitz I say I come to the house
    My family's graveyard. We were ten children, and I was the only one left
    The family. Everyone perished in Auschwitz. Soon after I came to Israel I saw little kids playing on the street. I figured out quickly that they were born after the Holocaust. I envied them with great envy. I was jealous of not knowing
    Talk about the kingdom of death, and the nature of a deep wound from time."
    Faith: "It was a daily war of survival. There was no time at all to think of anything but the existence of that moment. Not about the Almighty either.
    At the end of the war I was in the US Army camp and heard there was a synagogue on the spot. As a percent of excitement and excitement I left everything and ran
    pray. But after six years of ghettos, extermination camps, without parents, no brothers, I took the arrangement next, and my lips froze. No I was able to thank her. Today I can thank God, so I wasn't able. And despite the difficu

    (c) Dukas

     

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    Pinchas Greenberger was born
    Banjabaniya, Transylvania
    (Then in the territory of Romania).
    Sent in April '44
    To Auschwitz-Birkenau
    From there to Warsaw, to work
    Coercion. Step on the march
    Death from Warsaw to Kutno. Was in the Dachau concentration camp, among the few
    Who were tattooed there. Released in April '45 on the railroad tracks. His whole family
    Perished in the Holocaust: five brothers, a sister and parents. "I was left alone". Increased
    To Israel in February 48, after a year in a detention camp on Cyprus. Served
    24 years in the IDF, released with the rank of lieutenant colonel. Widower, father of four children
    And grandfather of 11 grandchildren. Lives in Tel Aviv.
    Auschwitz: "At the age of 15, we were taken to Auschwitz
    We are taken. ' Father replied 'God is Father and these are the Messiah's dead'.
    I was sure Christ would get on the wagons and redeem us. "
    Death march: "We dealt with the demolition after the Germans bombed
    The ghetto. We were housed in barracks. Next to me is an old man who adopted me as a son.
    As the Russians approached, they took us out on foot. The one that went from the left
    Fluttered and pushed me. A dog jumped at me and pushed me forward. I dropped who
    Before me, the dog left me and attacked me for dropping, tearing it apart
    To shreds. It was the rabbi that I saw as an effort father. "
    Holocaust and Revival: "60 years I made an effort they didn't know. When we arrived
    Kibbutz Givat Haim, at the entrance, was a group of boys shouting,
    I thought happily. It turned out they were shouting 'the soaps have arrived'. They lived
    Us away from the friends' quarters, the young people in the kibbutz said, "You went
    As a sheep for slaughter, a Jew defends himself. ' After conquering Hess village, I returned
    To an excited kibbutz; "I have a state and I protect it." On one of the trails
    Younger people passed and played 'what,

    (c) Dukas

     

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    Pinchas Greenberger was born
    Banjabaniya, Transylvania
    (Then in the territory of Romania).
    Sent in April '44
    To Auschwitz-Birkenau
    From there to Warsaw, to work
    Coercion. Step on the march
    Death from Warsaw to Kutno. Was in the Dachau concentration camp, among the few
    Who were tattooed there. Released in April '45 on the railroad tracks. His whole family
    Perished in the Holocaust: five brothers, a sister and parents. "I was left alone". Increased
    To Israel in February 48, after a year in a detention camp on Cyprus. Served
    24 years in the IDF, released with the rank of lieutenant colonel. Widower, father of four children
    And grandfather of 11 grandchildren. Lives in Tel Aviv.
    Auschwitz: "At the age of 15, we were taken to Auschwitz
    We are taken. ' Father replied 'God is Father and these are the Messiah's dead'.
    I was sure Christ would get on the wagons and redeem us. "
    Death march: "We dealt with the demolition after the Germans bombed
    The ghetto. We were housed in barracks. Next to me is an old man who adopted me as a son.
    As the Russians approached, they took us out on foot. The one that went from the left
    Fluttered and pushed me. A dog jumped at me and pushed me forward. I dropped who
    Before me, the dog left me and attacked me for dropping, tearing it apart
    To shreds. It was the rabbi that I saw as an effort father. "
    Holocaust and Revival: "60 years I made an effort they didn't know. When we arrived
    Kibbutz Givat Haim, at the entrance, was a group of boys shouting,
    I thought happily. It turned out they were shouting 'the soaps have arrived'. They lived
    Us away from the friends' quarters, the young people in the kibbutz said, "You went
    As a sheep for slaughter, a Jew defends himself. ' After conquering Hess village, I returned
    To an excited kibbutz; "I have a state and I protect it." On one of the trails
    Younger people passed and played 'what,

