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Search below to view digital records and find material that you can access at our library and at the Shapell Center. Search this record's additional resources, such as finding aids, documents, or transcripts. No results match this search term. Check spelling and try again. Consists of interviews with Holocaust survivors and concentration camp liberators conducted by United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Oral History Department volunteer staff. The interviewees, among them survivors from Hungary, Germany, Austria, France, Italy, and Poland, discuss their experiences of life before World War II, life in the ghettos, life in concentration camps, and life after the Holocaust. Nathan Kalman b. Jerome Stasson b. Jerome Stashevsky discusses his early life in Detroit, Michigan; coming from a family of Polish immigrants; being drafted into the U. Henry Kolber b. Ruth Greifer b. Anna Wollner b. Erwin Forley b. Gerald Rosenstein b. Ivan Becker, born in , discusses his childhood in Budapest, Hungary; his memories of the 'hanging priest of Budapest' who killed Jews for refusing conversion to Christianity; the Nazi invasion of Hungary; harsh restrictions on Jews; his father who was sent to Buchenwald; being sent on a death march with his mother from Budapest towards Austria; being separated from his mother and never seeing her again; his life in hiding; his experiences in an unnamed ghetto; his return to Budapest after liberation; his time in a displaced persons camp in Bad Gastein, Austria; his immigration to the United States as a 'war orphan' in ; and his adjustment to life after the Holocaust and success in business. George Pisik, born May 25, , describes his experience as a soldier in the U. Ruth Rosicka, born August 13, in Nowice, Czechoslovakia present day Poland , describes her Polish father who was actively pro-Zion; escaping bombing in Bielsko, Poland; escaping through Krakow, Poland and being found by the Russian army; being deported to a camp in Siberia from which she was amnestied in ; being drafted by the Czechoslovakian army and working in the medical brigade, where in she met her husband; being taken to the Carpathian Mountains, to the war front, where they stayed until February ; being released from the Army in May because of her pregnancy; and living in Prague, Czech Republic after the war. Salomon Cohen, born July 28, in Athens, Greece, discusses how his family escaped to the south of Greece in February with the help of partisans; hiding with his family in the mountains for six months; how the partisans obtained food from monasteries in the mountains for his family; using false names while in hiding; traveling to Izmir, Turkey then Syria; being captured by English troops; how the family was taken to British camps in the Gaza Strip; their escape with the help of a Jewish agency; traveling to Ted Aviv, Israel, where they lived from to ; going into the army as a tank fighter; going to Haifa, Israel after leaving the army; getting married and having children; and his visits to Greece. Suzanne Foldes b. Tibor Vince, born in , describes his childhood near Budapest, Hungary; his medical studies in Italy; his escape to Cuba at the outbreak of World War II; his immigration to the United States; his work as a physician in the United States Army; his experiences at Dachau shortly after liberation; his medical treatment of Allied prisoners of war; and his life in New York, NY after Lotte Salus b. Charlotte Helena Cohen discusses her childhood living near the Dutch border in Germany; working for a Jewish family; being arrested and pressed into labor after Kristallnacht; being sent to Amsterdam, Netherlands by her father; living with other Jewish teenagers in The Hague, Netherlands; learning her family had been deported to Westerbork; moving to Amsterdam in May ; receiving orders to register with the police; being deported to Westerbork; reuniting with her family; daily life in Westerbork; volunteering to go to Theresienstadt with her parents in ; her experiences in the camps Auschwitz, Stutthof, and Praust; being taken on a death march in March ; liberation by the Russians; sexual violence perpetrated by the Russians; returning to Germany; immigrating to the United States in ; and marrying and starting a family. Irena Neumann discusses her childhood in Prague, Czechoslovakia Czech Republic ; not having a Jewish identity or religious education; evacuating Prague before the Munich Agreement; returning to the city and learning she was Jewish; adapting to restrictions placed on Jews; her feelings about wearing the yellow star; being deported to Theresienstadt with her family; daily life in the camp; contracting encephalitis; being deported to Auschwitz; conditions in camps Auschwitz and Sachsen Chemnitz; returning