ABOUT WORLD BLOG

NBC News World Blog aims to provide a dynamic look at world events and trends -- both big and small -- from NBC News correspondents, producers, and bureaus around the world. Online entries -- from text to video -- will explore news events and how they are shaping our world.

Regular contributors include NBC News correspondents, producers and staff based in bureaus across the world and on assignment.

Click here to read more about the journalists behind NBC News World Blog.



Holocaust survivors always 'Survivors'

Posted: Tuesday, March 27, 2007 7:47 AM
Filed Under:

Recently -- and for the first time -- I have been reading survivors’ accounts of the Holocaust.

Turns out I am not alone in being delayed in addressing the subject.

I was surprised, for instance, to find that Primo Levi’s first account of Auschwitz was only widely published a full 13 years after his liberation. (And it took the medical report he co-authored for the Russian liberators sixty years to be released to the public.)

Meanwhile, Eli Wiesel -- who like Levi was used as a slave in the Buna-Werke, a subcamp of Auschwitz -- couldn’t write about it for 10 years, and even then he had to be persuaded to do so. And then it took him several years to find a publisher for his first book, "Night," a memoir about his experiences that was published in 1956.  

So why did it take decades for me to read Wiesel and Levi's testimonies? Maybe because of the pain passed on by my parents, whose entire families disappeared in smoke in those same extermination camps, I couldn’t face such open wounds, even dried by time.

Two things happened this week that picked off the scab.

First was when I joined a roomful of happy Holocaust survivors eating cake, drinking coffee and dancing at the new Café Europa near Tel Aviv. The goal of the café is to create a place for Holocaust survivors to meet and share their common experiences.

Survivors  
Happy is probably not an apt word to describe these 80-plus survivors of the death camps. Their lined faces wrinkle in shy smiles at the concept -- happiness is denied to people with such memories -- but moments of joy, even frequent moments, are their right, as babies are born and birthdays celebrated. Yet the shade of their history darkens and chills every occasion.

As they smile and chatter, lean on each other and shuffle their feet in time to the music, one cannot forget. They are always a Survivor. Any reference to their common tragedy reddens and waters their eyes.

Thus the events at the Europa. Social workers in Ramat Hasharon asked them if they wanted to get together to talk about their lives. "We’d love to get together," the old folk said. "But we don’t want to relive the camps. We want to dance." 

The second moment came as I joined thousands of Jews, crammed together and trudging through a densely packed tunnel leading out of a soccer stadium into a parking lot. The occasion was the England-Israel Group E qualifying match for Euro 2008.

The experience took me back to those elderly survivors.

Shoulder to shoulder we soccer fans plodded, laboriously matching our steps, shoulders rolling from side to side, like Levi’s prisoners returning from hard labor: "stiff puppets made of joint-less bones." We edged further down the narrow, dim tunnel, pushed from behind into the backs of the person in front.

I thought of Levi and Wiesel. Sixty years ago, Jews would have been naked and shivering, limping along an icy, muddy path, to a concrete room, with pipes and taps and no windows. Some really would believe that it was a place for a nice, hot shower. Others would understand: their destination was a gas chamber and their bodies would be burned in the crematorium next door.  

Levi wrote that everyone in Auschwitz knew there was only one way out: through the chimney. But it didn’t matter what they thought because the end was the same for everybody; inevitable, inescapable, and, by the time it came, a relief.

The strength and will to survive
The experience in the stadium tunnel led me to other thoughts. If I had gone the way of my grandparents, would I have known how to survive? Would I have willed myself through such horror to bear witness, like Levi and Wiesel? 

Thank God I’ll never know, but for one moment, trudging in a low tunnel with a thousand Jews, a chill went through me.

