Farewell
Farewell
Farewell
Farewell
Index
Prologue........................................................................ 1
Childhood in the Village ............................................... 7
Childhood in the Shadow of War................................. 23
Berlin Bolivia ........................................................... 31
The German Invasion .................................................. 35
The Deportation .......................................................... 39
Train to Auschwitz ...................................................... 47
Auschwitz-Birkenau .................................................... 51
Plashov ....................................................................... 65
Gross-Rozen, Bolkenhain ............................................ 75
Buchenwald ................................................................ 97
Dachau, Liberation .................................................... 107
A New Beginning ..................................................... 115
On the Ship to Israel.................................................. 145
Expulsion to Cyprus .................................................. 155
Bnei Brak .................................................................. 167
The Navy and the Columbus Campaign .................... 171
Home in Israel........................................................... 183
Commemorating the Village ..................................... 187
Farewell .................................................................... 191
Sources ..................................................................... 195
Prologue
[5]
[6]
The Czech name of the closest city, also known by its Hungarian
name, Beregsaz.
[10]
[21]
[22]
[23]
[24]
[26]
[29]
[30]
Berlin Bolivia
[32]
[33]
[34]
* * *
My father Yehuda's fourteenth birthday was celebrated
one week prior, on March 30, 1944. Not in his wildest
dreams could he possibly imagine that he would
"celebrate" his fifteenth birthday in the Buchenwald
concentration camp in Germany.
[38]
The Deportation
[45]
[46]
Train to Auschwitz
each car were two buckets, one for water and the other,
which was empty, was meant to be the "toilet". The fact
that one's personal needs were publicly taken care of was
humiliating. At first people contained themselves and
would try to relieve themselves at night when it was
darker. It was hard to reach the buckets because people
were standing and sitting everywhere and blocking the
way. On the way, people would fall over one another,
cursing and yelling at each other. After a whole day
people couldn't restrain themselves anymore. If a man
wanted to relieve himself, other men would stand around
him, hiding him from the view of others, and give him a
little dignity, and when women had to use the bucket,
other women would stand around her with their backs to
her in order to give her some privacy in what was a very
embarrassing situation. The doors were not opened
during the entire journey, food and water were not
distributed, and we had but a little food with us that we
had brought from the ghetto. It did not take long for the
water supply to run out. All of our attempts to scream
and ask for water were useless. The crying of the babies
was intolerable and the poor mothers were unable to help
them. The air quickly became stuffy and it was difficult
to breathe. We had no idea where they were taking us.
Sometimes a few people managed to peak out between
the wires, inhale some air and note the direction of the
[48]
train, but they could not discern where the train was
heading. We passed train stations so quickly that we
were unable to see anything. People cried and prayed
silently. The situation was horrible. Those unable to
tolerate the suffering died of suffocation and thirst. Their
bodies remained in the train cars. The stench was
intolerable sweat from people who had not washed in
days, the buckets filled with urine and feces which had
not been emptied since we boarded, and the corpses. All
of this transformed this journey into hell. But beyond
the immediate situation was the uncertainty; where are
we going? When will we arrive there? What will happen
to us?
When we passed the Polish border, SS soldiers boarded
the train, and that was a very bad sign. The train
continued ceaselessly for three days and three nights.
* * *
The Hungarian Government was responsible for the
Hungarian Holocaust on the Jews. Had the Hungarians
not hated the Jews so abysmally, and had they not been
so willing to acquiesce to all the demands of the Nazi
Government, the Hungarian Jews would have been
saved. It took less than three months from the time the
Germans conquered Hungary for 440,000 Jews to be
[49]
[50]
Auschwitz-Birkenau
[52]
[55]
Grandmother Chaya-Esther
in a picture that was taken before the War
[56]
"Schneller!" "Schnell!"
"Undress!"
"Move!"
The few items people managed to hide in their pockets
and shoes were taken, and we were left with nothing.
On one side people. On the other side clothes. Everyone
sanitized. At once hundreds of people, all standing naked
in a big hall, where the air was laden with the stench of
disinfectants. From there we were forcibly pushed to the
next stage, to the showers hall. The freezing water flow
slams hard on our naked bodies. There were no towels,
of course. From the showers we exited naked through
the other side of the hall. Like animals. Undignified.
Then we were pushed onto another stage the hair
cutting. Not only the hair on our heads, but also the hair
on our bodies. Women and men. Whoever could not
keep pace was beaten. I was lucky that I was a young
boy. I still did not have hair on my body, the hair on my
head was short, and my payes had already been shaved
off by the Hungarians before we arrived here. I passed
the humiliating hair cutting process relatively well. We
fulfilled their orders like robots. There was no time to
think or object. All of our senses were blurred.