to Theresienstadt in May ; reuniting with her parents; liberation by Russian soldiers; returning to Prague; beginning university; being arrested and released by communists; and immigrating to the United States in Edward Novakoff, born in in Boston, Massachusetts, discusses his Ukrainian and Lithuanian immigrant parents; enlisting in the U. Moris Glukman, born in Suceava, Romania in , discusses his childhood; the rise in antisemitism; deportation announcements; his arrival in Bessarabia in Moldova and Ukraine with his family and how the peasants took the belongings of the Romanian Jews; travel to Moravia, Czech Republic; living at the mercy of the Romanian Gendarmerie; the spread of typhus and diphtheria during the winter of ; how the Ukranian police guarded the village in Moravia; the German entrance into Moravia; building bridges and excavating coal from open mines; his knowledge about events in Bessarabia and Russian positions and the approaching front; working in a Kolkhoz; being liberated by the Russians; his schooling in Bucharest, Romania; and immigration to the United States in Marcel Drimer b. Marceli Drimmer , born in , discusses his childhood in Drohobych, Poland present day Ukraine ; his family; his religious upbringing; life before the war; the Russian occupation; the German invasion in ; the looting of Jewish property; the deportations in ; moving into the ghetto; the fates of his family members; Ukrainian and German police; the Judenrat; hiding in an attic for a week; escape plans being postponed due to the death of his father; how his female relatives were saved by a woman who was recognized as a righteous gentile; their living conditions while in hiding; liberation by the Soviets; adjusting to life after the war; his education; difficult living conditions in Poland; post-war anti-Semitism; immigrating to the United States in ; his family going to Israel; and his feelings about the war, Poland, and anti-Semitism. Army; and his life after the war. Bella Simon Pasternak, born in , discusses her liberation from Auschwitz by Russians; walking home to Hungary during the winter; being hospitalized with frostbite and starvation; living in a displaced persons camp in Innsbruck, Austria; immigrating to the United States in ; her first impressions of the U. Marion Friedman b. Thomas Brown Gardiner, born on March 26, in St. Louis County, Missouri, describes being raised by his widowed mother; life during the Depression; working for a house painter as a teen in St. Louis; getting married in ; working for a manufacturer that made small parts for the M1 rifle; being drafted in ; training at Camp Robinson in Arkansas; being sent to England in the fall of ; going to France; being assigned to the 45th Infantry Division; seeing action in the Vosges Mountains and Alsace-Lorraine; participating in the capture of Schaffenburg; going through Nuremberg and Munich; liberating Dachau as a member of L Company in the th Infantry Regiment; guarding the camp while waiting for the military police to arrive; billeting in apartment buildings outside of the camp, where the Nazi officers had lived; typhus in the camp and the high death rate of the survivors; speaking with the survivors and being shown the camp by them; going to Munich then Augsburg for a month; being sent to Le Havre, France; returning to the US; working in military camps in Texas until his release; the effect seeing Dachau had on him; and how he feels stronger in his Christian faith. Roberta Jones, born October 15, in St. Herbert Jerome Bitter, born August 4, in New York City, discusses his parents who were Romanian immigrants; growing up in a Jewish neighborhood in Manhattan; becoming more religious during his service in the United Sates Army from to ; his experiences at Ohrdruf in soon after the Germans evacuated the camp; seeing three U. He was an only child and lived a pleasant life there. Despite the Nuremberg laws, he was permitted to continue his schooling as his father served during World War I. Nevertheless, they lost the service of their maid. William experienced little anti-Semitism in Germany but knew that Hitler made anti-Semitic speeches and had newspaper articles written against the Jews. His father's business suffered little from the boycotting but he sold it in Anti-Semitism was more severe in the outlying towns than in Stuttgart. William studied English for two years before immigrating to Danville, Illinois with his uncle's assistance in He had difficulty adjusting to the US so had an English tutor. Kristallnacht and his father's internment in Dachau influenced his parents to leave Germany in for Danville. His mother was a garment worker and his father sold fruits and vegetables in a horse and cart in the local area. Due to an eye condition, Jack went to a health camp for a year. Jack's father left