As the number of survivors in the UK dwindles to 5,000, Stuart Jeffries commemorates Holocaust Memorial Day by hearing the stories six of them have to tell.Sixty-five years ago tomorrow, the largest Nazi killing camp, Auschwitz-Birkenau, was liberated by the Soviet army. The Holocaust Day Memorial Trust will celebrate the anniversary of that event. So what, you might be thinking. Another anniversary, another wall of newsprint. What, really, is the point of continuing to commemorate something that happened a lifetime ago? There are three good reasons. One is, as all the survivors of the Holocaust I interview in the following pages told me, that the slogan "Never again" has become a sick joke, degraded by the genocides in Cambodia (1975-79), Bosnia (1992), Rwanda (1994) and Darfur (2003- today). We have learned too little and let people die en masse not for what they did but for who they were – just as happened in the Nazi death camps.
Second reason: this is one of the last years we are going to have many Holocaust survivors in Britain to share with us what they went through. The Holocaust Day Memorial Trust estimates there are 5,000 survivors left in the UK. It's urgent that we hear their – often incredible – stories before they die. When the war in Europe ended on 8 May 1945, there were 200,000 Jewish Holocaust survivors, according to one source (Zoe Waxman's 2006 book Writing the Holocaust, Oxford University Press).
But Jews weren't the only victims, nor the Holocaust's only survivors: the Holocaust Memorial Museum in Washington, for instance, defines Holocaust survivors as "any persons, Jewish or non-Jewish, who were displaced, persecuted or discriminated against due to the racial, religious, ethnic, social and political policies of the Nazis and their collaborators between 1933 and 1945. In addition to former inmates of concentration camps, ghettos and prisons, this definition includes, among others, people who were refugees or were in hiding." The museum has a registry that includes more than 196,000 records related to survivors and their families. Any estimate of the number of Holocaust survivors immediately after the war, though, is likely to be wrong, not least because no one then had as their first priority counting up the number of people who survived the death camps.
more...'We saw the chimneys. Rumours said it was a crematorium. I didn't know what that meant'One morning after war broke out in September 1939, Zigi Shipper woke up to find his father standing by his bed. "He told me the Germans were coming and he had to go away." How could he leave you, I ask? "Like a lot of people in Łódz
, he thought the Nazis would only be after men of fighting age, not children and women. Nobody thought they would want to kill all Jews. How wrong we were. But still, my father ran away to Russia, thinking that was the right thing to do."
Zigi (short for Zygmunt) was nine. "That was the last time I saw my dad," he tells me in his living room in Bushey, Hertfordshire. His father returned to Poland later in the war but could only get as far as the Warsaw ghetto. What happened to him? "I presume he died. I have been to all the museums and I can't find a trace of him. He might have died in the Warsaw ghetto or Treblinka . Finding ways to die was not difficult for a Jew."
Zigi was raised by his grandparents in the ghetto in Łódz that the Nazis established in November 1939. His mother, divorced from his father before the war, had moved to Belgium. "I presumed she was dead." He was wrong.
Food was so scarce in the ghetto that Zigi's grandfather became weak and died. Death was everywhere: "When I was 10 I stepped over dead bodies in the ghetto without much feeling." Ghetto life took on a routine for him and his grandmother. He worked in a metal factory producing munitions. But the routine was broken when, in 1941, the Nazis began to round up Jews for what they called "resettlement". On one of these raids, Zigi was slung into a lorry. "I managed to jump off – I ran and ran and luckily, no German saw me."
Memories of the Holocaust: Zigi Shipper 'When someone fell, you felt lucky you were next to him. The dead always had something useful'Towards the end of the war, Harry Spiro was walking one day with 3,000 other Jewish prisoners from Rehmsdorf labour camp to Theresienstadt in Czechoslovakia when he dived into a ditch to avoid allied bombs falling from the sky. This was one of several so-called death marches that took place between April 1944 and April 1945 when prisoners were driven by their captors to avoid the British and American allies approaching from the west and Soviet troops from the east.
Why was it called a death march? "Three hundred people out of 3,000 who set off arrived at Theresienstadt," says Harry. "The majority were killed because they couldn't walk. If you fell over, the SS man would very calmly say, 'Get up, otherwise I'll shoot you.' And then if you repeated it, they would shoot you."
