Frank Cohn was born in 1925, in Breslau, Germany, where he experienced antisemitism following the enactment of a variety of anti-Jewish laws by the Nazi government. Frank came to the United States in 1938, just before Kristallnacht. He returned to Germany with the American military as a member of the 12th Army Group Intelligence Unit. Read Frank’s full biography.
Testimony
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Frank Cohn:
My name is Frank Cohn. I'm a Holocaust survivor and Museum volunteer. I was born in 1925, in Breslau, Germany—now named Wrocław in Poland. My father and mother energetically opened a sporting goods store, which was pretty successful. As middle-class German citizens, they hired a maid to take care of the household, and after I arrived, a girl to take care of me.
Our life was full of comfort. But there were dark clouds of a gathering political storm on the horizon as we entered the years of the 1930s.
From my window in my apartment, I was then about six years old, I could see fighting of groups of communists with groups of Nazis in front of the Finance Office, which was located across the street from us. And then, in 1932, the first personal news struck us.
My uncle Max was killed in the street attack, in Chemnitz, by Nazi Storm Troopers, just because he was a Jew. There were no arrests. But the word "Nazi" started to take meaning for me.
It was 1933, when Hitler, the Nazi Chancellor, came to power. It was immediately frightening and became personal.
Nazi Storm Troopers picketed my father's store, telling the public not to buy from Jews.
Within a year, my father sold the store for much less than it was worth. He had considered the need to sell as a catastrophe, but in retrospect it probably was a lifesaver. It was the beginning of his economic decline. Had the store still flourished, we never would have considered leaving Germany when we did.
At age six, I entered public school. I don't remember much of my first-grade teacher. He was "old," probably in his 50s. But in second grade, there was a young teacher, and I immediately loved him. I was thrilled to learn that Mr. Schubert would continue with my class in the third grade. But to my horror, as the first day of my third-grade school opened, there was Mr. Schubert in full Nazi uniform, with a swastika armband and lapel pin.
Pretty soon, many of the kids in class also came to school in their Hitler Youth uniforms. And then they sang their Nazi songs, standing up, while I was "allowed" to stay seated. Not a good omen.
One day, going to school, I was chased by a group of kids yelling, "Jew boy!" But I was a fast runner and eluded them. It was on that day that my parents decided to move me into a private, Jewish school.
A year later, our maid Bertha took me along as she decided to see Hitler, who was visiting Breslau. She told me to be sure to raise my hand in a Hitler salute when his car would pass us. I argued with her that as a Jew I was not allowed to do that, but she insisted. I was scared stiff if one of my former schoolmates might see me.
Then, the car approached, and people around me, including Bertha, became hysterical, screaming, "Sieg Heil, Sieg Heil," and I rendered the Hitler salute. No one saw me, but I was deeply disappointed with Bertha. Why would she love someone who would hate me? But I never told my parents about this excursion.
Our life in Breslau became increasingly more uncomfortable. We had some German friends with children, who I played with, but they terminated contact as soon as Hitler came to power. There were no public restaurants where Jews could eat. Most had signs "Jews Not Welcome" or "Jews Prohibited."
Laws were passed in 1935 which effectively brought about segregation between Aryans and Jews. Bertha could no longer work for us. I was cautioned to never become prominent for any reason in public—behave, behave, behave.
By 1938, my parents were running out of money and they planned a way to leave Germany. My father was determined to look for relatives in the States and convince them to give us an affidavit, which was needed to immigrate to the US. But the waiting time to emigrate, after securing an affidavit, was at least five years. In retrospect, waiting that long would obviously been impossible.
I celebrated my Bar Mitzvah, chanting portions of the Torah in flawless Hebrew, making my parents very proud. I received many wonderful gifts. After we returned from the synagogue, my father told me that he would be leaving for New York to look for relatives. Joy immediately turned to sadness.
Within a couple of weeks, he departed with a US visitor's visa in his pocket. We received letters from him daily and he reported that he had found his relatives, but they were unable to secure him an affidavit, which required a commitment for ongoing financial support.
When he left for New York, he was only allowed to take ten marks,although many travel expenses could be prepaid before his departure. Yet those ten marks, worth about $2.50, were not going to do much for him. He was at the mercy of Jewish relief agencies for financial assistance. However, their assistance was limited, requiring him ultimately to return to Germany.
While we waited for word from my father, two Gestapo agents, Nazi secret police, came to our door asking to see my father. My mother advised them that he was on an international business trip and was expected to return the following month. They told her he was required to report to Gestapo headquarters immediately upon his return.
My mother was devastated. She remembered a business friend named Michaelis, who, had some years earlier, had been requested to report to their headquarters. Within hours, his body was found outside on the pavement, after he had allegedly fallen from a third-story window.
My mother sent a coded message to my father telling him not to return. She was afraid that the mail might be monitored. My mother now faced a terrible dilemma. Could we just leave and join my father?
The affidavit route was not going to work for us. We did not have time to wait five years. Could she get us a visitor's visa and join him? Would we be able to stay in the US or would we be forced to return to Germany? And if so, would we be arrested and placed into a concentration camp?
All throughout the city there was graffiti, "JIKZ," which everyone knew meant "Jews into Concentration Camps." A decision had to be made. Then, for her, came another small push.
The Jews of Germany were ordered to submit their passports to be stamped with a big "J." My mother assumed that the next step was the confiscation of passports. The fear of losing her passport made her go to the US consulate in Breslau to seek a visitor's visa. If it was disclosed that my father was already in the States, she probably would not receive one. Luckily, she got the visa, but it only pertained to her own travel and did not include me.
Completely out of character, she approached the German consulate clerk and paid him to add my name to the visa. She now had the option for us to join my father. My mother now asked me "Should we leave?"
It was a crucial, difficult question. I had my friends, a new BMW bicycle, my stamp collection. But I knew we were not wanted here in Germany. I contemplated briefly and then said, "Let's go!"
My mother cautioned me not to tell a soul that we would be leaving in a couple of days.
Well, there was one more soccer game to play. I took my favorite position and we played. But this time I was distracted and we lost the game. I said: "So long, see you next time!" But there was not to be a next time, and I would never see or hear from any of my friends ever again.
During the next night, she and I packed one suitcase each. She took a chance and packed some silverware. But I had to leave my bike, my stamp collection, and my many other prized possessions behind.
At 5 a.m., we silently slipped out of our apartment, without waking up Mrs. Griffith, the suspected Nazi informant who had been placed in our apartment by the Gestapo.
We boarded a train for Berlin, where my mother said goodbye to her 86-year-old father, as well as her older sister and her family. It was a sad goodbye, since the future was not obvious to anyone.
Her father died within a year, presumably when taken to a concentration camp, but her sister escaped with her family to Australia. She would never see either of them again.
A couple of days later, we boarded a train for Amsterdam. As we approached the German/Holland border, my mother cautioned me to keep my mouth shut "Do not volunteer anything!" We had in our possession: our passports, our suitcases, our money (ten marks each), pre-paid, first-class return tickets on the Holland America Line, as well as two weeks of pre-paid New York hotel reservations.
A German border guard entered our railroad compartment, and my mother got very tense. He asked if anyone had anything from a long list of presumably contraband items and there were no answers from the six passengers in our compartment. Then he asked if anyone had a camera.
"I have one!" My mother gave me a look, which I could tell she was ready to kill me. I had not kept my mouth shut. I showed him my box camera. He looked it over and returned it to me. There were no further questions and the train moved on.
We had crossed the border. Was there any possibility of a safe return?
In Amsterdam, my mother had heard that the banker Rothschild was helping refugees. She had the address and went to see him while I stayed with her cousin Kurt, who had fled with his family to Holland. When she returned, she was quite cheerful. She received a substantial sum of money—but I never found out how much.
We said good-bye to Kurt, his wife Fanny, and their 13-year-old son, David. Their approaching fates were concentration camps, which somehow Kurt and Fanny managed to survive. But David died there in freezing weather, in an open field, without food or water or adequate clothing, along with about a hundred other children, as his father watched.
Of course, we had no inkling of that. We returned to the train station to take the train to Rotterdam, where we boarded the steamer Staatendam of the Holland America Line, a ship that would be at the bottom of Rotterdam harbor a year later.
My mother had bought first-class tickets, since there was really nothing we could do with our money, which we were forced to leave behind. And there was a chance that we could cash in the return tickets if we didn't have to use them.
All this comfort masked the prospect of what could occur at arrival in New York. My mother was well aware that if the immigration authorities on Ellis Island knew that my father was already in-country we might very well be told to take an immediate return voyage back to Germany. She again became tense as we approached the New York harbor. But then came a big surprise.
All first-class passengers were invited to disembark directly through customs. All others were diverted to Ellis Island for detailed examination. A quick check through customs and there was my father waiting for us on the pier. What a happy reunion! Tears were shed.
It was October 30th, 1938. November 9th, 1938, was the date of the German pogrom against the Jews called Kristallnacht, or "Night of the Broken Glass." A Jewish student had shot a member of the German embassy in Paris, which served as an excuse to implement a prior-planned attack on the German Jews. Jewish stores were smashed, synagogues were burned and thousands of Jews were arrested. A large fine was imposed on all the German Jews.
Every newspaper in the States carried the news, which we anxiously followed. It was a great tragedy-but ironically, not for us. After that pogrom, no more Jews were forced to leave the States to return to Germany. President Roosevelt issued an executive order which allowed all in-country refugees to stay in the US on a permanent basis—our visitor's visa was extended indefinitely.
The timing of our escape was indeed a miracle. We were saved.
By the end of November 1938, I was enrolled in seventh grade in a junior high school in New York City and subsequently, I went to Stuyvesant High School there. The war started in Europe in 1939, and my father received permission to work. The war reached us on December 7th, 1941. Then, in September of 1943, one month after my 18th birthday, I was drafted into the US Army and sworn in as a US citizen during basic training, in Columbus, Georgia.