MAIN PAGE

Email this EMAIL THIS

Comments

Growing up in Brooklyn in the 60's it seems that most of my neighbors were "refugees"(we didn't call them survivors then) with green numbers on their arms. They never talked about it then and probably still don't talk about it now. Your story was touching and poingnant, unfortunately now that you've "outed" yourself the anti-semites of the world will look at your reporting in a different light from now on. A zissen Pesach.
Every one should read & take to heart Martin Niemoller "First they came for the communist---
My sister's mother-in-law was 10 when her father was forced to fight for the Nazis. When the Russians came, they told the family it had 24 hours to get out of the country or they would be shot. On their journey, their father died in the forest, and they had to leave his body there. She died just recently, and her family will not talk about that time period. Please don't let these memories pass without note. My nieces and nephews need to know their legacy.
No one listened then and no one listens now as holocausts happen all over the world. My father went through Auschwitz then Mauthausen and finally liberated at Ebensee in may 1945. It is a shame that human beings do not learn from history as our teachers,parents and governments often dilute the truth or deny that these things ever happened.
I am aa 67 year old Jew who lost many family members in the Holocaust. I visited both Auschwitz concentration camps about 10 years ago and felt the same shivers deep in my spine as I walked the grounds and saw many artifacts, some of which might well have belonged to my family members. A pox on the house of any who dare to deny the existence of the Holocaust. THOSE WHO DO NOT LEARN LESSONS FROM THE MISTAKES PAST ARE COMDEMNED TO REPEAT THOSE MISTAKES! Eternal vigilance.
I am a second gen. I know this feeling well. It happens to me all the time. I have the stories of my parents burned into my psyche and everthing I do is touched by it. For example, while skiing, I wonder how I would survive without shoes or my parka. While gardening, I imagine digging weeds for food or cleaning up the leaves with a gun turret at my head. When my children were younger, while holding their hands while crossing the street, I imagined myself holding them while online for selection. The author, Thane Rosenbaum wrote a book that I recommend - Elijah Visible. Up until that book I didn't realize that others had the same experiences. I've been to Dachau, Theresienstadt (both the town & fortress, as well as Auchwitz/Buchenwald and my experiences at those camps enforced my wonder how anyone survived at all.
Martin Fletcher, you are a Mensch. My Berlin born Jewish mother, met my Sorrento born Italian Catholic father in night school in Coney Island, learning English. In marrying, they agreed to have the children 3, learn both religions, and make a choice on which to follow, when old enough. My mother's sister remained behind in Berlin, believing because her husband was a Burgher Meister, they had political protection. they sent a son to England, a daughter to the USA. They were hunted down and exterminated. I remember my mother's tears, as those of her other siblings. I could not then, nor now, understand man's inhumanity to man. Isreal gave me the incredible feeling of survival, each time I visited there. Other Middle East countries showed me disrespect, and invaded my personal space. Today, I cannot understand the revival of anti-Jewish hatred, and the unfortunate belief of too many vocal politicians, that it is wrong of the United States to support Israel. How many more 9/11's, SS Cole's, Embassy bombings, etc. must we tolerate before we really read what the koran teaches believers, "Convert by the Tongue of the Sword." This is not a peaceful religion, every one of us is a Heathen. We are all in jeopardy. World, wake up.
My father was a US Army soldier that arrived in Germany near the end of WWII. He helped with the DP's (Displaced Persons)quite a bit. He was horrified at the Nazi's treatment of the Jews and others that he came into contact with. He was a young boy that had been drafted when he came of age, so when he got to Germany he looked, and was, very young. He related that once while transferring supplies between Stugarrt(?) and other towns his truck slid off the road and got stuck, because of ice. The DP camp was close by and the DP's took him in, fed him and gave him a place next to the fire. My father always got angry when someone cast doubts on what had happened in the Holocaust.
I second Cloe Wood's question--how can anybody deny the Holocaust? The fact that the Holocaust happened is horrific enough. However, when you take into consideration not only the fact that the sort of racism and other forms of intolerance that spurred the Holocaust still live on, and the fact that similar genocide is currently going on in places like the Darfur region, it means that people have not learned from history--which is even worse.
I have always enjoyed Martin Fletcher's reporting, so it is with interest I read this personal information about him and his family.
I find it ridiculous to equate the experience of attending a soccer match with a march to the crematorium at a death camp. Fletcher should have stayed at Cafe Europa a bit longer and focused more on those survivors who know all too well how it really felt to face death every day.
Unfortunately, our government has learned nothing from the past. Remember the "ethnic cleansing" of the Serbs? Now genocide has moved to Africa. First in Rowanda, now in Darfur and moving into Chad. And as with Germany and Hitler, our government does nothing. Since these countries have nothing to offer the U.S. the deaths are not important. As citizens, each and every one of us need to become involved and make our voices heard.
