The eruption of the war
and the invasion of Hitlers Germany to Poland on the first
of September, 1939 brought sadness on Polands citizens
as well as on our town- our house- Zabludow. Immediately all
the men were drafted, the government of Moshchechski, Baak, Riides-
Shmigli didnt differentiate any more between Jews and non-Jews,
as it did before. Everyone was sent to the war, to the frontlines
that were organized quickly, without pre planning.
Sons were uprooted from their
parents, men from their wives. Everyone was sent to be cannon
meat. After a few weeks, the Red army invaded the town and Zabludow
was revived. In the days of the Fascist Poland, young Jews were
unable to get jobs, now they easily found jobs in big merchandise
warehouses, cultural institutes, and in sports organizations.
Everyone had the opportunity to study without taking into consideration
his background or his economic situation; the workers could
make the decisions.
But the celebration didnt
last for long. On the 22nd of June 1941, on Sunday, 4 am, at
the time that people were soundly asleep Hitlers Germany
attacked the Soviet Russians. The sound of bombs exploding startled
the people of Zabludow from their sleep. There was great panic,
from that day started the account of our suffering.
Since there ws chaos and an
atmosphere of lawlessness the Jewish youngsters organized self-defense
and prevented violence against the Jewish citizens.
In the first days of the war
I continued working in my job at Yoshkis store. On
the 23rd of June the Polish still acted with respect and politeness
toward us, but not for a long time were they able to withhold
the hatred that they got from the anti-Semitic government. They
were eager to plunder. On the third day when fire was all around
and the market turned into a heap of ruins from the bombings.
Polish gangs were spread among the stores and started to rob.
I didnt abandon my job in the store; I was scared and helpless.
Suddenly a tall Soviet clerk accompanied by a group of youngsters
appeared and the robbers ran away. We came to a decision that
we have to run away; in our car was my family members and Yosele
Zabludovsky.
There was blood on every piece
of land
flame was on every corner; we didnt know
where to run. We drove to Shedna. Flames all around, in front
and back
there are no ways.
In Volcovisk our car shattered from being hit
by a bomb, to our fortune we didnt get hurt. We were able
to run and hide ahead of time, but we were left with nothing.
All of our belongings were burnt along with the car. We started
to wander from town to town, tired broken and hungry. Again we
had to go back form where we came because the Germans were approaching;
we came to Baranowicze, and near Minsk we were trapped in a battle
zone; we all scattered. I was left alone, lonely as a rock
without my beloved loved ones, and worst of all I didnt
know where to look for them. There was no hope to find them.
I was afraid that I would fall in the Germans hands.
I continued walking by myself,
I passed 600 kilometers by foot in dangerous ways; my feet couldnt
carry me anymore
but after a week of wandering, exhausted
I arrived to the Soviet Russia, I worked in all kind of different
field work, in hospitals and in preschools. In my heart I had
a strong urge to revenge the damn Germans, I thought in my heart:
I cant be weak.
In my mind I had the repeated thought "why
did I survive, what makes me better than others, from hundred
of thousands of other people who were killed?" In April
1942, when all the youngsters volunteered to help the men in
the war for the country and for human pride I joined them and
was drafted to the Red army in order to revenge our fathers,
mothers, sisters, brothers, our innocent children, and all the
people that were murdered by the Nazi animals.
During my 3 years service
in the army I had many difficulties. I stood in them with pride
and honor. I was in different fronts, we didnt get supplies
for weeks and weeks, but the desire to fight and get revenge
didnt weaken. I suffered with love because I felt no difference
than the others; I was not put down because of my Judaism.
I have a sharp memory of one of the experiences
during inspection. The officer who was notified that the unit
has a Jewish woman from Poland came to me and started talking
with me in Yiddish.
We marched through villages
and cities, there were terrible ruins everywhere, the Jews were
killed and the Jewish towns vanished. I doubted if Id see
anyone from my family. In spite of that there was still a glimmer
of hope- maybe? Maybe the cruel fate passed over our town Zabludow.
Maybe it was saved from the horrible destruction that the Nazi
Satan plotted. After Poland was released I wrote letters to all
my acquaintances and neighbors in Zabludow, I couldnt deal
with the thought that everyone had vanished in such a horrible
The unforgettable day arrived,
the Red army, crowned with victory entered Berlin, on the 9th
of May, 1945 the Soviet forces and the allies finally destroyed
the Nazis headquarters. That day will be kept in my memory
forever! The victory day on the Nazism, the murderers of mankind
When the war was over they
immediately released the women from the army and sent them home,
I was among those who were released. They asked me if I had family,
home? ...If I have where to go? And what I was thinking of doing
now?