I was shipped overseas as an infantry replacement on the Queen Mary, returning to Europe in September, 1944. In Belgium, it was discovered that I spoke German and so I was sent for a two-week course to become an intelligence agent. I served during the Battle of the Bulge and later in the Rhineland and central Europe campaigns, tasked with securing building and personality targets and arresting persons suspected of war crimes.
I met up with the Russians at the Elbe River as the war was ending and later was assigned to guard war criminals and to oversee German prisoners of war, who helped me crate and ship Nazi documents back to the States in support of future war-crime prosecutions.
I returned to the States in May 1946 and was discharged in the rank of Staff Sergeant. But I stayed in the Army Reserve, went to college, and upon graduation was commissioned as a second lieutenant, Regular Army. I served a total of 35 years, with three more tours in Germany during the Cold War, and one year of war-time service in Vietnam. I retired in the rank of Colonel, in 1978.
I share my history as a way to honor the memory of my family members who were killed in the Holocaust. My 11 murdered family members were: Rea Cohn, Isidor Cohn, Richard Brodda, Jenny Brodda, Hugo Brodda, Bertha Brodda, Max Berdass, Else Berdass, Saul Pottlitzer, Herman David, David Josephson.
My family members who survived fled to Holland, England, Italy, Haiti, Australia, Israel, and the United States of America.
I hope that my experience, and those of all Holocaust victims and survivors, will serve as a warning of what can happen when hate and antisemitism go unchecked in a society, and be an inspiration for people to make better choices to prevent such atrocities in the future.
Thank you—and God bless America!
Transcript
Frank Cohn:
My name is Frank Cohn. I'm a Holocaust survivor and Museum volunteer. I was born in 1925, in Breslau, Germany—now named Wrocław in Poland. My father and mother energetically opened a sporting goods store, which was pretty successful. As middle-class German citizens, they hired a maid to take care of the household, and after I arrived, a girl to take care of me.
Our life was full of comfort. But there were dark clouds of a gathering political storm on the horizon as we entered the years of the 1930s.
From my window in my apartment, I was then about six years old, I could see fighting of groups of communists with groups of Nazis in front of the Finance Office, which was located across the street from us. And then, in 1932, the first personal news struck us.
My uncle Max was killed in the street attack, in Chemnitz, by Nazi Storm Troopers, just because he was a Jew. There were no arrests. But the word "Nazi" started to take meaning for me.
It was 1933, when Hitler, the Nazi Chancellor, came to power. It was immediately frightening and became personal.
Nazi Storm Troopers picketed my father's store, telling the public not to buy from Jews.
Within a year, my father sold the store for much less than it was worth. He had considered the need to sell as a catastrophe, but in retrospect it probably was a lifesaver. It was the beginning of his economic decline. Had the store still flourished, we never would have considered leaving Germany when we did.
At age six, I entered public school. I don't remember much of my first-grade teacher. He was "old," probably in his 50s. But in second grade, there was a young teacher, and I immediately loved him. I was thrilled to learn that Mr. Schubert would continue with my class in the third grade. But to my horror, as the first day of my third-grade school opened, there was Mr. Schubert in full Nazi uniform, with a swastika armband and lapel pin.
Pretty soon, many of the kids in class also came to school in their Hitler Youth uniforms. And then they sang their Nazi songs, standing up, while I was "allowed" to stay seated. Not a good omen.
One day, going to school, I was chased by a group of kids yelling, "Jew boy!" But I was a fast runner and eluded them. It was on that day that my parents decided to move me into a private, Jewish school.
A year later, our maid Bertha took me along as she decided to see Hitler, who was visiting Breslau. She told me to be sure to raise my hand in a Hitler salute when his car would pass us. I argued with her that as a Jew I was not allowed to do that, but she insisted. I was scared stiff if one of my former schoolmates might see me.
Then, the car approached, and people around me, including Bertha, became hysterical, screaming, "Sieg Heil, Sieg Heil," and I rendered the Hitler salute. No one saw me, but I was deeply disappointed with Bertha. Why would she love someone who would hate me? But I never told my parents about this excursion.
Our life in Breslau became increasingly more uncomfortable. We had some German friends with children, who I played with, but they terminated contact as soon as Hitler came to power. There were no public restaurants where Jews could eat. Most had signs "Jews Not Welcome" or "Jews Prohibited."
Laws were passed in 1935 which effectively brought about segregation between Aryans and Jews. Bertha could no longer work for us. I was cautioned to never become prominent for any reason in public—behave, behave, behave.
By 1938, my parents were running out of money and they planned a way to leave Germany. My father was determined to look for relatives in the States and convince them to give us an affidavit, which was needed to immigrate to the US. But the waiting time to emigrate, after securing an affidavit, was at least five years. In retrospect, waiting that long would obviously been impossible.
I celebrated my Bar Mitzvah, chanting portions of the Torah in flawless Hebrew, making my parents very proud. I received many wonderful gifts. After we returned from the synagogue, my father told me that he would be leaving for New York to look for relatives. Joy immediately turned to sadness.
Within a couple of weeks, he departed with a US visitor's visa in his pocket. We received letters from him daily and he reported that he had found his relatives, but they were unable to secure him an affidavit, which required a commitment for ongoing financial support.
When he left for New York, he was only allowed to take ten marks,although many travel expenses could be prepaid before his departure. Yet those ten marks, worth about $2.50, were not going to do much for him. He was at the mercy of Jewish relief agencies for financial assistance. However, their assistance was limited, requiring him ultimately to return to Germany.
While we waited for word from my father, two Gestapo agents, Nazi secret police, came to our door asking to see my father. My mother advised them that he was on an international business trip and was expected to return the following month. They told her he was required to report to Gestapo headquarters immediately upon his return.
My mother was devastated. She remembered a business friend named Michaelis, who, had some years earlier, had been requested to report to their headquarters. Within hours, his body was found outside on the pavement, after he had allegedly fallen from a third-story window.
My mother sent a coded message to my father telling him not to return. She was afraid that the mail might be monitored. My mother now faced a terrible dilemma. Could we just leave and join my father?
The affidavit route was not going to work for us. We did not have time to wait five years. Could she get us a visitor's visa and join him? Would we be able to stay in the US or would we be forced to return to Germany? And if so, would we be arrested and placed into a concentration camp?
All throughout the city there was graffiti, "JIKZ," which everyone knew meant "Jews into Concentration Camps." A decision had to be made. Then, for her, came another small push.
The Jews of Germany were ordered to submit their passports to be stamped with a big "J." My mother assumed that the next step was the confiscation of passports. The fear of losing her passport made her go to the US consulate in Breslau to seek a visitor's visa. If it was disclosed that my father was already in the States, she probably would not receive one. Luckily, she got the visa, but it only pertained to her own travel and did not include me.
Completely out of character, she approached the German consulate clerk and paid him to add my name to the visa. She now had the option for us to join my father. My mother now asked me "Should we leave?"
It was a crucial, difficult question. I had my friends, a new BMW bicycle, my stamp collection. But I knew we were not wanted here in Germany. I contemplated briefly and then said, "Let's go!"
My mother cautioned me not to tell a soul that we would be leaving in a couple of days.
Well, there was one more soccer game to play. I took my favorite position and we played. But this time I was distracted and we lost the game. I said: "So long, see you next time!" But there was not to be a next time, and I would never see or hear from any of my friends ever again.
During the next night, she and I packed one suitcase each. She took a chance and packed some silverware. But I had to leave my bike, my stamp collection, and my many other prized possessions behind.
At 5 a.m., we silently slipped out of our apartment, without waking up Mrs. Griffith, the suspected Nazi informant who had been placed in our apartment by the Gestapo.
We boarded a train for Berlin, where my mother said goodbye to her 86-year-old father, as well as her older sister and her family. It was a sad goodbye, since the future was not obvious to anyone.
Her father died within a year, presumably when taken to a concentration camp, but her sister escaped with her family to Australia. She would never see either of them again.
A couple of days later, we boarded a train for Amsterdam. As we approached the German/Holland border, my mother cautioned me to keep my mouth shut "Do not volunteer anything!" We had in our possession: our passports, our suitcases, our money (ten marks each), pre-paid, first-class return tickets on the Holland America Line, as well as two weeks of pre-paid New York hotel reservations.
A German border guard entered our railroad compartment, and my mother got very tense. He asked if anyone had anything from a long list of presumably contraband items and there were no answers from the six passengers in our compartment. Then he asked if anyone had a camera.
"I have one!" My mother gave me a look, which I could tell she was ready to kill me. I had not kept my mouth shut. I showed him my box camera. He looked it over and returned it to me. There were no further questions and the train moved on.
We had crossed the border. Was there any possibility of a safe return?
In Amsterdam, my mother had heard that the banker Rothschild was helping refugees. She had the address and went to see him while I stayed with her cousin Kurt, who had fled with his family to Holland. When she returned, she was quite cheerful. She received a substantial sum of money—but I never found out how much.
We said good-bye to Kurt, his wife Fanny, and their 13-year-old son, David. Their approaching fates were concentration camps, which somehow Kurt and Fanny managed to survive. But David died there in freezing weather, in an open field, without food or water or adequate clothing, along with about a hundred other children, as his father watched.
Of course, we had no inkling of that. We returned to the train station to take the train to Rotterdam, where we boarded the steamer Staatendam of the Holland America Line, a ship that would be at the bottom of Rotterdam harbor a year later.
My mother had bought first-class tickets, since there was really nothing we could do with our money, which we were forced to leave behind. And there was a chance that we could cash in the return tickets if we didn't have to use them.
All this comfort masked the prospect of what could occur at arrival in New York. My mother was well aware that if the immigration authorities on Ellis Island knew that my father was already in-country we might very well be told to take an immediate return voyage back to Germany. She again became tense as we approached the New York harbor. But then came a big surprise.