    (c) Dukas

     

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    Pinchas Greenberger was born
    Banjabaniya, Transylvania
    (Then in the territory of Romania).
    Sent in April '44
    To Auschwitz-Birkenau
    From there to Warsaw, to work
    Coercion. Step on the march
    Death from Warsaw to Kutno. Was in the Dachau concentration camp, among the few
    Who were tattooed there. Released in April '45 on the railroad tracks. His whole family
    Perished in the Holocaust: five brothers, a sister and parents. "I was left alone". Increased
    To Israel in February 48, after a year in a detention camp on Cyprus. Served
    24 years in the IDF, released with the rank of lieutenant colonel. Widower, father of four children
    And grandfather of 11 grandchildren. Lives in Tel Aviv.
    Auschwitz: "At the age of 15, we were taken to Auschwitz
    We are taken. ' Father replied 'God is Father and these are the Messiah's dead'.
    I was sure Christ would get on the wagons and redeem us. "
    Death march: "We dealt with the demolition after the Germans bombed
    The ghetto. We were housed in barracks. Next to me is an old man who adopted me as a son.
    As the Russians approached, they took us out on foot. The one that went from the left
    Fluttered and pushed me. A dog jumped at me and pushed me forward. I dropped who
    Before me, the dog left me and attacked me for dropping, tearing it apart
    To shreds. It was the rabbi that I saw as an effort father. "
    Holocaust and Revival: "60 years I made an effort they didn't know. When we arrived
    Kibbutz Givat Haim, at the entrance, was a group of boys shouting,
    I thought happily. It turned out they were shouting 'the soaps have arrived'. They lived
    Us away from the friends' quarters, the young people in the kibbutz said, "You went
    As a sheep for slaughter, a Jew defends himself. ' After conquering Hess village, I returned
    To an excited kibbutz; "I have a state and I protect it." On one of the trails
    Younger people passed and played 'what,

    (c) Dukas

     

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    Zvi David was born in Thessaloniki, Greece. Survived with his brother and sister, parents and two
    His sisters perished. In March '43 he was taken to the Thessaloniki ghetto. The next day was taken for forced labor (construction of railroads) in Thebes in Greece, after half a year he returned to the ghetto, where he was sent to Auschwitz-Birkenau. From there he was sent to work
    Coercion in Warsaw. Step on the death march to Dachau, "We left 3000 people from Warsaw and we reached the Dachau 500. ”Sent to camp, worked near Mildorf and released on the 30th in April 1945, when it was assembled
    Was arrested. Immigrated to Israel in 1947
    After spending time in a detention camp on Cyprus.
    Worked at the GSS and in the institution. Allman, father of two children and grandfather of three grandchildren. Residing in Tel Aviv.
    The ramp: "Start concentrating on us. They said,
    'The children and the elderly will be traveling in trucks because and the camp is three miles away.
    The ones we choose will walk. My brother sent right and me left, with the children and the elderly. My brother yelled at me, 'You can't walk three miles by foot? Come with me. ' He saved me. I can't forget that. Everything that I brought remains in the trailer. We had a shower, gave us the clothes with the stripes and we did the clearing, the DJ and the number. I was after my brother, so he was 137141 and I had 137142. We had to learn the number in German and Polish, and put us in the block, for isolation.
    "These two weeks were hell. They would open their heads with sprouts, even Jews who were veterans of us. Didn't care they didn't care much like mine
    Late, steals to survive, or pushes someone in the snow to fall and take it the bread. We were indifferent."
    The march: "We have reached the bridge. People, without
    thought, jump into the river. The water has turned
    Red."
    As sheep for slaughter: "Ben-Gurion

    (c) Dukas

     