Everything was done rapidly, stage after stage, as if
people were part of a manufacturing process in a factory.
For some reason we did not get prisoners' clothing.
[58]
youth and the strong ones were lucky and they were
considered fit for work; Auschwitz for them was a
transfer point. From there they were sent to labor camps,
where they provided cheap labor for private factories and
the German Army. These prisoners spent few days in
Auschwitz in separated blocks from the other prisoners.
Some of them were not registered as camp prisoners;
they neither received prisoner's clothing nor did they
have a prisoner's number imprinted on them.
I was one of those "lucky prisoners".
* * *
Between 1930-1945 the Germans established hundreds
of concentration camps to house enemies of the Nazi
State, the Third Reich. The first ones were labor camps
and concentration camps in Germany, in which people of
different nationalities, including Germans, for different
reasons were housed criminals, those who objected to
the Nazi Regime, Communists, Socialists and
homosexuals. The Jews were incarcerated in the camps
at a later date, following the outbreak of the War in
1939.
The concentration-camp, Auschwitz was established in
1940 in southern Poland, and was the largest of all the
camps. It included three central camps and 40 secondary
[62]
[63]
[64]
Plashov
[65]
[72]
* * *
In January 1945 the last prisoners in Plashov were
evacuated and forced on a death march to Auschwitz,
many were killed along the way and many of those who
survived the death march were killed on arrival in
Auschwitz. On January 20, 1945, the Red Army
liberated the camp, which was empty of people by then,
with no evidence of the murder that had taken place
there. After the War, the Supreme Court of Poland found
Amon Goeth, the cruel commander of the camp, guilty
of murdering tens of thousands of people. He was
hanged on September 1946 at the age of 37. The place
where he was hanged was not far from the Plashov
Camp.
[73]
[74]
Gross-Rozen, Bolkenhain
[75]
[76]
[78]
[81]
young age. His hands were full of sores and scars, his
body was weak, his face became wrinkled. It was painful
for me to look at him.
It was very hard to survive if you did not have someone
close by your side. A prisoner's condition was eminently
better if there was someone that he could rely upon, take
care of him, share his slice of bread, and crowd together
on the bunk and share a blanket. The proximity and the
concern enabled us to retain our humanity. Without any
kind of human closeness, people lost all of their
humanity and their feelings for others. A person who
lived for someone else, survived longer. My father had
me, and I had my father and we lived for each other.
My father did not feel well. For several days, his
situation had been deteriorating due to the severe
pneumonia and hacking cough that was plaguing him.
He was sent to the infirmary (revir in German), which
was located at the entrance to the camp. There was very
little medical equipment there. There were some
bandages, a few gauze pads, liquid for cleaning wounds,
aspirin and that's it. A plain table served as an operating
table, and surgical equipment consisted of scissors and
an old scalpel. There were a few beds, more accurately
bunks, and sometimes two or three patients were forced
to crowd together on one bunk. Most patients who
[83]
[84]
[85]
hand. On the other hand, there was a great fear that the
Germans wanted to dispose of us before the Russians
would arrive so as to destroy any evidence of what went
on here. The atmosphere was hectic. The SS officers
began to pack up and burn documents. Two days prior
to the evacuation, tens of prisoners were put to death
with injections, most of them were ill. My father and I
were among the 500 remaining prisoners, all of whom
were sent on a death march. On that day we were
ordered to line up during morning appell, and march
towards the camp gate, where the SS troops were
waiting. Prior to departure all of the prisoners received a
slice of bread, a small pat of margarine and a little jelly.
That is how we commenced walking in bitter cold and
snowy weather. The SS troops walked on either side of
the prisoners, with their guns and dogs. Their packed
satchels and suitcases were given to the poor prisoners to
carry. The difficult trek took place over several days, and
very few survived. We walked without a break for many
hours; we had only the single slice of bread we had been
given when we left the camp and we were not given any
other food or drink. When I finished my bread I ate the
snow. We had to walk quickly. The guards cursed at us
and hit us with the butts of their rifles to force us to
move more quickly, as they were afraid of the advancing
Russians. We could hear the artillery in the background.
[88]
[89]
[92]
[93]
[94]
[95]
[96]
Buchenwald
Zvi survived, made aliyah, married and lives with his wife Bruriah
and their children Moshe and Chani in Tel Aviv. We remained
friends after the War.