All first-class passengers were invited to disembark directly through customs. All others were diverted to Ellis Island for detailed examination. A quick check through customs and there was my father waiting for us on the pier. What a happy reunion! Tears were shed.
It was October 30th, 1938. November 9th, 1938, was the date of the German pogrom against the Jews called Kristallnacht, or "Night of the Broken Glass." A Jewish student had shot a member of the German embassy in Paris, which served as an excuse to implement a prior-planned attack on the German Jews. Jewish stores were smashed, synagogues were burned and thousands of Jews were arrested. A large fine was imposed on all the German Jews.
Every newspaper in the States carried the news, which we anxiously followed. It was a great tragedy-but ironically, not for us. After that pogrom, no more Jews were forced to leave the States to return to Germany. President Roosevelt issued an executive order which allowed all in-country refugees to stay in the US on a permanent basis—our visitor's visa was extended indefinitely.
The timing of our escape was indeed a miracle. We were saved.
By the end of November 1938, I was enrolled in seventh grade in a junior high school in New York City and subsequently, I went to Stuyvesant High School there. The war started in Europe in 1939, and my father received permission to work. The war reached us on December 7th, 1941. Then, in September of 1943, one month after my 18th birthday, I was drafted into the US Army and sworn in as a US citizen during basic training, in Columbus, Georgia.
I was shipped overseas as an infantry replacement on the Queen Mary, returning to Europe in September, 1944. In Belgium, it was discovered that I spoke German and so I was sent for a two-week course to become an intelligence agent. I served during the Battle of the Bulge and later in the Rhineland and central Europe campaigns, tasked with securing building and personality targets and arresting persons suspected of war crimes.
I met up with the Russians at the Elbe River as the war was ending and later was assigned to guard war criminals and to oversee German prisoners of war, who helped me crate and ship Nazi documents back to the States in support of future war-crime prosecutions.
I returned to the States in May 1946 and was discharged in the rank of Staff Sergeant. But I stayed in the Army Reserve, went to college, and upon graduation was commissioned as a second lieutenant, Regular Army. I served a total of 35 years, with three more tours in Germany during the Cold War, and one year of war-time service in Vietnam. I retired in the rank of Colonel, in 1978.
I share my history as a way to honor the memory of my family members who were killed in the Holocaust. My 11 murdered family members were: Rea Cohn, Isidor Cohn, Richard Brodda, Jenny Brodda, Hugo Brodda, Bertha Brodda, Max Berdass, Else Berdass, Saul Pottlitzer, Herman David, David Josephson.
My family members who survived fled to Holland, England, Italy, Haiti, Australia, Israel, and the United States of America.
I hope that my experience, and those of all Holocaust victims and survivors, will serve as a warning of what can happen when hate and antisemitism go unchecked in a society, and be an inspiration for people to make better choices to prevent such atrocities in the future.
Thank you—and God bless America!
Conversation
-
>> Bill Benson: Welcome. Thank you for joining us for First
Person: Conversations with HolocaustSurvivors. I'm Bill Benson, and I have
hosted First Person since it began atthe Museum in 2000. Each month, we bring
you first-hand accounts of survival ofthe Holocaust. Each of our First Person
guests serves as a volunteer at the Museum.We are honored to have Holocaust
survivor Frank Cohn share his personal
first-hand account of the Holocaust withus. Frank, thank you so much for agreeing
to be our First Person.>> Frank Cohn: Well, thank you very much and hello, everybody. I'm glad you joined.
>> Bill Benson: And Frank we have a short period, an hour,
and you have so much to share with uswe'll get started. Frank you were born in
the Holocaust and the Second World War,
please tell us about your family and your first few years.>> Frank Cohn: Well I was brought into a classic middle
class family in Germany, and it was
a Jewish family. Here you see my motherand father and my canary bird. This
was for my sixth birthday, I believe. Itwas a happy birthday, a sign that's
showing right there. Anyway I was theonly child and the way middle class
families worked -- well first of all, myparents had a sporting goods store and
that's what provided them with theincome to live very comfortably. And
as an only child -- first of all, we had alive-in maid which middle class families
had, and when I came along they gotanother girl to help them take care of
me. So it was a very comfortable life andof course, I don't remember anything
about the first two years or so.>> Bill Benson: In the 1920s the
Nazis were a small, radical, fringepolitical movement that was attempting
to seize power in Germany and theyregularly engaged in street violence.
Your uncle Max was attacked by a groupof Nazis in 1927. Tell us what happened.
>> Frank Cohn: Well of course, I was too young at that
point but there was legal work that was
going on, and I guess I was about fiveyears old when I heard the adults
talking with each other. They neverexplained these things to me, but the
kids do listen and they listen andthey form their own opinions. And I could
hear that this man who was myuncle was attacked by a bunch of Nazis
just because they found out he wasJewish and they had him in the street
and they killed himfor no specific reason at all except
that he was Jewish.This was a bit of a frightening
situation for me because I knew I wasJewish and I heard now that these Nazis
were killing Jews, so the term Nazibecame fearful to me at a very early age.
And I recall also I looked out of thewindow from my apartment that was
situated right across from a financeoffice and that finance office somehow
drew a lot of people for demonstrationsand there were fights between the
Communists and the Nazis and this -- Iasked about this and that was explained
to me that we really don't like eitherone of these groups. And Nazis again was
a dangerous thing that came into mindand it just stuck with me for all the
years I was there.>> Bill Benson: Frank, after your Uncle Max was killed
in 1927, Adolf Hitler came to power inseven years old. Can you share with us
some of your first memories of this period?
>> Frank Cohn: Well the first thing that happened
was right after he came to power. TheNazis started demonstrations in front of
stores owned by Jews as they did ourstore, our sports goods store, and my
father saw the sign that says, "don't buyfrom Jews," and he recognized that this
was going to be a losing proposition andhe decided right then and there to get
rid of the store, and he sold it at thebest price that he could get. And then he
had to see what else he could do and heturned to selling bales of cloth to
either manufacturers or tailors orindividuals who needed some some cloth.
And we had to, because of this change, wehad to move into a cheaper apartment and
that apartment immediately got oneroom where all these bales of cloth
were stacked up to be sold.>> Bill Benson: Frank, please tell us about your
experience in the second grade and aboutyour teacher, Herr Schubert.
>> Frank Cohn: First of all, my first grade teacher was
not memorable. To me, he was very old. Hewas at least 50 years old or so. Anyway,
second grade came in and there cameHerr Schubert and he was a young fella
somewhere in the late 20s or early 30s, Iwould suspect. Of course I never asked
him how old he was but thinking back, Iwas really enthused with him and I
thought he really liked me. And then Iheard he was coming back in the third
grade to teach us as well, and I was allexcited and I was waiting for him to
come, and he came in full Nazi uniform asyou can see him in the middle of that
picture. Very soon -- yep, that's me. Andpretty soon all the other kids in the
class started to be in the Hitler Youthand they got all these uniforms,
paraphernalia that they wore to classlike a hat or a belt or shirt or
whatever. And here was the class thatmade me an outcast because when they
started to sing the Hitler songs, I wastold, "You're Jewish. While everybody else
has to stand up you can't, you gotta stayseated." Of course a kid who sits while
everybody else stands is not going to bea very popular kid so I was
not popular, I was an outcast.>> Bill Benson: Frank, how did Herr Schubert
actually treat you in the midst of all those changes?>> Frank Cohn: Well actually, he treated me very fairly
aside from the fact that he separated me
from others when they sang their Hitlersongs. If anybody started to pick on
me, he didn't want that. I think he wantedorder in his classroom. But that was not
the problem for me. After the class, therewere kids who found out that I was
Jewish and they chased me yelling, "Jewboy, Jew boy!" But I was a very fast
runner and I was able to evade them andwhen I told my parents about that, they
said, "Well, we'll have to change that." Andthey then disenrolled me from the
German public school and enrolled meinto a Jewish private school, and I was
certainly much more comfortable in theJewish private school. About
just a few months later in 1935, lawswere passed when Jews no longer were
allowed to be in public school and atthat point the parents would have had to
get me transferred into the Jewishschool anyway but I was one step
ahead. And here I am in the first row Ithink they can kind of put a circle on
me...>> Bill Benson: There you go.
>> Frank Cohn: Yeah, that's me. And this was a boys and girls class, different from the public school but I
was very comfortable and I had lots of
friends among the boys. The girls werescary because I was an only child, I
wouldn't know how to deal with a girl.>> Bill Benson: Frank, tell us about your gym teacher in your private Jewish school.
>> Frank Cohn: I loved my gym teacher and I wasn't
particularly good in gym and he knew
that of course, but somehow he singledme out and sometimes I saw him in the
synagogue, and he would motion to meto come and sit next to him, and
I was always thrilled to do that. Andsomewhere along the line, he told us
about his trip to the United States andhe told us about the skyscrapers, he told
us about the Statue of Liberty and whatthat meant, and then he told us about the
Horn & Hardart restaurants. Now thosewere restaurants where you had to have a
lot of coins, and you put your coins inand you opened a little door and lo and
behold, there was either a soup or anentrée or dessert, whatever you want, and
you could see that of course in advanceby looking through those windows. And I
was really all excited about somethinglike that and I thought to myself, one of
these days, maybe I'll get to the Statesand I'll go to a Horn & Hardart
restaurant after I look at all theskyscrapers and the Statue of Liberty,
but I was all focused on that eventhough there were no plans at all for me
to go to the United States.>> Bill Benson: Frank, throughout the 1930s the
Nazi regime implemented morerestrictions on Jews throughout Germany.