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    Zvi David was born in Thessaloniki, Greece. Survived with his brother and sister, parents and two
    His sisters perished. In March '43 he was taken to the Thessaloniki ghetto. The next day was taken for forced labor (construction of railroads) in Thebes in Greece, after half a year he returned to the ghetto, where he was sent to Auschwitz-Birkenau. From there he was sent to work
    Coercion in Warsaw. Step on the death march to Dachau, "We left 3000 people from Warsaw and we reached the Dachau 500. ”Sent to camp, worked near Mildorf and released on the 30th in April 1945, when it was assembled
    Was arrested. Immigrated to Israel in 1947
    After spending time in a detention camp on Cyprus.
    Worked at the GSS and in the institution. Allman, father of two children and grandfather of three grandchildren. Residing in Tel Aviv.
    The ramp: "Start concentrating on us. They said,
    'The children and the elderly will be traveling in trucks because and the camp is three miles away.
    The ones we choose will walk. My brother sent right and me left, with the children and the elderly. My brother yelled at me, 'You can't walk three miles by foot? Come with me. ' He saved me. I can't forget that. Everything that I brought remains in the trailer. We had a shower, gave us the clothes with the stripes and we did the clearing, the DJ and the number. I was after my brother, so he was 137141 and I had 137142. We had to learn the number in German and Polish, and put us in the block, for isolation.
    "These two weeks were hell. They would open their heads with sprouts, even Jews who were veterans of us. Didn't care they didn't care much like mine
    Late, steals to survive, or pushes someone in the snow to fall and take it the bread. We were indifferent."
    The march: "We have reached the bridge. People, without
    thought, jump into the river. The water has turned
    Red."
    As sheep for slaughter: "Ben-Gurion

    (c) Dukas

     

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    Malka Zaken was born in Arte, Greece. Widow, mother of three children, grandmother to grandchildren and great-grandchildren.
    Mother: “I told the girls in the camp that I want my mother. I was little, 12 years old. I was told: Your mother burned her.
    No mother now. Your mother has become ashes already. They took you're my mom straight to the oven and we went somewhere else."
    Work: "I would stand and fold clothes. Clothes that people brought from home. From Romania, France, everywhere they came. They told me, 'You will fold clothes and put them here and come to take'. I open the suitcases, I fold things come and go folded. I was constantly in fear and crying. Who goes there in the hell of Auschwitz and has none fear?"
    Gases: "Once they took me inside the gases. They wanted to kill me. I saw two Germans talking. Not heaven heart. I took my feet and went outside. There was a pile of clothing. I went inside the pile of clothes, inside.
    And one says to the other: Look, something's breathing there. So the second one telling him no, clothes are falling off."
    Beating: "Beating, beating, no words; thick chain inside stick and bend your back and hit you. I have broken back. Some doctors I went to, said there was nothing to do
    Madam, you got a lot of blows."
    Love: "Before I got married they said to my husband: Don't take her. She would not bring children, they must have taken everything out inside there in camps. Although I was not touched. My husband said,"I love her and I'll take her." *** Local Caption *** 30923706

    (c) Dukas

     

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    Zvi David was born in Thessaloniki, Greece. Survived with his brother and sister, parents and two
    His sisters perished. In March '43 he was taken to the Thessaloniki ghetto. The next day was taken for forced labor (construction of railroads) in Thebes in Greece, after half a year he returned to the ghetto, where he was sent to Auschwitz-Birkenau. From there he was sent to work
    Coercion in Warsaw. Step on the death march to Dachau, "We left 3000 people from Warsaw and we reached the Dachau 500. ”Sent to camp, worked near Mildorf and released on the 30th in April 1945, when it was assembled
    Was arrested. Immigrated to Israel in 1947
    After spending time in a detention camp on Cyprus.
    Worked at the GSS and in the institution. Allman, father of two children and grandfather of three grandchildren. Residing in Tel Aviv.
    The ramp: "Start concentrating on us. They said,
    'The children and the elderly will be traveling in trucks because and the camp is three miles away.
    The ones we choose will walk. My brother sent right and me left, with the children and the elderly. My brother yelled at me, 'You can't walk three miles by foot? Come with me. ' He saved me. I can't forget that. Everything that I brought remains in the trailer. We had a shower, gave us the clothes with the stripes and we did the clearing, the DJ and the number. I was after my brother, so he was 137141 and I had 137142. We had to learn the number in German and Polish, and put us in the block, for isolation.
    "These two weeks were hell. They would open their heads with sprouts, even Jews who were veterans of us. Didn't care they didn't care much like mine
    Late, steals to survive, or pushes someone in the snow to fall and take it the bread. We were indifferent."
    The march: "We have reached the bridge. People, without
    thought, jump into the river. The water has turned
    Red."
    As sheep for slaughter: "Ben-Gurion