It is a monsterous abuse of free speech when certain people abuse the memory of those murdered by evil men to further their own political agendas. 12 million people were brutally killed (half Jews, half Non-Jews)because of the bigotry of some and the complacency of others. adeeb majd, you should be ashamed. Refugee camps are not extermination camps. There is no gassing or mass murder there. Those refugee camps themselves were built and maintained by the UN. If their residents want to build their own country than they would be better off to employ Ghandi's peaceful methods which succeeded than those of their own violent leaders (who have only brought dispair and poverty to their followers). A more honest comparison to the holocaust of the 1940's would be the current genocide in Darfur. But I notice you don't mention that. I wonder why?
How relatively easy it is for us to mull over the past indescribable atrocities and say “never again” and ignore today’s reality of the devastation in Darfur and other places around the world! As a jew, I would wish that experiencing such tragedies brought compassion and unyielding intolerance against all evil, and have the Israel as an ardent and outspoken enemy of those who commit such crimes - as those that our families went through - but it only happens when we are being harmed. As sad as it is, we have learned so little from so much pain.
I was born after the Nazi terror and have the upmost respect for the Victims. Myself and my thirteen year oid daughter visited the Holocuast Musem in Houston and we could't even talk on the way home we were in shock.
To compare the the brutal, barbarous and insane slaughter and destruction of European Jewry to the current condition of Arabs in refugee camps is ludicrous, belittling and insensitive. Not to mention dangerous.
I have been following the events of the Holocaust for many years and still can not put down a new book on that Dark Period of the 20th Century. I am not even Jewish and I look for answers as to who,what,when & how??. Matter of fact I am reading "The Dentist of Auschwitz - A Memoir by Benjamin Jacobs". The pain that was suffered during these time I could not think of, I try to put myself in the shoes of the auther and try to understand how this happen. I always say Why not put up a fight?? Fear was the key to the raise of the Nazi Machine and the camps that followed. I am truly sorry that these events took place and I hope and pray for peace in Israel.
I have been following the events of the Holocaust for many years and still can not put down a new book on that Dark Period of the 20th Century. I am not even Jewish and I look for answers as to who,what,when & how??. Matter of fact I am reading "The Dentist of Auschwitz - A Memoir by Benjamin Jacobs". The pain that was suffered during these time I could not think of, I try to put myself in the shoes of the auther and try to understand how this happen. I always say Why not put up a fight?? Fear was the key to the raise of the Nazi Machine and the camps that followed. I am truly sorry that these events took place and I hope and pray for peace in Israel.
As an army brat I grew up in Germany and as a child our elementary school took a field trip to a place where the Jews were slaughtered. As I type this email, I get chills remembering those dark places were death was manufactured I am not sure how widely read this column will be, but what another great thing for the Jews to remember what their people were forced to suffer through. It would seem that this is a part of the healing process, a part of a call to not forget the kind of evil people are capable of carrying inside them against another because of their race or religion. I am saddened however when descendants of African slaves in America relive their tragic history we are labeled as complainers. When the call for remembrance of our ancestors is made all of our hearts should desire to be healed of any hate we harbor; for time has shown that hate unchecked grow into uncontrollable act of insanity.
Both of my parents lost their entire families in the Holocaust.My parents were able to escape to England where my sister and I were born.We tried to get our parents to write or record their story and they died without this being done.Our brother lived in Switzerland taken care of by people from Kindertransport.
The poster equating the refugee camps in Gaza to Dachau has obviously never visted a real extermination camp. I have been to three. They are nothing like a refugee camp, nothing.
Thanks for writing this story and, of course, I hope the world will say enough to all atrocities committed against innocent civilians: in Israel, Palestine, Romania, Darfu, Turkey, Saudi Arabia, Zimbabwe, among others. God bless!
I lived as a child in post war Germany in the 50's. I vividly remember our housekeeper being terrified that Hitler was still alive. For years I have read accounts of survivors of the Holocost, historical novels (Thoene and others) and have no doubt that the Holocost happened. I weep when I read of those that deny it. We must never forget, we must learn from the past and work to prevent and stop the murder that is happening today. Human life is sacred no matter what nationality, faith or color.
So hard to think about but oh so necessary. I lost no one, am not Jewish and yet am haunted by the facts. May those survivors find any happiness that they can here on earth and surely they will be rewarded in the hereafter. God Bless All.