How did that impact life for you and your parents?>> Frank Cohn: Well it was a very subtle and -- they
called it like slicing salami, always
another slice and another restriction.And somehow of course it made our
community pull together as a Jewishcommunity because we would have no more
relationships with the Germansin Germany. And in 1935 the law
specifically segregated us from theGermans, and we had to let go of our maid
Berta, who was almost like a secondmother to me, but she was no longer
allowed to work for Jews. Germans werenot allowed to work for Jews. And then
the restaurants started to get signs"Jews not desired" or "Jews forbidden," and
pretty soon there were no justrestaurants that we could go to. And I
was in a soccer team but it was allJewish players of course, and we could
only play Jewish teams, we couldnever play anybody else. And so it was. We
got ourselves completely separatedbut the one thing that became a focus
to me was the parents admonishing me toalways behave. Behave, behave! And of
course they didn't want ever to haveourselves be called to
the attention by the communityand I understood that I really had to
toe the line.>> Bill Benson: Frank, even though this was an
extraordinarily difficult time, you wereable to celebrate your Bar Mitzvah when
you turned 13 years old. Tell us about it.>> Frank Cohn: Yeah there I am,
probably just a little bit beforemy Bar Mitzvah. And I had to study for the
Bar Mitzvah and perform in the synagogueby presenting certain prayers and so
forth. And I must have done pretty wellbecause I was congratulated and then
there were lots and lots of presents forme, one of which was a BMW bicycle! That
was my first bike and I was allenthralled about my bike and then goodness
knows how many pen and pencil sets Ireceived, and of course the
congratulations from all my friends andsuch. So it was a terrific feast that I
was experiencing there, being the centerof it. And then a little bit later my
father pulled me aside and said, "I havesome serious talk to make with
you." And he told us, well he told me,that he had really lost the ability to
earn a living in Germany and he had todo something else. He had some distant
relatives in the States and he was goingto go to the States to see if he could
find him and get an affidavit. Now anaffidavit is a document
that guarantees that the people thatreceived the affidavit will never become
a burden to the government. So the personwho is executing the affidavit must have
enough money to support those people whohe has guaranteed will not become a
burden. Anyway, my father made thepreparations to leave because only he
was allowed as a visitor to take out ofGermany, by German law that is, was
arrangements had to make in advance: he
could book his hotels in advance and hishis voyage in advance and such and
pay for that in Germany before he left.But when he left he only had 10 marks, so
he was at the mercy of the Jewish relief organizations.>> Bill Benson: When he got to the United States what did he find? What happened?
>> Frank Cohn: Well he did discover it all and found
all his distant relatives and they werevery nice to him. They entertained him
and invited him and such but none ofthem was in a position -- because of the
depression in those days, they did nothave the money to support an affidavit
and he had to stay a little bit longerto see if he could find someone else
to give him an affidavit. And believe itor not, it was a very lucky thing that
that happened to him.>> Bill Benson: And I know you'll tell us a little bit
more about that a little bit later. Andof course Frank, while your father had
gone to the United States to seek theaffidavit,
you and your mother remained behind inGermany. Tell us about the very frightening
encounter that you and your mother had
at your apartment in Breslau, and alsotell us about your parents' friend, Mr.
Michaelis.>> Frank Cohn: Ah. Well, it was because he had
to stay longer that he was not home when
two Gestapo agents came to our doorlooking for him. And my mother told them
that he was on a business trip overseas,and she was instructed to
advise him the minute he got back toreport to Gestapo headquarters.
Well, that sort of raised a red light inboth my mother's and in my mind
immediately because we associated itwith a story that we heard, that had
been told about a business acquaintanceof my father by the name of Michaelis.
And Mr. Michaelis was one who alsoreceived the request to report to
Gestapo headquarters and he did that, anda few hours later he was found on the
pavement in front of the headquarters. Hehad either jumped or pushed out of
the third floor window and that came toour mind immediately and my mother, when
the Gestapo left, wrote a letter to myfather to whatever he does he better
stay in the States because if he were tocome back right now he would be arrested
by the Gestapo.>> Bill Benson: And Frank, during this time that
you're describing, a British informantfor the Gestapo was placed in your home
with you and your mother. How did thatcome about and what effect did that have
on your life?>> Frank Cohn: There was this lady that came to our
door with an official document that saidthat we were obligated to provide her
with a bedroom, and of course with anofficial document like that, there was no
refusal and we made a room available forher. And she introduced herself as a
British lady and she was trying to bevery nice as a matter of fact, and
offered herself to provide me withEnglish lessons and I accepted, and I
had two English lessons which provedvery valuable later on. Although we never
discussed that of course and my motherhad pulled me aside and said, "Now we have
to be very careful what we say in thisapartment because this lady
is reporting to the Gestapo." Sowhenever we wanted a conversation she
told me, "We have to go outside for alittle walk," and that's a conversation we
had very soon thereafter. She said,"Let's go outside," and she said to me and
asked me, "Should we go?"And I knew immediately what she meant,
and this was a rough question for mebecause all my friends were there. I was
on it -- here's one of them, PeterFriedlander. He and I were together on
our soccer team and I had a niceposition up on the front line which I
liked, and I had a stamp collection, I hadthat BMW bike which I loved. So there
were lots of things that would have keptme in Germany, but I didn't really
hesitate. I understood that I was anoutsider in this country and that the
people in the country really didn't wantme and I said to my mother, "Let's go."
And she said, "Okay, but you've gotto keep your mouth shut and don't talk
about this to anybody."And I listened to her. I had one more
soccerplay to a team -- the team had one more
game to play and I came to it and Iwas very distracted and I helped them
lose the game. And at the end I said,"See you next time," but I knew there was
not going to be a next time and I neverreally heard or
saw anything about all of my friends asto whatever happened to them when I
left the next day.>> Frank Cohn: How did
I get out of Germany? Well, as I said, thenext day we were leaving and it was five
o'clock in the morning. We had ourone suitcase just like my father
the 10 marks the one suitcase and mymother had made all kinds of
arrangements in advance with a --well, we had first-class passage on the
Holland-America Line steamer Statendam,and we had two weeks of hotel
reservations. And our visas, she hadgotten the visa and then the next day
completely out of character shehad gone back and bribed an official in
the American Consulate toplace my name on that visa, and it was
easy because I was on her passport. So atfive in the morning we tiptoed out and
so we wouldn'twake Mrs. Griffith, and we got on the
train to Berlin. And in Berlin she saidgoodbye to her father who later died in
a concentration camp.She said goodbye to her oldest -- her
older sister, but her sister and herfamily got out of Germany later to
Australia, but she never saw her againeither because Australia was much too far.
>> Bill Benson: Frank, you and your mother made it to the
United States on October 30th, 1938. Tellus about the journey and about your
arrival in New York City.>> Frank Cohn: While the first class passage was a
terrific journey -- there's my mother onthe Statendam
and I was really living it up. I had allthe enjoyments and the food and whatnot
and I almost became a ping pong championbut one man beat me so I didn't quite
make it. And I had no worries whatsoeverand looked forward to getting into New
York Harbor, but my mother was very muchconcerned because she was worried
about going to Ellis Island because shehad heard that people who were coming
into the United States first had to goto enter to Ellis Island where they
were interrogated perhaps and theinformation could flow out -- because she
was not a good liar -- that my father wasalready in country and had they known
that, they would have recognized we werenot busy visitors, we were refugees and
would have put us on the next boat goingback to the States. Here's a picture I
took of the skyline of New York with mybox camera in anticipation of what I was
going to see as my gym teacher had toldme. I did that also with the Statue of
Liberty and I was now all geared up togo to Horn & Hardart and that was one
of the first things I asked my fatherwhen I got off the boat and greeted him
and we had our happy reunion. I said,"Father, take me to Horn & Hardart!" And
he sort of chuckled he said, "We'll takecare of that, we'll do that."
so you went to those little automaticvending machines and got your meals and
I got my soup, and I got my entree, and I got my dessert.>> Bill Benson: Frank, just a few days after your
arrival at the end of October in the
United States in fact November 9ththrough 10th the Nazis perpetrated a
vicious assault on Jews, synagogues, andJewish-owned businesses known as Kristallnacht, or The Night of Broken Glass
which took place throughout Germany and
Austria. What effect did that have on your family?>> Frank Cohn: Of course this pogrom against the Jews
hit all the newspapers all over the
world as it did in New York, and myparents were looking for any news that
they could because the people in theStates did not have our address. We made
sure that there wasn't going to be anycompromise here, and so we had no way of
getting any direct information so wewere very, very concerned about all of
our relatives as to what would happen tothem and what we heard about all these
arrests, and we knew some of ourrelatives would have gone into
concentration camps. But the irony ofthe whole thing was, that this
catastrophe for the Jews became a saviorto us because when President Roosevelt
heard about this, he issued anexecutive order that stated that
nobody would be forced to return toGermany. So our visitors visa were
extended indefinitely and we were saved.>> Bill Benson: Frank, now that you and your mom and your
dad are in New York City, your motherenrolled you in the seventh grade. What
do you remember about attending school in the United States?>> Frank Cohn: Well of course it was difficult and as I
was an outcast in Germany and the German
schools, I suddenly found myself anoutcast again because I couldn't speak
English well enough. That I recall on thefirst -- the second day in junior high
school the teacher turned to me and said,"Take the waste paper basket and collect
the trash." And I couldn'tunderstand the word she was talking
and she had looked at the window. Ithought she wanted me to open the window.