the family in and since lost track of him. Jack was placed in foster homes until the 11th grade and would visit his mother on the weekends. He graduated from high school and worked his way through UCLA by working part-time. In summer of '43 Jack volunteered for the Air Corps and was sent to Pomona College for nine months to study meteorology. He was not picked to be a meteorology officer so joined the infantry and was selected to be a coding clerk. He went to several camps and was shipped to Le Havre. His division had little information of the overall war and no details of concentration camps. From there he was part of the effort to form a bridge over the Moselle and next in a major assault at the Rhine River. Jack was in the Division furthest east in Germany which took many German prisoners as they quickly drove east. His company going east and meeting a surrendering German battalion who were permitted to march on their own. His company formed perimeters around villages and often stayed overnight in a civilian's home. They went through a rural area and saw dead prisoners and dead horses along the road without understanding the situation. They reached Ohrdruf Concentration Camp and saw a few emaciated prisoners leaving and many dead bodies piled up or laying on the ground. Jack did not realize it was a concentration camp at the time or that others existed until later when he returned to the US. The Army newspaper did not publish such information. From there, they went to the Czech border for 3 months which they guarded until VE Day. He was discharged and married a second time as his first wife was killed in an auto accident. Subsequently, he received a BA in economics, MA in family counseling and PhD in psychology and has practiced 10 years in the field. He has four children. Jack still does not understand how the crimes in the concentration camps could have been performed by fellow human beings. William Luksenburg describes going on a death march from Regensburg, Germany to Lebenau, Germany; a German farmer picking him up from the road, where he fell; being brought by the farmer to American troops stationed in the nearby town of Laufen, where he was treated for malnutrition; his cousin coming to the same camp a few months later; returning with his cousin to Bayreuth, Germany, where there were other family members; reuniting in Prague with his future wife, Helen, whom he met in the Blechhammer work camp; getting married in ; receiving money and support from the United Nations Relief and Rehabilitation Agency; attending a technical school organized by the Organization for Rehabilitation through Training; immigrating to the United States in September with Helen; and becoming a mechanic and starting his own business. This interview can be accessed by requesting RG Wallace A. Witkowski, born January 12, in Kielce, Poland, discusses his escape from Poland on a ship to Goteborg, Sweden in ; going to the United States; how his sister was caught by the communists and imprisoned; his struggle to find his father who had immigrated to the United States earlier; settling in Detroit, Michigan and adjusting to American life; how his mother and sister arrived in the U. Richard W. Army on April 25, ; spending time in a displaced persons camp after the war until his sister in America could send papers for him and his brother; immigrating to the United States in June ; adjusting to life in America and finding a job at a department store; settling in the Washington metro area; and interacting with other Holocaust survivors who live in his community. Ruth Alper, born on February 18, in Germany, describes her family and childhood; experiencing little antisemitism as a child; her memories of Kristallnacht; receiving an affidavit from family in Detroit, MI in to immigrate to the United States; arriving in Cuba and staying there until , when she and her family moved to Miami, FL; the small Jewish community in Havana, Cuba; listening to the progress of the war on the radio; experiencing antisemitism in Miami; her recollections of the response of the American Jewish community experiencing the war from abroad; and creating a new life for herself in the United States. Holocaust Memorial Museum; and not participating much in his faith anymore. Fritz Gluckstein, born January 24, in Berlin, Germany, describes the end of the war in Berlin; the food and housing shortages; cleaning up rubble from bombings with his father; the difficulties of re-starting his education after the war; immigrating to the United States in January and settling in the Minneapolis and St. Paul area; becoming a veterinarian; and volunteering for the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. George Leonard, a concentration camp liberator born on December 24, in Malden, Massachusetts, describes his childhood; his training