The day of parting arrived;
for one it brought happiness, and to the other it brought sadness.
In my mind I saw the experiences I went through in the last few
years; what should I expect now?
I was called to the officers
office. He asked me where do I want to go? Do I want to stay
in the Soviet Russia or go to Poland? I stood mesmerized, stone
faced, without knowing what to do, and in the end I decided to
travel to Zabludow. Perhaps someone, in spite of everything,
survived; that thought did not give me peace of mind.
I took my army suitcase and
inside I put 10 kilograms of white flour and some other stuff,
supplies for my family so that they wont be hungry in the first
few days. In addition to this a food coupon for an entire month.
I started my journey wearing an army uniform. The train traveled
to Bialystok, we passed Vilna, Gerodno, Sokolky, I hope to meet
someone in Zabludow
to share with them all my experiences
however that was just a false hope, an illusion, since I did
not find a soul, everyone perished.
The event occurred on the
night between the 21st and the 22nd of June 1941. We were three
people from Zabludow in a Russian work camp near Bilsk. Me, my
younger brother Yankel, and Yosef Dirdok. We worked on the night
shift. Saturday night all the soldiers in all the camps were
given free time. We stayed to work in the construction of the
airfield.
Around one oclock we
heard an explosion; we looked around but we didnt see a
thing and we continued working. Half an hour later we suddenly
heard the sound of airplanes; we saw immediately above our heads
a huge cloud of planes. We ran to all directions, we had not
advanced even 100 meters when a reign of bombs burst on us nonstop.
The attack continued for one hour, but in our eyes it felt like
an eternity. At the end of the attack it was morning, and then
it was revealed to us a terrible sight, dozens killed and hundreds
wounded
but who ever remained alive continued to live and
to work
we immediately started to search for our relatives
and acquaintances, I found Yosef Dirbach [Dirdok] immediately.
I could not find my brother, but I had been told that he had
been seen after the bombardment. We decided to go to Bilsk, that
was two kilometers from this place. We went to Yosefs uncle,
we rested at night and from there we started on our way home
to Zabludow.
Zabludow was very quiet, though
the atmosphere of war was felt. The Russian army retreated while
keeping as much order as possible. We stayed at home. The next
day we even thought of following the retreating army though the
army didnt know where to retreat, so we decided to stay.
On Monday morning a German air squadron arrived
and bombed the Zabludow, several houses were set aflame and the
first victims fell, and again it was quiet. On Wednesday night,
the 25th of June, within one hour the town was filled with Germans
and they immediately took hostages. They held them in one house,
they put guards and warned that if anything happened to the Germans
the hostages would be taken out and would be shot. After a few
hours the German guards left and the hostages returned to their
homes, a quiet night passed.
On the 26th of June 1941 on
Thursday, 7 oclock in the morning three or four Germans
entered the town and started to set it afire. The first conflagration
broke out on Bilske Street. All the townspeople, Jews and Christians
scattered to the fields. The Germans shot from the four corners
of the town. The fires and the shootings continued until 4 oclock.
Those that escaped decided then to return to the town, to our
great sorrow there was nowhere to return. The town was consumed
by fire; only a few remaining houses stood in the town surroundings,
where Christians lived. To my luck my house and the shoemakers
house was not affected, thats where many people came to
stay and everyone got along as much as they could. We sat there
hungry until Monday, the 30th of June; on this day the Christian
citizens got drunk together with the Germans, and together with
them they expelled the Jews. Everyone fled, some to the small
towns and some to Bialystok, the Germans had not yet attacked
the small towns.
I escaped with my family
to Bialystok, the journey was not easy, and it was impossible
to go on the road, because the Polish would attack the refugees
and hit them. I was forced to go through forest roads with my
wife and three children in our arms. Others were in a similar
situation. We dragged along to Bialystok for three days. We did
not stay there a long time, we felt hunger, in spite of the great
dangers we continued on our way to find food, and in this we
returned many times to Zabludow. In the end, after many wanderings
we settled at the Beit Midrash at Bilsk street. This
was the only building that was not taken by the Christians. Within
three weeks about six hundred gathered there, and lived there
in crowded and dirty conditions. One day the city governor ordered
to build a ghetto, since most of the houses were destroyed, the
foundation of the ghetto was established in the leather factories
that were concentrated in one place.
Now we were facing new problems,
they took the men to work. While working the men were beaten
brutally. Once, the Jews were sent away to the big market. There
stood a statue of Lenin that the Soviets constructed. The Germans
ordered to destroy the statue, to make a Jewish burial, and to
bring the pieces to the cemetery. At the same time they beat
the Jews cruelly with clubs, pitchforks, and axes; they shattered
heads and broke legs; in those riots the Polish city men also
took part. From the cemetery they made us run back to the big
market and ordered us to pray for our G-d to save us, and that
also was an opportunity for beatings.