I opened the window and of course thewhole class laughed and no kid likes to
be laughed at so I had a great incentiveto learn English and I did that well
first of all the teachers were veryhelpful they got magazines and wrote up
the various names of things that wereshown in the pictures and I listened to
the radio. Now the radio was difficultfor me because I couldn't understand
what was reallythe program all about but I couldn't
get the intonations so I could avoidthat that German accent I heard the
intonations and I tried to copywhat I heard but what really taught
me was the movies. And it was 10 centsfor a movie and 10 cents was a lot of
money for us but I earned that money.Believe it or not what happened was
there was a Time Magazine programthat was shown, a newsreel program, just
before every movie they had this and Iwas invited to have an arrangement as
if we were in Germany and they had ablackboard I had to stand next to the
blackboard with my head bowed downand of the
blackboard showed something aboutthat the Jews were the big enemies of
Germany, and for that I received ahundred dollars now just standing there
for about a couple of minutes wasn'tworth a hundred dollars so I think
they were trying to help a refugee kid,but that money helped me learn English
because it paid for all those movies.>> Bill Benson: All those movies
Frank, the the United States of course
entered the war following the Japanesebombing of Pearl Harbor on December 7,
June 1943. Right after your 18th birthday
you were drafted into the US Army.Please tell us about being sworn in as a US citizen during your basic training and what that meant to you.
>> Frank Cohn: Well when I was drafted, I first had to
go to a reception center that was Fort
Dix, New Jersey. And you usually staythere for three days where you get
processed and then you go to basictraining and some other location. Well
everybody was processed as I was andthen they left and I didn't. So I went
over to my sergeant and said,"What's with me? I don't have
orders." And he said, "Let me check." He cameback, he said, "Well it's very simple.
You're an enemy alien." I was shocked.Anyway, alien -- I never heard that term
before. I knew I was stateless becausethe passport that I was in, which my
mother had, was stamped by the Germanconsulate in New York as no longer valid.
We became stateless that way.But enemy alien well, he explained, you
were brought up and you were born inGermany. You were brought up in Germany,
you had a German passport that was thelast passport you had and Germany's at
war and you're the enemy and you have tobe investigated by the FBI. So I stayed
there for three months and obviouslyI must have passed the investigation
because I got orders to for JackFort Benning Georgia for my basic
training and one fine day they took meto Columbus, Georgia the Middle District
Court of Georgia and I was sworn as aU.S citizen and boy I was proud. I was
congratulating myself, I patted myselfon the shoulder because nobody else did
and I was very, very happy because I wasno longer an enemy alien. I was just like
everybody else and I felt great.>> Bill Benson: Frank, you left the United States for
England as an infantry replacementsoldier in September 1944 and you were
soon sent to France and Belgium. Shortlyafter that you were assigned to an intelligence unit. Tell us about your training for the intelligence unit.
>> Frank Cohn: Well, I was a infantry replacement going
into England and then across to
the invasion beaches, to Utah Beach, butby then they had built a little dock and
I never got my feet wet when I got offthe assault boat that we got on. And
then we went through France and theninto Belgium, all the way up to the front
lines in Malmedy where we went to thefoxholes. But I must have been earmarked
because I never got an assignment to anyunit and they had found out I spoke
German, so they brought me all the wayback to Le Vésinet near Paris for
a two-week course in intelligence andafter that I became an intelligence agent.
So the course was designed after aeight-week course that was given at Camp
Ritchie, and some of you might have heardabout the Richie Boys. Well I was not a
Richie Boy.I was a sort of a supplement of a Richie
Boy because mine was but a two-weekcourse and I ended up the same way like
everybody else. I ended up with a team, asix-man team: two officers, two
interpreters, and the four of us wore thesame uniform, no insignia on rank, only
the US as you see on my cap.>> Bill Benson: Right.
That was our rank designation. And then
we had a driver and anon-commissioned officer in charge. Now
actually the driver outranked me, but hedidn't know that, and I was ordering him
around all the time because I needed avehicle and I didn't know how to drive.
So that team then went all the waythrough, all the way to Belgium. And
we got into Belgium around the third orso of December 1944.
>> Bill Benson: And then of course shortly after
that on December 16, 1944, the German
military launched what became known asthe "Battle of the Bulge" which was a
last-ditch German militarycounter-offensive against the Allied
armies in the West. You found yourself inthat battle. We have footage of US
soldiers during the Battle of the Bulge.Describe for us what we're seeing here, Frank.
>> Frank Cohn: Well, we were on a defensive and
these weapons were being used to stop
the Germans that came up. But the picturethat you're seeing is very typical because
what anybody was going to ask youabout the Bulge, the first thing that
comes to mind was the cold. It was justmiserable. Not only cold but it was
either raining or sleeting or freezingrain or snow.
And we were in -- our mission becamelooking for Germans who had
penetrated in American uniforms and wehad to patrol in jeeps with the
windshield down and no top of coursebecause we were able, we should have been
able to shoot and you can't do it witheither the top up or the windshield
up. So even going 25 miles an hour was abig blast, but I was a PFC and I was
lucky that way. I was able to get behindthe captain and he got the blunt of
the blast that came in the driving and I hid behind him,but he never knew that he was helping me to survive in a better way than he was surviving.
But we were all cold and we never got warm.
>> Bill Benson: Frank, if you don't mind, describe
for us your first night in the Battle of the Bulge.>> Frank Cohn: Now that was probably the most frightening night of the entire combat situation that I went through, and
it wasn't because I was in personal
danger per se but because of the rumorsthat were going out and the orders that
we received. For example, I was told toget onto one of these dirt access roads
and to make sure that no German wouldcome through. That was my order. I had a
rifle and I had a flashlight and theorder "don't let any Germans through." So I
got in the middle of the roadand the first truck that came, I stopped
them and the guy yells out, "What the hellare you doing there?" I said, "I'm making
sure you're not a German." "Son, if you werea German you'd be dead by now and you
want to do anything you're going to getin the ditch right next to the road." So I
thought, well at least he had a point. Igot into the ditch. The next vehicle that
came I yelled, "Halt, halt, halt!" They never heard me,they just went right by me. So I wasn't
doing my job. And then there wereshooting going on all over the place and
there were rumors about parachuterscoming down.
And you just didn't know what was goingon, you didn't know what you were
supposed to do and then at midnight theycalled me back and we went into a
blackout move towards Antwerp. Wedidn't know it but Antwerp was really
the goal of the German offensive of the Bulge. But wenever got to Antwerp. We got to Namur and that is where we got our orders to look for those Germans.
>> Bill Benson: Frank, you continued to serve in Europe
after the war ended in 1945. In the little
time we have left, tell us about the workyou were assigned to do supporting the
prosecution of war criminals.>> Frank Cohn: Well this was me right there at the
Document Center, the IntelligenceCenter in Oberursel, Germany near
Frankfurt. And I received a mission towith a jeep go across Frankfurt every
morning and meet a squad of prisoners ofwar, German prisoners of war, who helped
me to crate documents that wewere sending back to the States
that were sent back in support of theprosecution of these Germans who were
going to be tried for war crimes. Andthose POWs helped me crate it, and I put
the label on top of the crate that thesewere secret or top secret documents and
out they went, and that was the end of myresponsibility for them.
>> Bill Benson: Tons and tons
of papers like we see here, right?>> Frank Cohn: Absolutely, yeah. Those could have been
the documents that I received and we putin crates. And I got promoted in the
meantime and then I became Sergeant ofthe Guard. And as the Sergeant of the
Guard, it was for the outer perimeter andwe really didn't know who was on the
inside of that camp. We always thought itwas Goering, and it wasn't Goering. Goering was
imprisoned in Berlin with the otherpeople who were tried by the Nuremberg
tribunal. The people we had, I found outlater,
were people who were tried by the secondNuremberg trial and these were
concentration camp commanders anddeputies of the primary Nazis. They
also were tried in Nuremberg and some ofthem were executed also after the trial.
So these were real important people butwe didn't know who it was, it was very
good security. The only people we allowedto enter were the guards and the
interrogators and the lawyers who were allowed access.>> Bill Benson: Frank, tell us if you don't mind about
your return from serving in Europe
during the war and reuniting with your parents.>> Frank Cohn: Well you had to have enough points
before you were shipped back and the
points were how long you were in theoverseas theater. And it took me
well, it took me a year to get enoughpoints for me to be able to go back. And
when I reported that to my boss at SHAEFheadquarters, Lieutenant Colonel
Gronik, he said, "Oh I'm going to help yougo back in style." And he gave me two
crates of secret documents, things like Ishipped back to the States, and he said, "I
want you to deliver those two crates inthe port of Brooklyn in New York, and I'm
going to put you on a Navy ship." Andthat voyage on the Navy ship was
terrific. It was a little slow but I wasin first-class accommodations.
Particularly as far as the soup, the foodwas concerned, I never ate that well that
entire time that I was in Europe, and theNavy knew how to feed people.
Anyway I got to New York and then I wasstuck in Brooklyn because I came in just
before noon and the taxi drivers, theyearned their money on these short trips,
and at noon they had a lot of shorttrips and they didn't want to take me
all the way to Manhattan. After the lunchhour, one cab driver took pity on me and
took me all the way back to Manhattan. Ihad my duffel bag and I got into the
vestibule in front of my apartment. Idumped the bag and I couldn't get myself
to ring the bell.I left the building, I walked through
the neighborhood and I calmed down alittle bit. I saw these places
which I knew well from before I went tothe Army and finally I was in
position to go back. I rang the bell and ofcourse, I was greeted very, very
heartily by my mother. She was so happyto see me. And then my father came from
work and he was very happy to see me andit was a wonderful reunion. But it was a
short-lived one because just 10 dayslater, he died of a heart attack
that was sustained when he was atwork and
he went to the hospital and never recovered. But at least I had this week or so with him before he died.
>> Bill Benson: That must
have just been so devastating for you, Frank.Frank, you shared with us earlier
about some family members who
were able to get out to, I think you saidfive or six different countries. How many
family members did not make it out?>> Frank Cohn: Oh goodness we had so many distant
family members, I really don'thave a number but it must have been well
over 30. And they were distributed allover. Now about eight of them were in
the States so we met those againand we had meetings with them, but we
certainly lost personal contact withall the others because they were just
too far away. I did make a trip to Israeland I saw my cousin over there in Israel.