in Alabama and California before he and his unit went to England; becoming the company runner, staying close to the captain and lieutenants; translating codes and delivering messages while at war; his memories of the fights at the Siegfried Line; receiving the Bronze Star after being wounded; traveling through parts of Germany along the Czech border and getting ordered to the Mauthausen concentration camp in Austria; helping to give the victims a proper burial; staying in the Mauthausen area for about six weeks until he went to Spital am Pyhrn, Austria in late July; leaving for America on December 15, ; getting married; and teaching at Harvard University after the war. Army; his experiences trying to obtain United States citizenship; his life in America as a citizen and his activism in Holocaust survivor networks. Helen Goldkind, born in Czechoslovakia near Volosyanka, Ukraine on July 9, , describes her early childhood; experiencing antisemitism as a child; her recollections of the Nazi occupation of her town in ; her deportation to Auschwitz; how her grandfather was beaten to death for not relinquishing a Torah scroll; being sent to work at a munitions factory in Germany; being with her sister when they were liberated by British troops in ; spending time in the Bergen-Belsen displaced persons camp to recover; receiving help from the Swedish Red Cross and traveling to Sweden to recover; immigrating to the United States in with her sister; finding a job as a secretary in New York City; getting married and moving to Baltimore; the death of her sister and raising her children; and her reflections on the current state of the world. Information Agency; leaving Israel in with her husband and five year old son; immigrating to Palo Alto, California, where her husband could get a job at the Hoover Institute; moving to Washington, D. Thea S. Rips, born in Trieste, Italy on February 24, , describes her childhood; her family moving to Rijeka, Croatia when she was five years old; growing up in a Catholic family but having many Jewish friends; witnessing the persecution of nearby Jewish families; aiding several families in their attempts to escape Italy; wanting to become a doctor and working in a shipyard infirmary in Rijeka; getting a job working on the Marshall Plan after the war in Rome, Italy; being offered a chance to move to the United States and work as an interpreter in ; meeting her husband, who she was engaged to for eighteen years before they married in February ; going to the United States and living in New York; moving to Washington, D. Goering and speaking with Mrs. Goering; seeing Holocaust survivors walking home; returning to the United States and starting a luncheonette business; and meeting his wife and having three children. Helen Schwartz b. Szwarczynski, a Catholic woman; the arrival of the Russians in Lvov in June ; staying in three displaced persons camps in ; living in Camp Taylor in Linz, Austria; traveling alone at seven years old to the United States, where she lived in a series of Catholic orphanages, seeing relatives on weekends; being called a Nazi because she spoke German; being sent by the Joint Distribution Committee to the Bellefaire Jewish Children's Orphanage in Cleveland, OH; her adoption by Fred and Tea Klejstadt; attending Oberlin College; getting married and earning a graduate degree in education; feeling grateful to United States; and her desire to find out what happened to her hidden sister whose name became Antonina Noviska. These additional online resources from the U. Holocaust Memorial Museum will help you learn more about the Holocaust and research your family history. The Holocaust Encyclopedia provides an overview of the Holocaust using text, photographs, maps, artifacts, and personal histories. Research family history relating to the Holocaust and explore the Museum's collections about individual survivors and victims of the Holocaust and Nazi persecution. This reference provides text, photographs, charts, maps, and extensive indexes. Transcript Scroll with media Hide folders. Murrow and one was at quarter of ,. Powers called them Doctor Whatever. Lewis because his uncle was there. And yeah,. Interviewee Juliette Peternick. Interviewer Gail Schwartz. Date interview: March Geography creation: Chevy Chase Md. Language English. Extent 1 digital file : WAV. Conditions on Access There are no known restrictions on access to this material. Conditions on Use No restrictions on use. Topical Term Antisemitism--United States. Holocaust survivors--United States. Holocaust, Jewish --Personal narratives. Jewish children in the Holocaust. Jewish families. Orthodox Judaism. World War, German Americans. World War, Refugees. Women--Personal narratives. Geographic Name Boston Mass. United States--Emigration and immigration. Personal Name