[99]
[105]
[106]
Dachau, Liberation
[110]
[114]
A New Beginning
[115]
* * *
I crossed the Danube on foot until I arrived in Budapest.
I wandered through the streets. I heard about a local
Jewish organization providing food and housing for
refugees and I went there. I believe they even distributed
some money. Throughout the city were lists of survivors,
and people would stand for hours in front of these lists,
hoping to find surviving family members.
While in Budapest, for the first time in my life I went to
the cinema to see a movie. The protagonist was a naval
captain. My love of the sea was born there, as was my
dream, which I fulfilled a few years later serving in the
Israeli Navy. Eventually, I would also make a living as a
naval appraiser and that is how I stayed close to boats
and the sea.
My next goal was to return to Muzsaj, my childhood
village. I traveled from place to place by train until I
arrived at the train station in Berehovo and from there I
walked to the village. I discovered the village was now
under Russian rule and life was going on as usual; as if
nothing had changed since we were expelled. I walked to
my house. I knocked on the door and strangers opened
it. They were Russian citizens who had arrived from
Siberia within the framework of a population exchange
organized by the Russians Russians who lived in the
[118]
[122]
[123]
[124]
[126]
[130]
[131]
[136]
[137]
[138]
Up:
Sylvia and Yehuda
Landsberg, 1947.
Down:
[139]
regular routine: rising early, exercise, prayer, selfdefense training, Judo and target practice, lectures,
gatherings, meals and lights out. They prepared us for
possible confrontation with the British. It was forbidden
to leave the compound or correspond by mail because of
the need for complete secrecy.
One day we were told that we had to be ready to leave in
a matter of hours. We were permitted to pack ten
kilograms of personal belongings. Remaining
possessions were to be left behind. Before leaving we
were told to destroy all identification and photographs,
anything that might indicate where we came from.
Sadly, I had to destroy the identification card that I had
received in Bucharest. Everyone received a card noting
his place on the boat, which we had to present upon
boarding. In the late hours of the night, we left on trucks
traveling to the port. I had no idea what kind of
adventure lay before me. The future was unclear, but the
desire and excitement to go to the Land of Israel enabled
us to have faith and to blindly follow our emissaries.
[142]
[144]
12
[145]
[147]
[148]
[153]
[154]
Expulsion to Cyprus
[155]
to renew ties with relatives from Israel and all over the
world. When the Joint entered they increased the quota
to two stamps monthly per person.
Organization in Cyprus was under the same parties or
movements the immigrants had been under during their
attempt at reaching Israel. Party affiliation was totally
encompassing; anyone who wasn't affiliated was an
exception, such individuals or families were categorized
as "loners". Although joining a movement for anyone
who wanted to reach Israel was done for practical
reasons, in Cyprus the need for party affiliation
increased dramatically. Each movement had its own
identifying marks expressed by symbols, dress, daily
activities, etc. It was forbidden to transfer among
movements. Most people were secular . Less than twenty
per cent were religious or traditional and identified with
religious movements, Mizrachi, Bnei Akiva and Agudat
Yisrael.
* * *
Because I initiated my aliyah with Poalei Agudat
Yisrael, I remained with them in Cyprus; some seven per
cent of immigrants were affiliated with that movement.
The movement was largely influenced by the Gur Rebbe,
[158]
[162]
[163]
[164]
Yehuda 1949
[165]
[166]
Bnei Brak
[168]
[169]
[170]
[175]
[176]
[177]
[178]
[180]
[181]
[182]
Home in Israel
Haifa 1957. My father Yehuda lives in a small, oneroom apartment on 23 Haganim Street in the German
Colony. The apartment belonged to his maternal Aunt
Piri, who gave it to him after she left Israel for America.
A little lonely. No family. Some army friends. A few
months after returning from three years in America. He
was trying to restart his life, earn a living, start a family.
He worked for the Paz Gas company. On Shabbat
mornings he used to sit on the bench in his neighborhood
tennis court watching players hit the ball back and forth.
He was particularly fascinated by an athletic young girl
and he loved to watch her. Her shiny black hair fell to
her shoulders and her charming smile captured his heart.
He heard her speaking English. He decided to try his
luck and play.
One day, while he went to the post office to collect the
tennis balls his brother David sent him from America, he
saw the girl from the tennis court walking towards him.
He stopped and asked her:
"Hello. Do you know me?"
"Sorry. No"
Does this box remind you of something?"
[183]
[186]
[188]
[189]
[190]
Farewell
[192]
[193]
[194]
Sources
[195]
Books
[196]
[197]
Websites
[199]
[200]