And I had planned to go to Australia,from Vietnam there was a possibility to
go to Australia but Ionly had one chance of a rest and
recreation, and I went to Hawaii where Imet my wife and my daughter Laura. That
was more important than Australia. But acouple of cousins from Australia
actually came to visit us, so there weresome sporadic personal contact,
but the family certainly never got together again.>> Bill Benson: Frank, my last question for you is this:
as we face rising antisemitism andrelated conspiracy theories, please tell
us what we can learn from what youexperienced before and during the
Holocaust.>> Frank Cohn: That's a rough question too because
this is what's going on right now.
There's so much hate around and it's thehate that we have to be careful of and
that has to be stopped one way or theother. It has to be confronted and it has
to be confronted early because if youlet the hate fester long enough, then it
gets so ingrained that you can'tget rid of it and things like what
happened in Germany, where the hate -- andthe hate is not just the antisemitism.
The antisemitism is like the canarybird in the mine.
It's a warning signal because prettysoon the hate spreads to others, and
others are pulled into this hate, andyou don't know if you are one of those
who are hated or if you might becomea hater. Anyway, the Holocaust is a lesson
and that is a lesson that I try to bringabout and confront in these speeches
that I have. And the Holocaust Museum isthe perfect place that
sponsors me and so many others that cantell about what can happen if you let
the hate fester. And I do hope that Iam able to continue this and talk to
young groups particularly and tell them,learn from history, learn the history
lessons so that you don't repeat themand that is what's so important and
that's why I'm here today also.
Transcript
>> Bill Benson: Welcome. Thank you for joining us for First
Person: Conversations with Holocaust
Survivors. I'm Bill Benson, and I have
hosted First Person since it began at
the Museum in 2000. Each month, we bring
you first-hand accounts of survival of
the Holocaust. Each of our First Person
guests serves as a volunteer at the Museum.
We are honored to have Holocaust
survivor Frank Cohn share his personal
first-hand account of the Holocaust with
us. Frank, thank you so much for agreeing
to be our First Person.
>> Frank Cohn: Well, thank you very much and hello, everybody. I'm glad you joined.
>> Bill Benson: And Frank we have a short period, an hour,
and you have so much to share with us
we'll get started. Frank you were born in
the Holocaust and the Second World War,
please tell us about your family and your first few years.
>> Frank Cohn: Well I was brought into a classic middle
class family in Germany, and it was
a Jewish family. Here you see my mother
and father and my canary bird. This
was for my sixth birthday, I believe. It
was a happy birthday, a sign that's
showing right there. Anyway I was the
only child and the way middle class
families worked -- well first of all, my
parents had a sporting goods store and
that's what provided them with the
income to live very comfortably. And
as an only child -- first of all, we had a
live-in maid which middle class families
had, and when I came along they got
another girl to help them take care of
me. So it was a very comfortable life and
of course, I don't remember anything
about the first two years or so.
>> Bill Benson: In the 1920s the
Nazis were a small, radical, fringe
political movement that was attempting
to seize power in Germany and they
regularly engaged in street violence.
Your uncle Max was attacked by a group
of Nazis in 1927. Tell us what happened.
>> Frank Cohn: Well of course, I was too young at that
point but there was legal work that was
going on, and I guess I was about five
years old when I heard the adults
talking with each other. They never
explained these things to me, but the
kids do listen and they listen and
they form their own opinions. And I could
hear that this man who was my
uncle was attacked by a bunch of Nazis
just because they found out he was
Jewish and they had him in the street
and they killed him
for no specific reason at all except
that he was Jewish.
This was a bit of a frightening
situation for me because I knew I was
Jewish and I heard now that these Nazis
were killing Jews, so the term Nazi
became fearful to me at a very early age.
And I recall also I looked out of the
window from my apartment that was
situated right across from a finance
office and that finance office somehow
drew a lot of people for demonstrations
and there were fights between the
Communists and the Nazis and this -- I
asked about this and that was explained
to me that we really don't like either
one of these groups. And Nazis again was
a dangerous thing that came into mind
and it just stuck with me for all the
years I was there.
>> Bill Benson: Frank, after your Uncle Max was killed
in 1927, Adolf Hitler came to power in
seven years old. Can you share with us
some of your first memories of this period?
>> Frank Cohn: Well the first thing that happened
was right after he came to power. The
Nazis started demonstrations in front of
stores owned by Jews as they did our
store, our sports goods store, and my
father saw the sign that says, "don't buy
from Jews," and he recognized that this
was going to be a losing proposition and
he decided right then and there to get
rid of the store, and he sold it at the
best price that he could get. And then he
had to see what else he could do and he
turned to selling bales of cloth to
either manufacturers or tailors or
individuals who needed some some cloth.
And we had to, because of this change, we
had to move into a cheaper apartment and
that apartment immediately got one
room where all these bales of cloth
were stacked up to be sold.
>> Bill Benson: Frank, please tell us about your
experience in the second grade and about
your teacher, Herr Schubert.
>> Frank Cohn: First of all, my first grade teacher was
not memorable. To me, he was very old. He
was at least 50 years old or so. Anyway,
second grade came in and there came
Herr Schubert and he was a young fella
somewhere in the late 20s or early 30s, I
would suspect. Of course I never asked
him how old he was but thinking back, I
was really enthused with him and I
thought he really liked me. And then I
heard he was coming back in the third
grade to teach us as well, and I was all
excited and I was waiting for him to
come, and he came in full Nazi uniform as
you can see him in the middle of that
picture. Very soon -- yep, that's me. And
pretty soon all the other kids in the
class started to be in the Hitler Youth
and they got all these uniforms,
paraphernalia that they wore to class
like a hat or a belt or shirt or
whatever. And here was the class that
made me an outcast because when they
started to sing the Hitler songs, I was
told, "You're Jewish. While everybody else
has to stand up you can't, you gotta stay
seated." Of course a kid who sits while
everybody else stands is not going to be
a very popular kid so I was
not popular, I was an outcast.
>> Bill Benson: Frank, how did Herr Schubert
actually treat you in the midst of all those changes?
>> Frank Cohn: Well actually, he treated me very fairly
aside from the fact that he separated me
from others when they sang their Hitler
songs. If anybody started to pick on
me, he didn't want that. I think he wanted
order in his classroom. But that was not
the problem for me. After the class, there
were kids who found out that I was
Jewish and they chased me yelling, "Jew
boy, Jew boy!" But I was a very fast
runner and I was able to evade them and
when I told my parents about that, they
said, "Well, we'll have to change that." And
they then disenrolled me from the
German public school and enrolled me
into a Jewish private school, and I was
certainly much more comfortable in the
Jewish private school. About
just a few months later in 1935, laws
were passed when Jews no longer were
allowed to be in public school and at
that point the parents would have had to
get me transferred into the Jewish
school anyway but I was one step
ahead. And here I am in the first row I
think they can kind of put a circle on
me...
>> Bill Benson: There you go.
>> Frank Cohn: Yeah, that's me. And this was a boys and girls class, different from the public school but I
was very comfortable and I had lots of
friends among the boys. The girls were
scary because I was an only child, I
wouldn't know how to deal with a girl.
>> Bill Benson: Frank, tell us about your gym teacher in your private Jewish school.
>> Frank Cohn: I loved my gym teacher and I wasn't
particularly good in gym and he knew
that of course, but somehow he singled
me out and sometimes I saw him in the
synagogue, and he would motion to me
to come and sit next to him, and
I was always thrilled to do that. And
somewhere along the line, he told us
about his trip to the United States and
he told us about the skyscrapers, he told
us about the Statue of Liberty and what
that meant, and then he told us about the
Horn & Hardart restaurants. Now those
were restaurants where you had to have a
lot of coins, and you put your coins in
and you opened a little door and lo and
behold, there was either a soup or an
entrée or dessert, whatever you want, and
you could see that of course in advance
by looking through those windows. And I
was really all excited about something
like that and I thought to myself, one of
these days, maybe I'll get to the States
and I'll go to a Horn & Hardart
restaurant after I look at all the
skyscrapers and the Statue of Liberty,
but I was all focused on that even
though there were no plans at all for me
to go to the United States.
>> Bill Benson: Frank, throughout the 1930s the
Nazi regime implemented more
restrictions on Jews throughout Germany.
How did that impact life for you and your parents?
>> Frank Cohn: Well it was a very subtle and -- they
called it like slicing salami, always
another slice and another restriction.
And somehow of course it made our
community pull together as a Jewish
community because we would have no more
relationships with the Germans
in Germany. And in 1935 the law
specifically segregated us from the
Germans, and we had to let go of our maid
Berta, who was almost like a second
mother to me, but she was no longer
allowed to work for Jews. Germans were
not allowed to work for Jews. And then
the restaurants started to get signs
"Jews not desired" or "Jews forbidden," and
pretty soon there were no just
restaurants that we could go to. And I
was in a soccer team but it was all
Jewish players of course, and we could
only play Jewish teams, we could
never play anybody else. And so it was. We
got ourselves completely separated
but the one thing that became a focus
to me was the parents admonishing me to
always behave. Behave, behave! And of
course they didn't want ever to have
ourselves be called to
the attention by the community
and I understood that I really had to
toe the line.
>> Bill Benson: Frank, even though this was an
extraordinarily difficult time, you were
able to celebrate your Bar Mitzvah when
you turned 13 years old. Tell us about it.