Jesus says"Love thy GOD with all thy mind and heart, and Love thy neighbor the same" Peace
Yeah, it happened. No one should forget Germans also executed millions of non-Jewish, which also should be remembered. Jewish people should remember how many non-Jewish sacrificed their lives to help them during WWII.
My father, a young soldier of 20 years old in the 103rd. Infantry Division, was in the the first liberation wave of one of the death camps. He was one of the first soldiers through the main gates. Through out my childhood years, as he told his children his military stories, he kept certain memories closely guarded to himself. He always talked about his military experiences, but for some reason unknown to us, he avoided this subject. It was not until the early 1970's that he finally started to talk about the experience and horrors he saw as his unit broke down the gates and went from building to building looking for survivors. Each sight worse than the previous site...each area a living death. He would forget the vacant eyes and lifeless stares on the skeletal faces of the people still barely alive shuffling towards him in that horrible place. He showed us the pictures and tried to retell his stories through tears and choked back sobs. As he slowly and painfully relived his experience, he made us promise never to forget what he was telling us. "Never forget," he said! "Never! Never forget, so it will never happen again!" To this day, I keep the photos and publications of the horrors he experienced in a safe place so if the time ever comes when the horrors are again questioned, I will keep my promise to him and be one of the first to stand strong!
I have been sitting here reading this article and I find that I have tears in my eyes. I have heard the stories of how some people think there never was a holocaust but I say to them; Go and visit those camps and take in a very deep breath and then tell me and all the survivors that this never happened. I have read little on the holocaust and the death camps but since reading this article and the comments of survivors children I am compelled to read more and to try to understand what, if anything, made these mad people tick. I agree that there is geneocide going on in this nation as we speak and we should not turn a deaf ear to what is happening in Darfur but do our best to get this government and there's to stop it. It could happen here, in the United States and we need to make sure that it never does. They say that history repeats itself but we need to step up to the plate and make sure that it stops and never continues. My prayers are with all Holocaust survivors and their families everwhere. My prayers also go out to Martin that God grants him the piece to continue this article and to open the eyes of all Americans everywhere no matter how old or young to see that this really did happen and to understand why and how people can do these things and to never let it happen again; EVER.
Move on and get over it. The Jews and Israel are not the only people nor only country that has suffered since the beginning of the history of man. Look at Africans, Greeks, Turks, Kurds, American Indians- all of these groups have been displaced, put in to slavery, killed because of who they are. Its seems though that the Jews are the only ones who have the monopoly on pity and the inability to move on "despite of" instead of "because of".
i cant say that i am i child or grandchild of surviors but my heart heart does go out to those that had to go though that horrible ordile. I heard on the news a while back that some are trying to call the holocaust a myth. I dont see see how the extermination of millinos can be called a myth. I know a man who only survied the camps becasue he could cook. He did not approve of what was going on. Yet he was helpless to do anything to stop either and theat is something that plagues him forever. My heart and soul go out to all.
I'm proud to say my uncle was the first American soldier through the Dachua gates, seeing firsthand the horrors. He was a liberator and also witness for the survivors and the dead spirits remaining.
I'm proud to say my uncle was the first American soldier through the Dachua gates, seeing firsthand the horrors. He was a liberator and also witness for the survivors and the dead spirits remaining.
Wow,, I just sat here and cryed. I only know my mothers side of the family, my fathers is just a blank page. But to never know any grandparents or others, I can see why they just would like to dance.And take in the now and let the past go, but being wise to never forget and keep a watchfull eye out for what's happening now.
This is a truly amazing article. As a Christian who loves Israel and a descendant of African slaves I personally found it quite moving. I have always felt there was a common bond, if you will, between Blacks and Jews. The survival of both through some of the most horrifying events in mordern history is a testimony of God's grace towards His children. Holocaust survivor's stories must be told and retold to every generation so they nor the horrors they went through are ever forgotten.
This was a very good story by Martin Fletcher. My family has watched him for years and always marveled at his wonderful way of delivering news. I had no idea that his parents were Holocaust survivors. That just makes me want to reach out and send him a warm hug and say, "You are not alone". G-d bless you.
Enough of the WWII Holocaust. Black Christians in Africa are being annihilated by Muslims in a real Holocaust, and I don't see Jews doing anything about it.