As Harry lay in the ditch, he noticed that there was something in the field he could eat. "They were white beetroot or turnips and I got one and put it in my pocket. One boy came up to me and said, 'Give me a piece.' I said, 'No.' He said, 'If you don't, I will tell everyone what you've got and they will crush you to death.' I cut off a piece and gave him it. He kept coming back for more. The third time, I told him, 'Ask again and I'll give you a knife, not beetroot.'"
Harry chuckles and his wife Pauline does too. We're sitting at the couple's dining room table in Radlett, Hertfordshire. The beetroot story has an unexpectedly happy ending. "That boy was Harry Balsom and after the war we became business partners and friends. He was Harry, so was I. He got married to a woman called Pauline, and so did I. We ran a firm of tailors together."
Memories of the Holocaust: Harry Spiro 'We ran because we heard the ghettos were being liquidated and that lorries were coming for the Jews'Sabina Miller never did find out what happened to the young woman she only knew as Ruszka. They both spent the winter of 1942-43 sheltering in a hole in the forests of northern Poland. It had been dug earlier by partisans and was the best accommodation the two women could find. "We couldn't go home because we had no home and we felt safer there in the woods than risk being betrayed to the Germans."
Sabina fled the horrors of the Warsaw ghetto in her teens; later she ended up working on a farm run by a Lithuanian man. He used to horsewhip the Jewish women labourers if they didn't work hard enough. There she met Ruszka, and together they finally ran away, to shelter in the forest. "We ran not because of him but because we heard that the ghettoes were being liquidated, and we heard that lorries were coming for
."
We're sitting over tea and cakes in Sabina's warm kitchen in the flat in west Hampstead, London, where she has lived for nearly 50 years. What was it like in that freezing hole? "You couldn't walk into it. You slid inside and then tried to keep as warm as you could. I think we had pinched a blanket from somewhere that kept us warm. But we were frozen and lousy. We looked like animals. My feet were so swollen I couldn't wear boots." Sabina nods towards her feet. "Later I had to have an operation on my foot. They amputated part of my toe."
The only thing that Sabina had to remind her of her past life with her family in Warsaw was a little washbag containing a few photographs and a postcard from her sister. The postcard, Sabina believes, had been thrown by her sister from a train heading towards a death camp and was picked up by someone who posted it to the farm. "I don't know that for certain. Maybe she jumped from that train. Maybe she's alive." All that seems unlikely, Sabina admits. But, nearly 70 years after the card was, perhaps, thrown from the train, she holds on to that hope.
Memories of the Holocaust: Sabina Miller 'When I heard what happened to my father, I was alone. I cried for 24 hours'One morning, four days before Christmas in 1942, Nazi soldiers went to the synagogue in the Polish town of Piotrków, where 560 Jews were crammed, and demanded that 50 strong men accompany them to the woods. The men were told to dig five pits and then shot. In one week in October, 22,000 Jews (out of a population of 25,000) had been sent from Piotrków to the Treblinka gas chambers, so the men were under no illusions what they were digging.
The following morning, the SS took the rest of the people in the synagogue in groups of 100 to the woods. They were told to undress next to the pits and then they were shot. Among the victims was Ben Helfgott's 37-year-old mother and his eight- year-old sister, Lusia.
Twelve-year-old Ben was working in a glass factory outside the ghetto and so regarded as "legitimate" by the Nazis. His 11-year-old sister, Mala, somehow escaped the roundup and his father had a permit to live in the Piotrków ghetto. But his mother and Lusia were seen as illegals and so went into hiding, fearing that they would be murdered. Then the Nazis offered illegals like Ben's mother asylum. It was a ruse, but she and Lusia came out of hiding and were held in the synagogue. It was hardly a place of sanctuary: for amusement, guards would shoot in through the windows, killing and wounding people.
Ben's father managed to get a permit for the release of his wife, but could not organise one for Lusia. He begged his wife to come home, but she refused. She wrote to her husband: "You look after the two children and I will have to look after the youngest one."
