|
|
|
|
| Yad Vashem Home ► | Torchlighters 2006 |
|
Contents
►
A Wake-up Call |
Uri Chanoch In July 1994, the ghetto was liquidated and the few people remaining after the Aktions were moved in deportation trains to Germany. On the way, the women and children were removed in Stutthoff, Poland – including Uri’s mother and sister. This was the last time that Uri saw them. The men were transported to the Landsberg/Kaufering labor camp in Dachau. Several days later, all the remaining young children were sent to Auschwitz – Uri’s brother, Dani, among them.
Due to the oppressive work, starvation and beating, Uri’s father’s health
deteriorated, and in October 1944 he was sent to Auschwitz. Uri was now
left alone and tried to satisfy his hunger by eating salt and drinking
water. As a result, his body swelled and he weakened, losing the will to
live. At sick call, he stepped forward, knowing full well that this meant
almost certain death. Fortunately, the Jewish assistants to the camp
commander who recognized him from the Ghetto intervened on his behalf, and
the commander ordered Uri removed from the line and assigned him the job
of cleaning the office. In April 1945, the remaining camp survivors were placed on a train to Dachau. During the journey, the train was blown up, and Uri managed to jump off and flee to the forest under fire. He hid in the forest until he was liberated by American soldiers. In 1946, Uri and his brother Dani, who had survived Auschwitz, came to Israel illegally on the ship “Wedgwood”. He was recruited into the Palmach and fought in the 4th battalion freeing Jerusalem from the siege. He then became an officer in the IDF. For most of his life, he was an industrialist, and since retiring has been engaged in public service. Uri is married to Yehudit and has 3 children and 5 grandchildren.
Ester Burstein (Lipscyz)
In September 1939, the Germans came to the family’s home and plundered its
valuables. A week later, Esther’s grandfather was ordered to appear at the
German headquarters and provide them with the number of Jews living in the
town.
In January 1945, the girls were marched to Bergen-Belsen. They caught
typhus, and her cousin died. Esther herself became very ill, and her
friend, Erika Pakua, risked her life to get her half a cup of milk. Erika
did not drink one drop from the cup. Ester remembers that acts of mutual
aid like this were very common. Her sister, Channah died just after
liberation. Esther weighed 27 kg when she was liberated. In 1948, Esther finally arrived in Israel. She settled in Haifa and studied accounting. She married in 1952, and moved to Bnai Brak. Esther has six children, and many grandchildren and great-grandchildren.
Hedy Hirsch (Engel) In 1944, Hedy and her mother tried to re-enter Slovakia, but they were arrested and put on a train to Auschwitz with no food or water. The journey took three days. On arrival, they managed to pass the selection and were sent to Lager C, where they experienced tremendous starvation, frequent selections and labor transports. In October, 17-year-old Hedy was selected for transport to a labor camp in Altenberg, Germany. Hedy asked the woman in charge of the block, with whom she had become friends, to include her mother on the list. The two were sent to work in an arms factory, where they labored for 12 hours a day. They remained there until April 1945. As the Allies approached, the factory workers were sent on a death march, without any food. On the night of 12 April, they reached Waldenberg, where they were liberated by the Americans. Hedy, her mother and her sister returned to Czechoslovakia. In 1949, Hedy and her mother came to Israel and settled in Jerusalem. Hedy is married and works as an ECG technician. Hedy has four children and several grandchildren.
Chasia Bornstein (Bielicka) As part of her underground activities, Chasia was sent to Bialystock, where she worked on the “Aryan” side under the alias of a young Polish woman – Helena Stasziwak. With the failure of the uprising in Bialystok, she joined another of her comrades as a courier for the partisan brigade hiding in the forests. During the day, she worked as “Helena” for the family of an SS officer, and at night she smuggled weapons, armaments, food and medicines, and gathered intelligence for the partisans. Together with other couriers, she also organized a cell of Germans who helped the partisans. Thanks to a map of Bialystok Chasia prepared for the Red Army Command, the city was captured without losses. For this, she and her fellow couriers were awarded the highest commendation given to civilians.
At the end of the war, Chasia opened the first orphanage for Jewish
children in Lodz. For the next 18 months, she wandered through Germany and
France with the children. In 1947, she boarded the ship “Theodore Herzl”
with more than 500 children in her charge. The ship was caught by the
British and sent to Cyprus, where Chasia continued to run educational
activities in the youth camp. After six months, the group managed to reach
Israel. To this day, she maintains warm relationships with many of the
group’s members.
Menachem Frenkel Some two months later, the French police came to arrest the family. They were sent to the camp in Venissieux. At that time, attempts were being made by three organizations – the OSE (Children’s Aid Society), Amitie Chretienne, and the Jewish Underground in Lyons – to remove some 100 Jewish children from the camp, Menachem and his sister among them. They were transferred to Chateau de Peyrins, a private institution run by Madame Germaine Chesneau, where they spent the next year and a half with 108 Jewish children. Menachem’s name was changed to Marcel Faure. He has no recollection of studying there, but he does remember that they worked in the vegetable garden, celebrated only Christian holidays, and food was scarce. One night, when Madame Chesneau noticed that one of her workers hadn’t returned at night, she feared the women had been arrested. She quickly arranged for all of the children to be dispersed to nearby villages.
Menachem was sent to the village of Rosans to live with the Hughes, a
couple with no children. His sister was sent to a monastery. Menachem was
hidden in the attic but supplied with plenty of food and even began to
study again. He remained in Rosans until the end of the war. Madame Chesneau, the Hughes’ and the priest Alexandre Glasberg of the Amitie Chretienne organization have been recognized by Yad Vashem as Righteous Among the Nations.
Kalman Bar On Kalman was separated from the others and taken to the “Twins Block.” There he met a dwarf by the name of Leush Peled, who was also his distant relative. Their familial relationship and shared plight bonded the two together, and they looked out for each other from then on. Kalman was put to work in the guardroom. This posting provided him with opportunities to hide precious food scraps, which he shared with his cousin Leush. He was subjected to medical experiments, receiving numerous injections. In July 1944, Kalman learnt that his mother and sister had been transferred to the barracks next to his. He began to throw food to them over the fence. One day, a party was held for SS soldiers in the guardroom. Kalman was placed against a wall and shots were fired between his legs and hands and near his head. Suddenly someone shouted: “What are you doing? He belongs to Mengele!” The shooting practice ended abruptly and Kalman was released.
During the death marches, Kalman hid for a week under a bunk, until he was
liberated on 27 January 1945 by the Red Army. He wandered alone for months
until he found his sister. His mother had died before the liberation. |
Copyright © 2006 Yad Vashem The Holocaust Martyrs' and Heroes' Remembrance Authority |