No one says it doesnt happen. They just say less people died then announced. How come the first number estimated was 10 million jews and then it went down to 6 million. Science will tell us how many.
There is a very good documentary that was made entitled "Purple Triangles". The Jews were not the only people to undergo persecution, death & unspeakable torture. The holocaust was most definitely a fact of history, albeit one to be ashamed of.
Just as I believe that the Holocaust was the most horrific behavior that humans can subject other humans to, what about the 'camps' in Palestine? What about the atrocities that are occuring there as we speak? Is this not in a some ways like a mini holocaust?
If you have not read the holocaust accounts I urge you to do so. Eli Wiesel is my favorite author not just in his holocaust account but in other pieces which I believe only a survivor can write so eloquently and personal. For some this may be difficult to read but so worth the gain in knowledge. I continue to educate my children as age permits so their generation will not know this sadness. Thank survivors you know for their bravery in teaching us basic respect and love of our fellow man.
My name is Avrom Herskovits. I was born in Malmo Sweden. My Father Samuel Herskovits was born in Kosce Slovakia. Siemens Corp and the SS killed all of my fathers living relatives family of 10. Untill today Siemens Corp still runs owns and operates mines they captured in WW2. My father was in Buchenwald and was liberated by US forces. After the war my father looked for another living jew from Kosce he found one in 1982. Now I continue the search. As a child of 2 survivors mother was a Polish partisan. The only thing I can say is GOD please help your people.
Let us never forget!
Mike, stop the conservative nonsense about Israel! I am a liberal Democrat and I support Israel 100%. I do not bash Israel and we do not need right-wing political dogma involved in the Israel's survival. If you belive what you wrote above than you don't know what you are writing about.
It would seem to me that Holocaust survivors and those that dwell on this issue should be the first people to protest such things as Gitmo and other secret prisons. I wonder why that is seldom the case?
It takes nothing away from the 6 million Jewish deaths for us to remember that a similar number of Poles, Slavs, Gypsies, Communists, homosexuals and other "undesirables" were also murdered in those camps.
It is a shame that people still live this as part of their lives. If only people where more loving in this world it would be for the better.
When we lived in Far Rockaway, NY (1961 - 1964), I remember "the grandmothers", older European immigrant women, who sat and watched us play from the park benches. If you hurt yourself and cried, the other kids would send you to "the grandmothers" who would hug and hold you, dry your eyes and check your hurt. If it was more than they could handle with their tissues, they would point to the building for you to go to your own mother. What I remember most is while they didn't speak English, but they understood distress. I now wonder how many of those women were Holocaust survirors. They wore dark dresses with scarves on their heads tied under their chins. I just read "Sala's Gift" by Ann Kirschner, her mother's story of the Holocaust. I was in my first year of college before I discovered that the more appropriate statement of loss is "TWELVE MILLION people were exterminated by the Natzis, 6 million were Jews". I'd only heard of the "6 million Jews", but the Jews seem to discount that there were 6 million others! When I was home sick from work watching a PBS station, I saw footage from the liberation of a camp. The people there were all races! I was so shocked to see an Asian man and a Black man behind the gates. It was a wake up call to me that people of color were affected as well.
No one listened then and no one listens now as holocausts happen all over the world. My father went through Auschwitz then Mauthausen and finally liberated at Ebensee in may 1945. It is a shame that human beings do not learn from history as our teachers,parents and governments often dilute the truth or deny that these things ever happened.
Political views should not matter this happened and should always be prevelant in our minds irrigardless if we are democrat or republican. What the survivors went through should not be cheepend by what you feel is wrong with the US government
My 9 year old son, when asked in Hebrew School class what he should do when other kids yell, "dirty Jew", immediately responded, "fight back - we don't take that any more!" Jewish Kids today are proud, and strong, and united, We as a people no longer sit back and hope things will get better, while watching them get worse. NEVER AGAIN! The people Israel LIVE!


SEND A COMMENT

PLEASE READ: All comments must be approved before appearing in the thread; time and space constraints prevent all comments from appearing. We will only approve comments that are directly related to the blog, use appropriate language and are not attacking the comments of others.

Message (please, no HTML tags. Web addresses will be hyperlinked):

TRACKBACKS

Trackbacks are links to weblogs that reference this post. Like comments, trackbacks do not appear until approved by us. The trackback URL for this post is: http://worldblog.msnbc.msn.com/trackback.aspx?PostID=101802

Syndicate This Site

Add World Blog to your news reader:
live.com xml
myyahoo msn
bloglines newsgator
google

Interactive

Fight for Iraq
Learn more about the ethnic, religious and political power plays in and around Iraq during a briefing of the region led by NBC’s Richard Engel.