On the Fields of LonelinessYad Vashem and the Holocaust Survivor's Memoirs Project, 2006 - 184 Seiten Memoirs of a Jew born in 1930 in Brzeżany (eastern Galicia). Notes that the Soviet occupation of his town in 1939-41 did not halt antisemitism, but rather reinforced it. Under German occupation, Altman's father was killed on Yom Kippur of 1941. With his mother and sisters, he attempted to leave Brzeżany and hide with non-Jews; but his three sisters were killed, and he and his mother returned to the Brzeżany ghetto. After the last roundup in June 1943, during which he hid in a bunker prepared by relatives, Altman left the town. He lived in a small family camp in the forest, but after a Nazi raid, he, his cousin and her fiancé left the camp and were hidden and helped by various Polish and Ukrainian peasants. In 1944 they were liberated by the Soviets. After the war, Altman settled in the USA. |
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... boots ? Our questions were soon answered when two soldiers stomped cheerfully on the glasses with the heels of their shiny boots , collected the sharp pieces and poured the broken glass into the two old boots . " Take off your shoes and ...
... boots ? Our questions were soon answered when two soldiers stomped cheerfully on the glasses with the heels of their shiny boots , collected the sharp pieces and poured the broken glass into the two old boots . " Take off your shoes and ...
Seite 82
... boots across the kitchen floor , thumping above our heads in the bunker . Suddenly the insistent movement of boots stopped and it became quiet . No one spoke . We had to wait for the only person outside the house who knew where our ...
... boots across the kitchen floor , thumping above our heads in the bunker . Suddenly the insistent movement of boots stopped and it became quiet . No one spoke . We had to wait for the only person outside the house who knew where our ...
Seite 84
... Boots pounded above us like gun- shots . The watchman and I had not yet stepped into the bunker when I heard the rip of a floorboard . We had been discovered . I knew it was the end and crawled to my place on the bench next to my mother ...
... Boots pounded above us like gun- shots . The watchman and I had not yet stepped into the bunker when I heard the rip of a floorboard . We had been discovered . I knew it was the end and crawled to my place on the bench next to my mother ...
Inhalt
FOREWORD xi | 11 |
THE GERMAN INVASION | 31 |
MOTHER | 47 |
Urheberrecht | |
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afraid Altman anymore asked attic aunt and uncle Aunt Scheindl Banderowce Bar Mitzvah barn began boots bread Brzeżany bunker cheder cold cousin dark dogs door eyes face farmer father feet Feiga felt fire forest German officer German soldiers Gestapo ghetto Golombek hands happened head hear heard Hersch Herschele Hesio hiding Hócisko Holocaust inside Ivan Izak Meller Jewish Jews Judenrat Judka Kaddish kill knew ladder looked Lwów matzah Michal Moishe morning mother moved Nazis night peasant Poland Polish prayer pulled Rabbi raid Ratusz road Rochel Russians Sabbath Schachter seemed Shancia shot sisters sleep someone soon sound stay succah sure survived synagogue tell took Torah town turned Ukrainian Uncle David village Vladek voice waiting walked wanted wife window woods worried Yad Vashem Yahrzeit yelled Yiddish Yom Kippur Zbozowa Street Zdzisław