Peternick, Juliette. Legal Status Permanent Collection. Funding Note The cataloging of this oral history interview has been supported by a grant from the Conference on Jewish Material Claims Against Germany. Date: Oral history interview with Ivan Becker Oral History Ivan Becker, born in , discusses his childhood in Budapest, Hungary; his memories of the 'hanging priest of Budapest' who killed Jews for refusing conversion to Christianity; the Nazi invasion of Hungary; harsh restrictions on Jews; his father who was sent to Buchenwald; being sent on a death march with his mother from Budapest towards Austria; being separated from his mother and never seeing her again; his life in hiding; his experiences in an unnamed ghetto; his return to Budapest after liberation; his time in a displaced persons camp in Bad Gastein, Austria; his immigration to the United States as a 'war orphan' in ; and his adjustment to life after the Holocaust and success in business. Oral history interview with Ruth Rosicka Oral History Ruth Rosicka, born August 13, in Nowice, Czechoslovakia present day Poland , describes her Polish father who was actively pro-Zion; escaping bombing in Bielsko, Poland; escaping through Krakow, Poland and being found by the Russian army; being deported to a camp in Siberia from which she was amnestied in ; being drafted by the Czechoslovakian army and working in the medical brigade, where in she met her husband; being taken to the Carpathian Mountains, to the war front, where they stayed until February ; being released from the Army in May because of her pregnancy; and living in Prague, Czech Republic after the war. Oral history interview with Salomon Cohen Oral History Salomon Cohen, born July 28, in Athens, Greece, discusses how his family escaped to the south of Greece in February with the help of partisans; hiding with his family in the mountains for six months; how the partisans obtained food from monasteries in the mountains for his family; using false names while in hiding; traveling to Izmir, Turkey then Syria; being captured by English troops; how the family was taken to British camps in the Gaza Strip; their escape with the help of a Jewish agency; traveling to Ted Aviv, Israel, where they lived from to ; going into the army as a tank fighter; going to Haifa, Israel after leaving the army; getting married and having children; and his visits to Greece. Oral history interview with Tibor Vince Oral History Tibor Vince, born in , describes his childhood near Budapest, Hungary; his medical studies in Italy; his escape to Cuba at the outbreak of World War II; his immigration to the United States; his work as a physician in the United States Army; his experiences at Dachau shortly after liberation; his medical treatment of Allied prisoners of war; and his life in New York, NY after Oral history interview with Irena Kirkland Oral History Irena Neumann discusses her childhood in Prague, Czechoslovakia Czech Republic ; not having a Jewish identity or religious education; evacuating Prague before the Munich Agreement; returning to the city and learning she was Jewish; adapting to restrictions placed on Jews; her feelings about wearing the yellow star; being deported to Theresienstadt with her family; daily life in the camp; contracting encephalitis; being deported to Auschwitz; conditions in camps Auschwitz and Sachsen Chemnitz; returning to Theresienstadt in May ; reuniting with her parents; liberation by Russian soldiers; returning to Prague; beginning university; being arrested and released by communists; and immigrating to the United States in Oral history interview with Celia Feldschuh Oral History. Oral history interview with Moris Gluckman Oral History Moris Glukman, born in Suceava, Romania in , discusses his childhood; the rise in antisemitism; deportation announcements; his arrival in Bessarabia in Moldova and Ukraine with his family and how the peasants took the belongings of the Romanian Jews; travel to Moravia, Czech Republic; living at the mercy of the Romanian Gendarmerie; the spread of typhus and diphtheria during the winter of ; how the Ukranian police guarded the village in Moravia; the German entrance into Moravia; building bridges and excavating coal from open mines; his knowledge about events in Bessarabia and Russian positions and the approaching front; working in a Kolkhoz; being liberated by the Russians; his schooling in Bucharest, Romania; and immigration to the United States in Oral history interview with Bella Simon Pasternak Oral History Bella Simon Pasternak, born in , discusses her liberation from Auschwitz by Russians; walking home to Hungary during the winter; being hospitalized with frostbite and starvation; living in a displaced persons camp in Innsbruck, Austria; immigrating to the United States in ; her first impressions of the U. Oral history