    (c) Dukas

     

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    Chaim Noy (Tatla) was born in Czechoslovakia, a survivor of his family
    The nuclear, which he lost in 1941, when his parents and six siblings perished
    And were buried in a mass grave. Since then, Noy has embarked on his survival journey.
    1944 he was sent to the Auschwitz-Birch concentration and extermination camp
    -
    -B
    Nao, a step on the death march and survived, moved to the Mathausen concentration camp
    In Austria and later to the Gunskirchen collection camp, from where he was released
    In May 1945, he immigrated to Israel in September 1947, and is currently residing
    In Haifa. Noi is a widower, the father of three children and the grandfather of nine grandchildren
    And he is also a witness who for years searched the place where they were murdered
    His family, and finally erected a memorial to their memory.
    On the way: "We traveled three days and nights. The hardest was water
    We gave water. At each stop we stopped, we offered money in exchange for water.
    "Voda. Voda," that's what we asked for. And even more difficult was the pail
    The stool. Rope together, gathered a sheet around them and put the inside
    The bucket, there will be some privacy. And there were always fights, you killed
    We couldn't straighten Lime. In my trailer I saw a dead adult,
    And she was also a young mother to a few days old baby, both of whom died.
    The older man, mother and baby covered the same sheet. When we arrived
    To Birkenau and open the trailer, I remember my aunt Feige saying
    In Yiddish: "Ouch, finally there is air."
    Cannibalism: "Cannibalism started in Mathausen. There was bombing and corpses
    Dispersed and people began to abduct meat and eat. Met
    My relative's name and he asked me to keep his brother, a Nazi soldier
    Attacked his body to take off his shoes and clothes, and shot him when he did. The brother was seriously injured, and people
    Cold began to bite his flesh while ali

    (c) Dukas

     

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    Lania Rosenhoch was born in Radom, Poland. Only she and her two sisters survived
    From the whole family. From the combustion ghetto, she moved to concentration camps until
    Head to Auschwitz and from there to other camps. About a week before the war ended
    She was released to Sweden. Immigrated to Israel in 1948 with illegal immigration.
    Of her two daughters, she has six grandchildren, six great-grandchildren, and two other great-great-grandchildren
    Who are expected to be born these days. “Despite all the disasters, apparently
    Life is stronger than everything. "
    Good friend: "In Auschwitz, in the selection, I saw that the company was taken the most
    My goodness, Nyosha. I started running after her, but other companies stopped
    Force me and put me back in line. Neosha took Bergen-Belsen and more
    I didn't see her. "
    Nurses: "We decided not to say goodbye. In the ghetto, Jewish friends persuaded me
    Escape to the East, and I refused because I couldn't leave the family
    behind. Dad actually encouraged me to run away with them
    Life is waiting for us, after all we will die here. ' And I insisted I didn't
    Escape and leave the sisters behind. And that's what guided me to the end.
    I had some kind of inside knowledge that we had to stay together. Also backgammon
    Vedia was hard for us to say goodbye. When they offered me to work with survivor children
    Holocaust in Sweden, I said the condition is that the nurses stay with me.
    I taught them Hebrew. The first time we broke up was Bella and her share
    Attached to illegal immigration and I stayed in Sweden with a group
    The kids, but then we knew we would meet in Israel. Mania and Bella passed away before me
    About six years apart for four months. It was the first time
    We broke up. forever". *** Local Caption *** 30923711

    (c) Dukas

     

