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Torchlighters 2004
Vera (Miriam) Dotan
Yehuda Feigin
Esther Eisen
Zvi Kratz
David Leitner
Stella Franco
Israel
Vera (Miriam) Dotan
Vera (Miriam) Dotan was born in
1931 to a family of four in Budapest, Hungary. When the Germans
invaded in 1944, her happy and culture-rich life completely
changed, and within a month all the Jews were sent to a ghetto
where they lived in intolerable conditions.
In July they were taken on a
three-day journey, without food or water, to Auschwitz. Upon
arrival, Vera and her mother were separated from her father and
brother, and Vera was sent off with the other children. Desperate
to rejoin her mother, Vera seized the first opportunity to escape
from the group and look for her mother, but she was caught by the
warden of the women’s camp, beaten, and returned to the children’s
quarters. Later that day she fled the children’s group again.
This time she found her mother, and the two managed to stay
together.
After three months of selections
and labor, they were sent to work at Wohldorf, an air base near
Frankfurt. After Wohldorf was evacuated, they were transported to
Ravensbrueck. When Vera’s mother was sent to work in the Siemens
factory, Vera ran after her. Fortunately, the group was one worker
short, and Vera was allowed to join.
At the end of April 1945,
Ravensbrueck was evacuated and the prisoners were marched away.
They walked under constant allied bombardment, and any stragglers
were shot. In the confusion, eight women—including Vera and her
mother—ran to hide in a nearby stable. When the stable caught
fire, they escaped to a ditch, only to find three SS soldiers
lying there. The soldiers tried to use them as human shields, but
again they managed to flee, and Vera and her mother slowly made
their way towards Berlin, from where they traveled to Prague and
then back to Ujpest. When they arrived home, they were heartbroken
to discover that Vera’s father had been murdered and cremated the
day he arrived at Auschwitz and her brother had died just a few
weeks before liberation.
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Vera’s last
picture with her brother Gabi, 1942 |
After the war, Vera married a friend of her brother’s, and in 1949
they moved to Israel, followed a year later by her mother. Today
they have two sons and five grandchildren.
Yehuda Feigin
Yehuda
Feigin was born in 1931 in Kovno, Lithuania, the youngest child to
a Zionist family of four. In 1941 the Germans entered the city,
and many Lithuanians joined in the rioting against the Jews.
Within a few months, all the Jews were concentrated in the ghetto
in Slobodka; the Feigins shared a four-roomed house with three
other families. Yehuda helped support his family by cultivating a
small vegetable garden in the courtyard, gathering wood and
selling candies.
The many aktions in the ghetto
diminished the number of its residents, including much of Yehuda’s
extended family. During the children’s aktion, Yehuda and
his mother hid in the basement. The following day, still fearing
for his son’s life, Yehuda’s father asked the food distributor to
hide Yehuda underneath the canvas in his truck. Yehuda returned to
the ghetto the next day.
In July 1944 the ghetto was liquidated
and the remaining residents were loaded onto trains. The women
and children disembarked at Stutthof, but Yehuda chose to stay
with his father and the train continued to Landsberg. After a
week, the 131 children of Kovno were separated from their families
and sent to Auschwitz, where they were used as “human horses”
hitched to wagons carrying items from place to place. The children
formed a cohesive group and gave each other vital support.
During the selektions on the
eve of Rosh Hashana and Yom Kippur in September
1944, some 90 children were sent for extermination, including the
youngest—an eight-year-old boy—who tried in vain to exchange his
portion of bread for his life. After Auschwitz was destroyed the
remaining children were marched 50 kilometers to the train
station, and sent to Mauthausen. During the journey the train was
bombed, killing a number of passengers. After two months, they
were transferred to a tent encampment and then on to Gunskirchen,
where they lay in the mud under pouring rain, without shelter or
food. Many people died, but the children of Kovno managed to
survive until their liberation in May 1945.
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Yehuda and his mother walking
in Kovno, before the war |
After
the war the Feigin family reunited, and in 1948 made aliyah.