interview with Thomas B. Oral history interview with Herbert Bitter Oral History Herbert Jerome Bitter, born August 4, in New York City, discusses his parents who were Romanian immigrants; growing up in a Jewish neighborhood in Manhattan; becoming more religious during his service in the United Sates Army from to ; his experiences at Ohrdruf in soon after the Germans evacuated the camp; seeing three U. Oral history interview with David Bayer Oral History. Oral history interview with Samuel B. Oral history interview with Werner E. Michel Oral History. Oral history interview with Helen Luksenburg Oral History. Oral history interview with William Luksenburg Oral History William Luksenburg describes going on a death march from Regensburg, Germany to Lebenau, Germany; a German farmer picking him up from the road, where he fell; being brought by the farmer to American troops stationed in the nearby town of Laufen, where he was treated for malnutrition; his cousin coming to the same camp a few months later; returning with his cousin to Bayreuth, Germany, where there were other family members; reuniting in Prague with his future wife, Helen, whom he met in the Blechhammer work camp; getting married in ; receiving money and support from the United Nations Relief and Rehabilitation Agency; attending a technical school organized by the Organization for Rehabilitation through Training; immigrating to the United States in September with Helen; and becoming a mechanic and starting his own business. Oral history interview with Ruth E. Oral history interview with Peter Masters Oral History. Oral history interview with Richard W. Peterson Oral History Richard W. Oral history interview with Ruth Alper Oral History Ruth Alper, born on February 18, in Germany, describes her family and childhood; experiencing little antisemitism as a child; her memories of Kristallnacht; receiving an affidavit from family in Detroit, MI in to immigrate to the United States; arriving in Cuba and staying there until , when she and her family moved to Miami, FL; the small Jewish community in Havana, Cuba; listening to the progress of the war on the radio; experiencing antisemitism in Miami; her recollections of the response of the American Jewish community experiencing the war from abroad; and creating a new life for herself in the United States. Oral history interview with Dorrit L. Oral history interview with Fritz Gluckstein Oral History Fritz Gluckstein, born January 24, in Berlin, Germany, describes the end of the war in Berlin; the food and housing shortages; cleaning up rubble from bombings with his father; the difficulties of re-starting his education after the war; immigrating to the United States in January and settling in the Minneapolis and St. Oral history interview with George Hill Leonard Oral History George Leonard, a concentration camp liberator born on December 24, in Malden, Massachusetts, describes his childhood; his training in Alabama and California before he and his unit went to England; becoming the company runner, staying close to the captain and lieutenants; translating codes and delivering messages while at war; his memories of the fights at the Siegfried Line; receiving the Bronze Star after being wounded; traveling through parts of Germany along the Czech border and getting ordered to the Mauthausen concentration camp in Austria; helping to give the victims a proper burial; staying in the Mauthausen area for about six weeks until he went to Spital am Pyhrn, Austria in late July; leaving for America on December 15, ; getting married; and teaching at Harvard University after the war. Oral history interview with Helen Goldkind Oral History Helen Goldkind, born in Czechoslovakia near Volosyanka, Ukraine on July 9, , describes her early childhood; experiencing antisemitism as a child; her recollections of the Nazi occupation of her town in ; her deportation to Auschwitz; how her grandfather was beaten to death for not relinquishing a Torah scroll; being sent to work at a munitions factory in Germany; being with her sister when they were liberated by British troops in ; spending time in the Bergen-Belsen displaced persons camp to recover; receiving help from the Swedish Red Cross and traveling to Sweden to recover; immigrating to the United States in with her sister; finding a job as a secretary in New York City; getting married and moving to Baltimore; the death of her sister and raising her children; and her reflections on the current state of the world. Oral history interview with Norbert V. Oral history interview with Thea S. Rips Oral History Thea S. Oral history interview with Susanne K. Oral history interview with Julie A. Oral history interview with Vera Levine Oral History. View All Items in the Collection. Further Your Research.

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