>> Frank Cohn: Yeah there I am,
probably just a little bit before
my Bar Mitzvah. And I had to study for the
Bar Mitzvah and perform in the synagogue
by presenting certain prayers and so
forth. And I must have done pretty well
because I was congratulated and then
there were lots and lots of presents for
me, one of which was a BMW bicycle! That
was my first bike and I was all
enthralled about my bike and then goodness
knows how many pen and pencil sets I
received, and of course the
congratulations from all my friends and
such. So it was a terrific feast that I
was experiencing there, being the center
of it. And then a little bit later my
father pulled me aside and said, "I have
some serious talk to make with
you." And he told us, well he told me,
that he had really lost the ability to
earn a living in Germany and he had to
do something else. He had some distant
relatives in the States and he was going
to go to the States to see if he could
find him and get an affidavit. Now an
affidavit is a document
that guarantees that the people that
received the affidavit will never become
a burden to the government. So the person
who is executing the affidavit must have
enough money to support those people who
he has guaranteed will not become a
burden. Anyway, my father made the
preparations to leave because only he
was allowed as a visitor to take out of
Germany, by German law that is, was
arrangements had to make in advance: he
could book his hotels in advance and his
his voyage in advance and such and
pay for that in Germany before he left.
But when he left he only had 10 marks, so
he was at the mercy of the Jewish relief organizations.
>> Bill Benson: When he got to the United States what did he find? What happened?
>> Frank Cohn: Well he did discover it all and found
all his distant relatives and they were
very nice to him. They entertained him
and invited him and such but none of
them was in a position -- because of the
depression in those days, they did not
have the money to support an affidavit
and he had to stay a little bit longer
to see if he could find someone else
to give him an affidavit. And believe it
or not, it was a very lucky thing that
that happened to him.
>> Bill Benson: And I know you'll tell us a little bit
more about that a little bit later. And
of course Frank, while your father had
gone to the United States to seek the
affidavit,
you and your mother remained behind in
Germany. Tell us about the very frightening
encounter that you and your mother had
at your apartment in Breslau, and also
tell us about your parents' friend, Mr.
Michaelis.
>> Frank Cohn: Ah. Well, it was because he had
to stay longer that he was not home when
two Gestapo agents came to our door
looking for him. And my mother told them
that he was on a business trip overseas,
and she was instructed to
advise him the minute he got back to
report to Gestapo headquarters.
Well, that sort of raised a red light in
both my mother's and in my mind
immediately because we associated it
with a story that we heard, that had
been told about a business acquaintance
of my father by the name of Michaelis.
And Mr. Michaelis was one who also
received the request to report to
Gestapo headquarters and he did that, and
a few hours later he was found on the
pavement in front of the headquarters. He
had either jumped or pushed out of
the third floor window and that came to
our mind immediately and my mother, when
the Gestapo left, wrote a letter to my
father to whatever he does he better
stay in the States because if he were to
come back right now he would be arrested
by the Gestapo.
>> Bill Benson: And Frank, during this time that
you're describing, a British informant
for the Gestapo was placed in your home
with you and your mother. How did that
come about and what effect did that have
on your life?
>> Frank Cohn: There was this lady that came to our
door with an official document that said
that we were obligated to provide her
with a bedroom, and of course with an
official document like that, there was no
refusal and we made a room available for
her. And she introduced herself as a
British lady and she was trying to be
very nice as a matter of fact, and
offered herself to provide me with
English lessons and I accepted, and I
had two English lessons which proved
very valuable later on. Although we never
discussed that of course and my mother
had pulled me aside and said, "Now we have
to be very careful what we say in this
apartment because this lady
is reporting to the Gestapo." So
whenever we wanted a conversation she
told me, "We have to go outside for a
little walk," and that's a conversation we
had very soon thereafter. She said,
"Let's go outside," and she said to me and
asked me, "Should we go?"
And I knew immediately what she meant,
and this was a rough question for me
because all my friends were there. I was
on it -- here's one of them, Peter
Friedlander. He and I were together on
our soccer team and I had a nice
position up on the front line which I
liked, and I had a stamp collection, I had
that BMW bike which I loved. So there
were lots of things that would have kept
me in Germany, but I didn't really
hesitate. I understood that I was an
outsider in this country and that the
people in the country really didn't want
me and I said to my mother, "Let's go."
And she said, "Okay, but you've got
to keep your mouth shut and don't talk
about this to anybody."
And I listened to her. I had one more
soccer
play to a team -- the team had one more
game to play and I came to it and I
was very distracted and I helped them
lose the game. And at the end I said,
"See you next time," but I knew there was
not going to be a next time and I never
really heard or
saw anything about all of my friends as
to whatever happened to them when I
left the next day.
>> Frank Cohn: How did
I get out of Germany? Well, as I said, the
next day we were leaving and it was five
o'clock in the morning. We had our
one suitcase just like my father
the 10 marks the one suitcase and my
mother had made all kinds of
arrangements in advance with a --
well, we had first-class passage on the
Holland-America Line steamer Statendam,
and we had two weeks of hotel
reservations. And our visas, she had
gotten the visa and then the next day
completely out of character she
had gone back and bribed an official in
the American Consulate to
place my name on that visa, and it was
easy because I was on her passport. So at
five in the morning we tiptoed out and
so we wouldn't
wake Mrs. Griffith, and we got on the
train to Berlin. And in Berlin she said
goodbye to her father who later died in
a concentration camp.
She said goodbye to her oldest -- her
older sister, but her sister and her
family got out of Germany later to
Australia, but she never saw her again
either because Australia was much too far.
>> Bill Benson: Frank, you and your mother made it to the
United States on October 30th, 1938. Tell
us about the journey and about your
arrival in New York City.
>> Frank Cohn: While the first class passage was a
terrific journey -- there's my mother on
the Statendam
and I was really living it up. I had all
the enjoyments and the food and whatnot
and I almost became a ping pong champion
but one man beat me so I didn't quite
make it. And I had no worries whatsoever
and looked forward to getting into New
York Harbor, but my mother was very much
concerned because she was worried
about going to Ellis Island because she
had heard that people who were coming
into the United States first had to go
to enter to Ellis Island where they
were interrogated perhaps and the
information could flow out -- because she
was not a good liar -- that my father was
already in country and had they known
that, they would have recognized we were
not busy visitors, we were refugees and
would have put us on the next boat going
back to the States. Here's a picture I
took of the skyline of New York with my
box camera in anticipation of what I was
going to see as my gym teacher had told
me. I did that also with the Statue of
Liberty and I was now all geared up to
go to Horn & Hardart and that was one
of the first things I asked my father
when I got off the boat and greeted him
and we had our happy reunion. I said,
"Father, take me to Horn & Hardart!" And
he sort of chuckled he said, "We'll take
care of that, we'll do that."
so you went to those little automatic
vending machines and got your meals and
I got my soup, and I got my entree, and I got my dessert.
>> Bill Benson: Frank, just a few days after your
arrival at the end of October in the
United States in fact November 9th
through 10th the Nazis perpetrated a
vicious assault on Jews, synagogues, and
Jewish-owned businesses known as Kristallnacht, or The Night of Broken Glass
which took place throughout Germany and
Austria. What effect did that have on your family?
>> Frank Cohn: Of course this pogrom against the Jews
hit all the newspapers all over the
world as it did in New York, and my
parents were looking for any news that
they could because the people in the
States did not have our address. We made
sure that there wasn't going to be any
compromise here, and so we had no way of
getting any direct information so we
were very, very concerned about all of
our relatives as to what would happen to
them and what we heard about all these
arrests, and we knew some of our
relatives would have gone into
concentration camps. But the irony of
the whole thing was, that this
catastrophe for the Jews became a savior
to us because when President Roosevelt
heard about this, he issued an
executive order that stated that
nobody would be forced to return to
Germany. So our visitors visa were
extended indefinitely and we were saved.
>> Bill Benson: Frank, now that you and your mom and your
dad are in New York City, your mother
enrolled you in the seventh grade. What
do you remember about attending school in the United States?
>> Frank Cohn: Well of course it was difficult and as I
was an outcast in Germany and the German
schools, I suddenly found myself an
outcast again because I couldn't speak
English well enough. That I recall on the
first -- the second day in junior high
school the teacher turned to me and said,
"Take the waste paper basket and collect
the trash." And I couldn't
understand the word she was talking
and she had looked at the window. I
thought she wanted me to open the window.
I opened the window and of course the
whole class laughed and no kid likes to
be laughed at so I had a great incentive
to learn English and I did that well
first of all the teachers were very
helpful they got magazines and wrote up
the various names of things that were
shown in the pictures and I listened to
the radio. Now the radio was difficult
for me because I couldn't understand
what was really
the program all about but I couldn't
get the intonations so I could avoid
that that German accent I heard the
intonations and I tried to copy
what I heard but what really taught
me was the movies. And it was 10 cents
for a movie and 10 cents was a lot of
money for us but I earned that money.
Believe it or not what happened was
there was a Time Magazine program
that was shown, a newsreel program, just
before every movie they had this and I
was invited to have an arrangement as
if we were in Germany and they had a
blackboard I had to stand next to the
blackboard with my head bowed down
and of the
blackboard showed something about
that the Jews were the big enemies of
Germany, and for that I received a
hundred dollars now just standing there
for about a couple of minutes wasn't
worth a hundred dollars so I think
they were trying to help a refugee kid,
but that money helped me learn English
because it paid for all those movies.
>> Bill Benson: All those movies
Frank, the the United States of course
entered the war following the Japanese
bombing of Pearl Harbor on December 7,
June 1943. Right after your 18th birthday
you were drafted into the US Army.
Please tell us about being sworn in as a US citizen during your basic training and what that meant to you.
>> Frank Cohn: Well when I was drafted, I first had to
go to a reception center that was Fort
Dix, New Jersey. And you usually stay
there for three days where you get
processed and then you go to basic
training and some other location. Well
everybody was processed as I was and
then they left and I didn't. So I went
over to my sergeant and said,
"What's with me? I don't have
orders." And he said, "Let me check." He came
back, he said, "Well it's very simple.
You're an enemy alien." I was shocked.
Anyway, alien -- I never heard that term
before. I knew I was stateless because
the passport that I was in, which my
mother had, was stamped by the German
consulate in New York as no longer valid.
We became stateless that way.