Nearly two years later, with the Russian army advancing across Poland, Ben and his father, along with 300 other Jewish men, were taken from Piotrków to Buchenwald concentration camp. It was the first of three concentration camps in which Ben was held during the war. Ben was 14 when he saw his father for the last time, before he was transferred from Buchenwald to Schlieben concentration camp, where hand-held anti-tank weapons were produced.
Memories of the Holocaust: Ben Helfgott 'They looked like ordinary railwaymen cramming people in. Why were they doing that?'Two young Dutch men walked into a nursery school in Amsterdam one day in 1944 and asked for Martin Stern. The teacher told them he hadn't come in that day. "I put up my hand and said: 'But I am here.' Stern, now a retired immunologist, is recalling that fateful moment as dusk gathers outside his sitting room in Leicester. "The poor woman was trying to protect me. I'll never forget the look on her face as I was led away." He was arrested, aged five, because his father was a Jew.
Martin and his one-year-old sister Erica were taken to Westerbork transit camp in the Netherlands, where they were housed in wooden huts, each one crammed with as many as 800 people. "The food consisted of vegetables unfit for sale. Old runner beans that hadn't been stringed were nicknamed 'barbed wire' by the boys I was with because they were painful to eat."
Martin's parents were Germans who had fled to Holland before the war. His non-Jewish mother died in hospital shortly after giving birth to his sister. His father was hidden by courageous farmers near Amsterdam airport after the German invasion of Holland, only to be captured by Nazis after a shoot-out in which he apparently killed two of them. There is a photograph of Martin's father on the sitting room wall, taken before he left Germany. It shows a young, smartly dressed man with, you might think, a bright future. "As you can see, he was well-to-do," says Martin. "He died a skeleton of a man on 25 March 1945 in Buchenwald."
Martin and Erica were looked after by two separate Dutch families for two years before they were arrested. "I lived near the Anne Frank house," he says. After Martin's abduction from nursery school, Cathrien and Jo (short for Johannes) Rademakers, who had looked after Martin, were themselves arrested. For the crime of caring for a five-year-old Jewish orphan, Jo was sent to Neuengamme concentration camp near Hamburg, where he died. All his wife got back were his spectacles.
Memories of the Holocaust: Martin Stern 'We were prepared to die there but it turned out to be a mock execution - a piece of Nazi cruelty'In Birmingham, after the war, people would ask Auschwitz survivor Kitty Hart-Moxon about the tattoo on her forearm: "Is that your boyfriend's telephone number?" "People simply knew nothing," says Kitty. "If I did say what happened to me and my mother, people would say: 'That sounds far fetched.' I would explain that I saw thousands walk into a gas chamber and never come out. But they could not get their heads round it. They found it impossible to comprehend that there was massacre on a huge scale, that thousands were murdered deliberately."
What was worse was that no one wanted to know. She and her mother had arrived at Dover in late 1946 to be met by her uncle, the husband of her mother's sister. "He said: 'I don't want you to talk about anything that happened to you. I don't want to know.' My mother and I became very angry at being silenced."
Did you ever receive counselling? Kitty favours me with a justifiable sardonic look as we sit in her living room in Harpenden, Hertfordshire. "Counselling? No. My mother and I sorted ourselves out by countless discussions about what had happened to us." Kitty wrote two books about her experiences: I Am Alive (1961) and Return to Auschwitz (1981). She also has made award-winning films about her return to the death camp and about her time after Auschwitz. Kitty, a retired radiographer, has been speaking for decades in schools, colleges, universities to all who are prepared to listen. In 2003 she received the OBE for her work on Holocaust education
She was born Kitty Felix in 1926 in Bielsko, a Polish town where Jews, Czechs, Poles and Germans mixed. She recalls a blissful sporty childhood with her brother Robert – hiking in the mountains in summer and skiing in winter. She was educated by nuns and was oblivious to antisemitism until she and her Jewish swimming team were stoned during a competition. A few days prior to Hitler's invasion on 1 September 1939, Kitty's family fled eastward to elude the Wehrmacht but were overtaken by the Nazis and became trapped in the Lublin ghetto. After many attempts, the family escaped and obtained non-Jewish documents.
Memories of the Holocaust: Kitty Hart-Moxon