Read reflections and testimonies written by Holocaust survivors in their own words.

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  • Hunger Winter

    It was cold, bitter cold. I was only two and a half years old. My feet itched and hurt and then itched again—the result of chronic cold feet. The attic where my family was hiding had no heating, only a very small camping-like stove that was only used to heat water or some food, if we had it. It was the coldest winter in a long time. The southern part of the Netherlands was already liberated. We were in Amsterdam, the northern part. We were isolated and it was very difficult to get food, oil, or wood to heat. Trees were chopped down clandestinely in the night. Punishment for that action would be fierce.

    Tags:   louise lawrence-israëlslouise lawrence israëlsechoes of memory, volume 4hidingmemoryparentsfood

  • Spiritual Resistance—The Hanging

    Nineteen forty-three was a very cold winter. Life in the ghetto was very difficult. People did not have wood to heat their rooms; they burned every piece of wooden furniture to keep warm. The hunger was great—the small ration that was given to us could not keep us alive.

    Tags:   nesse godinechoes of memory, volume 4collaborationjewish resistancegestapoghettosfood

  • Tedium!

    “The roof tiles are here, take your places on the steps.” Oh not again we thought; why all this nonsense? We work all day to get the heavy brick tiles up to the roof of the apartment building, and tomorrow morning, after an air raid, they probably will all be in small pieces on the ground. But we had to do it.

    Tags:   fritz glucksteinechoes of memory, volume 3forced labormemoryfood

  • Two Decent Germans

    I met them at the first concentration camp I was sent to. Their appearances and personalities were completely different from each other. One, called Shaika, was emaciated, thin. He had to wear suspenders to hold up his trousers. He had a lean, drawn face, protruding cheekbones, searching eyes, and a pipe forever hanging from the side of his mouth—even when it wasn’t lit.

    Tags:   manya friedmanechoes of memory, volume 3ssgermanyfoodforced-labor camps

  • In The Ghetto with My Mother

    One day my mother asked me to take off my yellow star because we had to go to the country. We lived in a ghetto, and we were not supposed to leave. If we were caught on the outside we could be killed and they also might kill other people in the ghetto for good measure.

    Tags:   erika eckstutechoes of memory, volume 3anti-jewish legislationantisemitismghettosfood

  • Lasting Memory

    I remember the time in the Czernowitz ghetto when I used to take off the star from my coat, leave my ID, and go out to look for food. I was always hungry and scared. I went to a store that sold food to the clergy, because I knew my father had a priest who was an old schoolmate. It was easy for me to go out since I was blonde, blue–eyed, and spoke German fluently.

    Tags:   echoes of memory, volume 1czernowitzfoodmemoryghettosjewish resistance

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