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    Lania Rosenhoch was born in Radom, Poland. Only she and her two sisters survived
    From the whole family. From the combustion ghetto, she moved to concentration camps until
    Head to Auschwitz and from there to other camps. About a week before the war ended
    She was released to Sweden. Immigrated to Israel in 1948 with illegal immigration.
    Of her two daughters, she has six grandchildren, six great-grandchildren, and two other great-great-grandchildren
    Who are expected to be born these days. “Despite all the disasters, apparently
    Life is stronger than everything. "
    Good friend: "In Auschwitz, in the selection, I saw that the company was taken the most
    My goodness, Nyosha. I started running after her, but other companies stopped
    Force me and put me back in line. Neosha took Bergen-Belsen and more
    I didn't see her. "
    Nurses: "We decided not to say goodbye. In the ghetto, Jewish friends persuaded me
    Escape to the East, and I refused because I couldn't leave the family
    behind. Dad actually encouraged me to run away with them
    Life is waiting for us, after all we will die here. ' And I insisted I didn't
    Escape and leave the sisters behind. And that's what guided me to the end.
    I had some kind of inside knowledge that we had to stay together. Also backgammon
    Vedia was hard for us to say goodbye. When they offered me to work with survivor children
    Holocaust in Sweden, I said the condition is that the nurses stay with me.
    I taught them Hebrew. The first time we broke up was Bella and her share
    Attached to illegal immigration and I stayed in Sweden with a group
    The kids, but then we knew we would meet in Israel. Mania and Bella passed away before me
    About six years apart for four months. It was the first time
    We broke up. forever". *** Local Caption *** 30923709

    (c) Dukas

     

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    Lania Rosenhoch was born in Radom, Poland. Only she and her two sisters survived
    From the whole family. From the combustion ghetto, she moved to concentration camps until
    Head to Auschwitz and from there to other camps. About a week before the war ended
    She was released to Sweden. Immigrated to Israel in 1948 with illegal immigration.
    Of her two daughters, she has six grandchildren, six great-grandchildren, and two other great-great-grandchildren
    Who are expected to be born these days. “Despite all the disasters, apparently
    Life is stronger than everything. "
    Good friend: "In Auschwitz, in the selection, I saw that the company was taken the most
    My goodness, Nyosha. I started running after her, but other companies stopped
    Force me and put me back in line. Neosha took Bergen-Belsen and more
    I didn't see her. "
    Nurses: "We decided not to say goodbye. In the ghetto, Jewish friends persuaded me
    Escape to the East, and I refused because I couldn't leave the family
    behind. Dad actually encouraged me to run away with them
    Life is waiting for us, after all we will die here. ' And I insisted I didn't
    Escape and leave the sisters behind. And that's what guided me to the end.
    I had some kind of inside knowledge that we had to stay together. Also backgammon
    Vedia was hard for us to say goodbye. When they offered me to work with survivor children
    Holocaust in Sweden, I said the condition is that the nurses stay with me.
    I taught them Hebrew. The first time we broke up was Bella and her share
    Attached to illegal immigration and I stayed in Sweden with a group
    The kids, but then we knew we would meet in Israel. Mania and Bella passed away before me
    About six years apart for four months. It was the first time
    We broke up. forever". *** Local Caption *** 30923707

    (c) Dukas

     

  • REPORTAGE - Portraits von Holocaust-Überlebenden
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    REPORTAGE - Portraits von Holocaust-Überlebenden
    Exclusive: Please credit Avigail Uzi/Yedioth Aharonot
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    Shalom Stemberg was born in Warsaw, Poland. Was in the Warsaw ghetto until year 41, he moved to the Plonsk ghetto. Sent on December 3, 1942
    To Auschwitz-Birkenau. Was in Auschwitz and Auschwitz-Monowitz. slave
    In the Yavishowitz labor camp. Step on the death march. Was in camps Buchenwald and Bissingen. Released in Dachau on April 29, 1945. Remains singular. His whole family perished. Immigrated to Israel in 1948 and was of Bonnie
    The city of Beit She'an with its settlement, after the War of Independence. darling
    The city of Haifa and an activist in the Yad Ezbah Friend for Holocaust Survivors
    Married, father of children and grandparents. Lives in Haifa.
    Job: "I got a job - counting the dead. Not from the gases.
    Threw them near the crematorium, and we had to count
    And list how many there are. We stood for a few hours, passing through Capos. They had
    Fingers on the palms, fingers - fists. Come and give
    We have punches. We were just a joke for them. "
    Transports: “On the trains we had no food, no water, no where lie. One sat on the other. When someone died on the way, it was a bench. "
    Survival: "I was hungry, I was sore, I had everything, but
    I stayed alive. It's not that I was a hero. I was like everyone else. Boy.
    After the Holocaust, I was left alone, without anyone. I didn't have a people
    Who to talk to, I had no one to be with. A lonely man in the world, who doesn't
    He learned nothing, finished four classes and was at war. To this day I am
    Miss the family I had. Since I immigrated to Israel, I have candles
    A soul that is lit in their memory day and night. "
    Polish law: "I was angry. I went to Tel Aviv and made a demonstration against him.
    Everywhere the Poles helped the Germans. They had no compassion, no
    They had a heart. "
    Message: "I went through all the destruction in the world and was left alone
    To Israel and I did a lot for the country. We h