Yehuda married an Israeli-born woman, Aviva, in 1955, and today
the couple has three sons and three grandchildren.
Esther Eisen
Esther Eisen was born in 1929 in Lodz, Poland, to a family
of four. In 1939, after the German invasion, the family was
relocated to the ghetto. Crowded into one room with her aunt,
cousin and another woman, and with no income, it was difficult to
subsist. After her eldest brother died of starvation and her
mother fell ill, Esther found a job making artificial flowers.
In September 1942 the Jews were commanded to report to the
courtyards; the elderly, children and the sick—including Esther’s
mother—were taken to Chelmno. Esther soon fell ill herself with
typhus, but she later recovered and returned to work. In August
1944, the ghetto was liquidated and the remaining Jews—including
Esther and her father—were transported to Auschwitz. The men and
women were separated immediately upon arrival, and after ten days,
Esther was sent to Bomlitz labor camp. A month later she was
transferred to Bergen-Belsen, and then to Elsnig, where she worked
until April 1945.
As the allies approached, the prisoners were loaded onto
trains without food or water, and taken deeper into German
territory. On the way, the train was bombed and many passengers
were killed, but Esther escaped with a friend into the woods.
Returning to the destroyed railway the next day, they learned that
the Germans had assembled 100 of the women prisoners inside a
building and burned it down.
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A silver goblet
from Esther’s home, recovered from her basement by her aunt
after the war |
At the end of the war, Esther returned to Poland and tried,
in vain, to discover the fate of her father. After the Kielce
pogrom, she decided to leave Poland along with other DPs. Along
the way, Esther met Ya’akov (Kobe); they fell in love, married in
Bergen-Belsen, and immigrated to Israel. Kobe fought and was
killed during the War of Independence. Esther later married Romek,
a childhood friend from Lodz, and the couple had three children
and two grandchildren. Today Esther is an sculptor, a poet and a
writer.
Zvi Kratz
Zvi
Kratz was born in 1924 in Chust,
Czechoslovakia, into a religious family of six. Following the Nazi
invasion in March 1939, all Jewish children were expelled from
school, and Zvi worked to help support his family.
Zvi
was transported to Auschwitz-Birkenau in June, with the other Jews
of Chust. After a three-hour wait in the cattle cars while Jews
from the previous transport were being exterminated, Zvi and his
father Avraham were separated from his mother and three brothers,
who were sent straight to the gas chambers. The next day, Zvi
persuaded his father to sign up for work with him. They remained
in Auschwitz for a few more days where Zvi found Pnina, his
sweetheart. They pledged to meet after the war.
Zvi
and his father were sent to work in a labor camp inside the
destroyed Warsaw ghetto, tearing down the ruins to reclaim the
building materials. In the summer of 1944, after the Polish
uprising, the prisoners were evacuated to Dachau—an exhausting
13-day journey in which many prisoners died. Zvi and his father
were placed in Kaufering 7—a secondary camp of Dachau—where the
prisoners lived in dugouts and performed hard labor. Two months
later, typhus swept through the camp, killing more than half the
prisoners. Zvi’s father who died in his arms in February 1945, two
months before liberation. Zvi also fell ill, but a week later all
the prisoners, including the sick, were forced on a three-day
march to Allach.
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Zvi (right) with his younger
brother Shaya, 1937 |
Lying exhausted in his cabin, Zvi
soon heard cries of joy; the Americans had arrived and liberated
the camp. Despite losing his will to live, Zvi was transferred to
a hospital near Munich, where he spent a month recuperating. He
then returned to Chust,
found Pnina and married her. In 1949 they immigrated with their
young son to Israel, and settled in Jerusalem, where their
daughter was later born. Today Zvi has eight grandchildren and
seven great-grandchildren.
