Hiding in the Open: A Holocaust MemoirNorth Star Press of St. Cloud, 2001 - 225 Seiten Memoirs of a Jew born in Piotrków, Poland, in 1923. During the German occupation, she and her family were interned in the ghetto. In 1942, when rumors began to circulate that the ghetto would be liquidated, the family of Zimering's Polish Catholic teacher, Mrs. Justyna, provided them with "Aryan" papers. Zimering left the ghetto with her parents, sister, and brother. She and her sister Helka then volunteered for labor in Germany. In 1944 they attempted to flee to Switzerland; they were captured and returned to Regensburg, where they were liberated by the U.S. Army in April 1945. After the war they settled in the USA. Their brother Natek also survived the war, but their parents perished. |
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Seite 59
... Jews - the customary scapegoat . Jews were the problem , he told the people , and he had the solution . He turned his attention first on the assimilated , patriotic German Jews . The Third Reich stripped them of their businesses and ...
... Jews - the customary scapegoat . Jews were the problem , he told the people , and he had the solution . He turned his attention first on the assimilated , patriotic German Jews . The Third Reich stripped them of their businesses and ...
Seite 74
... Jews , our correspondence seemed like a miracle . Two Jews in Poland communi- cating in the open with two Jews in Germany . And Die Deutsche Post ( the German Postal Service ) carried these communications with their renown pre- cision ...
... Jews , our correspondence seemed like a miracle . Two Jews in Poland communi- cating in the open with two Jews in Germany . And Die Deutsche Post ( the German Postal Service ) carried these communications with their renown pre- cision ...
Seite 129
... Jews in Poland before the war . " The Jews have always tied our hands . Whenever our government tried to pass a law they didn't like , the West European and American Jews spoke up right away . " As if the Jews in Poland didn't have ...
... Jews in Poland before the war . " The Jews have always tied our hands . Whenever our government tried to pass a law they didn't like , the West European and American Jews spoke up right away . " As if the Jews in Poland didn't have ...
Inhalt
Abschnitt 1 | 6 |
Abschnitt 2 | 12 |
Abschnitt 3 | 26 |
Urheberrecht | |
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American apartment arrived asked Auschwitz basement became began bombs building cholent clothes coal yard concentration camp cousin Danka and Mala dark door DP camps exams eyes face false papers favorite fear felt floor Frau Wittner friends front gave German Gestapo ghetto girls guests hair Hanka heard Helka Herr Uhlman Hitler Jewish Jews Justyna kitchen knew Lager leave lived looked loud loved Mala's Marysia Minneapolis morning Mother moved Munich Natek Neustadt never night older parents Persian rugs Piotrkow Poland Poles Polish quickly Radomsko Regensburg remained remember Richard Ruben Russian Sabina Sara seemed Shabbat shouting sister smile soldiers Soviet Union station stay stood stopped streets Suddenly survivors talked tall took town train Treblinka tried typhus Uncle Uncle Sam voice waited walked Warsaw window woman women Yiddish young