    (c) Dukas

     

  • REPORTAGE - Portraits von Holocaust-Überlebenden
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    REPORTAGE - Portraits von Holocaust-Überlebenden
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    Bat Sheva Dagan was born in Lodz, Poland, as Isabella Rubinstein. Of nine sisters and brothers survived seven and three of her brothers, two who fled to Russia and one who immigrated to Israel before the war. Dagan was
    In the Radom ghetto. In May 1943, she was sent to Auschwitz-Birkenau on the death march and was in the Ravensbrueck and Malchov camps. She was released
    May 1945 and immigrated to Israel that year. Dagan is an educator, psychologist, writer and darling of the city of Holon. Pioneer in writing for children about the Holocaust ("What happened in the Holocaust", "Chica the bitch in the ghetto").
    Widow, mother of two sons, grandmother of ten grandchildren and 25 great grandchildren.
    "My family is the best revenge," she says.
    Survival: "Those who knew to endure had chances and those who did not know to suffer, he had a choice between life and death. And there were a lot of figures. Those who did not want to live there with their hands on the electrified fence you've finished life. I wanted to live and tell the whole world."
    Holocaust for children: "I was a kindergarten teacher. The children asked why I had a number and I was looking for something to answer. Teaching children about this Holocaust is a must all boy, depending on his developmental stage."
    Auschwitz-Birkenau: "We worked for eight girls in sorting the line rabbinate. I knew about the liquidation of the Lodz ghetto because I found photographs of my teachers. I was holding objects of the people of Lodz in my hands, eh
    Wearing them. Jackets, furs, underwear, jerseys, whatever the bu blood needs. I worked close to crematorium four. There were windows tall. Through the windows, a cyclone threw me. I heard howls weeping
    And then quiet, because everyone was poisoned. I saw how you got out
    The pronunciations and the sky on the pile, in front of the gate."
    Motherhood: "My oldest child was born in 1952

    (c) Dukas

     

  • REPORTAGE - Portraits von Holocaust-Überlebenden
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    REPORTAGE - Portraits von Holocaust-Überlebenden
    Exclusive: Please credit Avigail Uzi/Yedioth Aharonot
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    Tommy Shaham was born in Nitra, Slovakia. Sent to Auschwitz-Birkenau on October '44 after a month in the ghetto. Released January 27, 1945, Am Red Army entry into the camp. On the day of release a Soviet photographer filmed a movie documenting the event.
    From the film, a picture of 12 children standing between the fences of the camp was taken. Photography became one of the famous Holocaust pictures. Tommy is the boy with the hat aside the left of the image. Immigrated to Israel in 1949. Was a sports officer in Nahal At Wingate, he was a sports instructor at Hadassim, deputy director of Hadassim and coordinator of athletics in Israel. Married, father of three and grandfather to grandchildren. Lives in Herzliya.
    War: "When I was six years old, the Germans entered Slovakia. I was in first grade. We marveled at the power of the Germans. By October of '44, we were home, and then we were taken to Auschwitz."
    Auschwitz: "Rain and barbed wire and muslim that went completely thin, without life, without meat, only bones. I was ten and a half. I did not think. There was no time to think."
    Mother: "They put us in a big hall the kids and all the moms. I think they were there 150 child and a hundred mothers. Then the Germans came in, with the Jewish police in chargetThese things, and forcibly pushed the mothers outside. 150 children run into the door screaming, 'Mother Mother Mother' and cry."
    Germany: "I have a daughter in Berlin. Studied in Germany, met a German guy, got married and there is
    They have two Jewish children. I took my German groom on a tour of Auschwitz, you too his parents. I was in Germany for the first time in 1975. We drove down a street with no entrance with a vehicle except the occupants, and I said, 'I'm in.' I have to do something against it.
    A woman opened the window and yelled at me, and I said to her, 'I'm shit on you. I do not Afraid of you."
    The mecha

    (c) Dukas

     

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