But enemy alien well, he explained, you
were brought up and you were born in
Germany. You were brought up in Germany,
you had a German passport that was the
last passport you had and Germany's at
war and you're the enemy and you have to
be investigated by the FBI. So I stayed
there for three months and obviously
I must have passed the investigation
because I got orders to for Jack
Fort Benning Georgia for my basic
training and one fine day they took me
to Columbus, Georgia the Middle District
Court of Georgia and I was sworn as a
U.S citizen and boy I was proud. I was
congratulating myself, I patted myself
on the shoulder because nobody else did
and I was very, very happy because I was
no longer an enemy alien. I was just like
everybody else and I felt great.
>> Bill Benson: Frank, you left the United States for
England as an infantry replacement
soldier in September 1944 and you were
soon sent to France and Belgium. Shortly
after that you were assigned to an intelligence unit. Tell us about your training for the intelligence unit.
>> Frank Cohn: Well, I was a infantry replacement going
into England and then across to
the invasion beaches, to Utah Beach, but
by then they had built a little dock and
I never got my feet wet when I got off
the assault boat that we got on. And
then we went through France and then
into Belgium, all the way up to the front
lines in Malmedy where we went to the
foxholes. But I must have been earmarked
because I never got an assignment to any
unit and they had found out I spoke
German, so they brought me all the way
back to Le Vésinet near Paris for
a two-week course in intelligence and
after that I became an intelligence agent.
So the course was designed after a
eight-week course that was given at Camp
Ritchie, and some of you might have heard
about the Richie Boys. Well I was not a
Richie Boy.
I was a sort of a supplement of a Richie
Boy because mine was but a two-week
course and I ended up the same way like
everybody else. I ended up with a team, a
six-man team: two officers, two
interpreters, and the four of us wore the
same uniform, no insignia on rank, only
the US as you see on my cap.
>> Bill Benson: Right.
That was our rank designation. And then
we had a driver and a
non-commissioned officer in charge. Now
actually the driver outranked me, but he
didn't know that, and I was ordering him
around all the time because I needed a
vehicle and I didn't know how to drive.
So that team then went all the way
through, all the way to Belgium. And
we got into Belgium around the third or
so of December 1944.
>> Bill Benson: And then of course shortly after
that on December 16, 1944, the German
military launched what became known as
the "Battle of the Bulge" which was a
last-ditch German military
counter-offensive against the Allied
armies in the West. You found yourself in
that battle. We have footage of US
soldiers during the Battle of the Bulge.
Describe for us what we're seeing here, Frank.
>> Frank Cohn: Well, we were on a defensive and
these weapons were being used to stop
the Germans that came up. But the picture
that you're seeing is very typical because
what anybody was going to ask you
about the Bulge, the first thing that
comes to mind was the cold. It was just
miserable. Not only cold but it was
either raining or sleeting or freezing
rain or snow.
And we were in -- our mission became
looking for Germans who had
penetrated in American uniforms and we
had to patrol in jeeps with the
windshield down and no top of course
because we were able, we should have been
able to shoot and you can't do it with
either the top up or the windshield
up. So even going 25 miles an hour was a
big blast, but I was a PFC and I was
lucky that way. I was able to get behind
the captain and he got the blunt of
the blast that came in the driving and I hid behind him,
but he never knew that he was helping me to survive in a better way than he was surviving.
But we were all cold and we never got warm.
>> Bill Benson: Frank, if you don't mind, describe
for us your first night in the Battle of the Bulge.
>> Frank Cohn: Now that was probably the most frightening night of the entire combat situation that I went through, and
it wasn't because I was in personal
danger per se but because of the rumors
that were going out and the orders that
we received. For example, I was told to
get onto one of these dirt access roads
and to make sure that no German would
come through. That was my order. I had a
rifle and I had a flashlight and the
order "don't let any Germans through." So I
got in the middle of the road
and the first truck that came, I stopped
them and the guy yells out, "What the hell
are you doing there?" I said, "I'm making
sure you're not a German." "Son, if you were
a German you'd be dead by now and you
want to do anything you're going to get
in the ditch right next to the road." So I
thought, well at least he had a point. I
got into the ditch. The next vehicle that
came I yelled, "Halt, halt, halt!" They never heard me,
they just went right by me. So I wasn't
doing my job. And then there were
shooting going on all over the place and
there were rumors about parachuters
coming down.
And you just didn't know what was going
on, you didn't know what you were
supposed to do and then at midnight they
called me back and we went into a
blackout move towards Antwerp. We
didn't know it but Antwerp was really
the goal of the German offensive of the Bulge. But we
never got to Antwerp. We got to Namur and that is where we got our orders to look for those Germans.
>> Bill Benson: Frank, you continued to serve in Europe
after the war ended in 1945. In the little
time we have left, tell us about the work
you were assigned to do supporting the
prosecution of war criminals.
>> Frank Cohn: Well this was me right there at the
Document Center, the Intelligence
Center in Oberursel, Germany near
Frankfurt. And I received a mission to
with a jeep go across Frankfurt every
morning and meet a squad of prisoners of
war, German prisoners of war, who helped
me to crate documents that we
were sending back to the States
that were sent back in support of the
prosecution of these Germans who were
going to be tried for war crimes. And
those POWs helped me crate it, and I put
the label on top of the crate that these
were secret or top secret documents and
out they went, and that was the end of my
responsibility for them.
>> Bill Benson: Tons and tons
of papers like we see here, right?
>> Frank Cohn: Absolutely, yeah. Those could have been
the documents that I received and we put
in crates. And I got promoted in the
meantime and then I became Sergeant of
the Guard. And as the Sergeant of the
Guard, it was for the outer perimeter and
we really didn't know who was on the
inside of that camp. We always thought it
was Goering, and it wasn't Goering. Goering was
imprisoned in Berlin with the other
people who were tried by the Nuremberg
tribunal. The people we had, I found out
later,
were people who were tried by the second
Nuremberg trial and these were
concentration camp commanders and
deputies of the primary Nazis. They
also were tried in Nuremberg and some of
them were executed also after the trial.
So these were real important people but
we didn't know who it was, it was very
good security. The only people we allowed
to enter were the guards and the
interrogators and the lawyers who were allowed access.
>> Bill Benson: Frank, tell us if you don't mind about
your return from serving in Europe
during the war and reuniting with your parents.
>> Frank Cohn: Well you had to have enough points
before you were shipped back and the
points were how long you were in the
overseas theater. And it took me
well, it took me a year to get enough
points for me to be able to go back. And
when I reported that to my boss at SHAEF
headquarters, Lieutenant Colonel
Gronik, he said, "Oh I'm going to help you
go back in style." And he gave me two
crates of secret documents, things like I
shipped back to the States, and he said, "I
want you to deliver those two crates in
the port of Brooklyn in New York, and I'm
going to put you on a Navy ship." And
that voyage on the Navy ship was
terrific. It was a little slow but I was
in first-class accommodations.
Particularly as far as the soup, the food
was concerned, I never ate that well that
entire time that I was in Europe, and the
Navy knew how to feed people.
Anyway I got to New York and then I was
stuck in Brooklyn because I came in just
before noon and the taxi drivers, they
earned their money on these short trips,
and at noon they had a lot of short
trips and they didn't want to take me
all the way to Manhattan. After the lunch
hour, one cab driver took pity on me and
took me all the way back to Manhattan. I
had my duffel bag and I got into the
vestibule in front of my apartment. I
dumped the bag and I couldn't get myself
to ring the bell.
I left the building, I walked through
the neighborhood and I calmed down a
little bit. I saw these places
which I knew well from before I went to
the Army and finally I was in
position to go back. I rang the bell and of
course, I was greeted very, very
heartily by my mother. She was so happy
to see me. And then my father came from
work and he was very happy to see me and
it was a wonderful reunion. But it was a
short-lived one because just 10 days
later, he died of a heart attack
that was sustained when he was at
work and
he went to the hospital and never recovered. But at least I had this week or so with him before he died.
>> Bill Benson: That must
have just been so devastating for you, Frank.
Frank, you shared with us earlier
about some family members who
were able to get out to, I think you said
five or six different countries. How many
family members did not make it out?
>> Frank Cohn: Oh goodness we had so many distant
family members, I really don't
have a number but it must have been well
over 30. And they were distributed all
over. Now about eight of them were in
the States so we met those again
and we had meetings with them, but we
certainly lost personal contact with
all the others because they were just
too far away. I did make a trip to Israel
and I saw my cousin over there in Israel.
And I had planned to go to Australia,
from Vietnam there was a possibility to
go to Australia but I
only had one chance of a rest and
recreation, and I went to Hawaii where I
met my wife and my daughter Laura. That
was more important than Australia. But a
couple of cousins from Australia
actually came to visit us, so there were
some sporadic personal contact,
but the family certainly never got together again.
>> Bill Benson: Frank, my last question for you is this:
as we face rising antisemitism and
related conspiracy theories, please tell
us what we can learn from what you
experienced before and during the
Holocaust.
>> Frank Cohn: That's a rough question too because
this is what's going on right now.
There's so much hate around and it's the
hate that we have to be careful of and
that has to be stopped one way or the
other. It has to be confronted and it has
to be confronted early because if you
let the hate fester long enough, then it
gets so ingrained that you can't
get rid of it and things like what
happened in Germany, where the hate -- and
the hate is not just the antisemitism.
The antisemitism is like the canary
bird in the mine.
It's a warning signal because pretty
soon the hate spreads to others, and
others are pulled into this hate, and
you don't know if you are one of those
who are hated or if you might become
a hater. Anyway, the Holocaust is a lesson
and that is a lesson that I try to bring
about and confront in these speeches
that I have. And the Holocaust Museum is
the perfect place that
sponsors me and so many others that can
tell about what can happen if you let
the hate fester. And I do hope that I
am able to continue this and talk to
young groups particularly and tell them,
learn from history, learn the history
lessons so that you don't repeat them
and that is what's so important and
that's why I'm here today also.