David Leitner
David Leitner was born in 1930 in
Nyiregyhaza, Hungary, into a
religious family of six. In 1938, his father was drafted into the
Hungarian army, returning in March 1944, just before the German
invasion. Within a few weeks, local gendarmes had confiscated the
Jews’ valuables and herded them into a ghetto. Six weeks later
they were taken to the train station, packed into cattle cars and
deported to Auschwitz-Birkenau.
At Birkenau, the men of David’s family
were separated from his mother and sisters, who were murdered
immediately. David’s father and brother were sent to Buchenwald
and from there to Bergen-Belsen, while David remained in Birkenau
with 40,000 other children. Being tall and strong, David survived
further selektions, as well as a severe beating after he
was caught trying to escape on one of the transports exiting the
camp. On Simchat Torah, David was herded with hundreds of
other children to the crematorium. Amid cries of Shema Yisrael
and calls for their parents, the children were stripped naked
for extermination. Suddenly the process stopped; a group of
children was needed to unpack potatoes from a train of supplies
that had just arrived. David was among 50 children chosen for the
task: they worked amidst the whistle of bullets, as guards shot at
them for amusement.
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A holy book inscribed by
David’s father and given to him on his wedding day |
In January 1945, David was transported
to Mauthausen where the prisoners were whipped by SS soldiers and
left naked in the freezing cold for three days. In April, they
were marched through the pouring rain to Gunskirchen, where
thousands of them huddled together in a camp of roofless shacks.
On 4 May, the survivors discovered that the Germans had fled the
camp so David made his way to a nearby town. After six months in
hospital, David was strong enough to return to his ruined home.
There he found his brother, who told him that their father had
died marching from Bergen-Belsen.
Three months later David traveled to Czechoslovakia
with the Bricha (Escape) organization, and then to Austria
and Italy. In 1949, he sailed to Israel, joining the IDF while
still aboard the ship. He settled in Nir Galim, where he met his
Israeli-born wife, Sarah. Today David and Sarah have two
daughters, ten grandchildren and three great-grandchildren.
Stella Franco
Israel
Stella Franco was born in Rhodes in
1926, the eldest of seven children. Until 1943, the country was
far removed from the war, but in 1944 Rhodes began being bombed
heavily. During Passover a bomb struck the family’s home, killing
Stella’s mother and five siblings. Overcome by grief, Stella’s
father moved the remnants of his family to a nearby Greek village,
where they stayed for three months. In July the Germans entered
the village and assembled the 2,000 Jews into a building. The day
after Stella was incarcerated, they were loaded onto four
freighters headed for Piraeus. One ship was sent to Kos, to
collect the island’s 200 Jews. Another stopped in Leros and picked
up Daniel Rahamim, the only Jew on the island (Daniel perished in
the Holocaust, together with his family from Rhodes).
Nearly a month later, with no food and
little water, they arrived in Auschwitz-Birkenau. Those who had
survived immediately underwent a selektion—Stella’s father,
who was young and relatively healthy, chose to go with his elderly
parents and small daughter to their deaths, leaving Stella alone.
Stella and the other young women from Rhodes who were admitted
into the camp refused to believe their families had been
destroyed, despite the smoke spiraling out of the crematoria.
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Stella (left) with her
family, 1942 |
In November, Stella was transported to
the Wilstedt camp in Germany. There she met 32 young women from
Rhodes, including her aunt, which slightly alleviated her
suffering. Following bombings of the camp, the women were
transferred to Theresienstadt. On 8 May, the Russian army arrived
and was greeted with great joy. Stella stayed in the camp for a
few more weeks to regain their strength before journeying on to
Prague, and eventually settling in Bologna, Italy. Two years
later, she succeeded in contacting one of two uncles who lived
abroad. He flew her to his home in the Congo and warmly welcomed
her into the family. Soon after she met Salvator Israel,
originally from Rhodes, who had also lost his family in the
Holocaust. They married and had two children, and after many happy
years, immigrated to Israel. Today, Stella has four grandchildren.
Copyright ©2004 Yad Vashem The Holocaust
Martyrs' and Heroes' Remembrance Authority |