No pen is able to describe
what we went through during fifteen or sixteen months, until
Zabludow was pure from Jews. In spite of that, if
they let us stay there many of us could have survived. We suffered
a great deal of torture in the leather factories, until the first
of November 1942. On the night between the 1st and 2nd of November
wagons of Polish farmers from the nearby villages were brought,
and in the morning came the SS people, armed from head to toe,
and with the help of the Polish police forced the Jews to climb
onto the wagons. They were taken under heavy guard to the tenth
cavalry camp behind Bialystok. They threw us into horse stables,
and there we found some other Zabludow people who were brought
from the surrounding towns that were purified from
Jews.
It is impossible the horrible
sufferings that we suffered for three weeks, until we were expelled
to Treblinka. I cant remember the exact date, I am all
confused about the time; I think it was on the 20th, or 21st
of November. On that day, the bitter and horrible day, the Jews
were brought to the gas chambers and were burned by the murderer
Germans, may their names and memories be erased! That is how
our dear town and dear Jews of Zabludow were erased from earth.
May their memory be blessed!
I will tell shortly about our big tragedy.
On the first of September 1939 when the Second World War broke
out I was a soldier in the Polish Army. Our brigade was sent
to the front line, between Tsinstochov and Peutrecov. The Germans
broke through all the fronts forcefully and invaded Poland with
tremendous speed, our front was also broken through quickly,
and already on the 6th of September 1939 I was captured as a
German prisoner of war, in the city Redomsk. After a few days
I managed to escape and I arrived to Warsaw. There all the Polish
soldiers that retreated were reorganized and sent to the Lublin
front hastily. Our resistance there was very short. Meanwhile,
on the 17th of March the Polish army passed the Polish border
and released the Polish White Russia and Ukraine. The resistance
of the broken up Polish forces to the German army was very weak.
Whoever fought against him would become a Russian prisoner of
war. Among the prisoners of war were many Polish soldiers who
were caught on their way to the front, I was captured in the
city of Lutsk. With me there was a fellow from Zabludow, his
name is Saria Fishbein. We were sent immediately to a far away
place inside the Soviet Russia. In 1942 I was drafted to the
new Polish army that was established in Russia and was transferred
to the Near East. I deserted it in 1943 and after wanderings
I got to Eretz Israel . The people who came with
me are: Abishi [Avishai] Dolinsky, Moshe Avramitsky, Rivka Binder,
Shimon Robbins and his mother. Im unable to write about
our dear Zabludow, about her beautiful youth that was suffocated
and killed in gas, and burnt in Treblinka by the Nazis,
may their name and memory be erased, because the tears in the
eyes are still not dry and in the heart the oath is carved never
to forget, and in the blood sparks of revenge are steaming! But
it would be appropriate to give some details about the annihilation
of Zabludow Jews. When the war broke out a terrible panic broke
out in the towns people; many were drafted, whole families were
left without livelihood, and no one to help; that was in the
first days of September, 1939, and on the 13th of September Zabludow
was already in German hands; the Jews were not hurt yet- they
were there only a few days- and on the 18th of September the
town was captured by the Red Army. Before leaving White Russia
and Zabludow the Nazis regretted that they had to hand over the
city to the dirty Russians and threatened, that if
theyll return theyll slaughter all the "Jews",
and they pointed to their necks.
As I mentioned, the Soviets
invaded Zabludow on the eighteenth of September 1939, and life
went back to normal. The Jews felt that they were free men, just
like all other human beings. In all trades and occupations there
were Jews; you could think that this was a Jewish republic. But
this situation did not last long. On the 22nd of June 1941, Hitler
(may his memory be erased) attacked Russia. The Nazis conquered
Bialystok and the environs in a flash; Zabludow was set aflame
by the Germans from all four directions- and was burned totally.
Zabludow was also destroyed by other military means. There were
only a few remaining houses outside of the town, adjoining the
leather factories. Before long the Nazis banished the Jews that
were left to the leather factories; there they erected a ghetto.
The Jews were tightly enclosed in horrible conditions of filth
and hunger. They were later transferred to Bialystok and from
there to Treblinka where they were exterminated in gas chambers.
My father, my uncle David and their families fled to my uncle
Leible, who lived in Ribelen village, however the farmers exposed
them to the Nazis. My father Zalman was killed by the Germans
before my mother and my sisters eyes; may they rest in
peace, and they went on their last journey with the other innocent
martyrs.
Such was the fate of our dear
Zabludow Jews. Honor to their memory!
The train with Jews and
Poles returning to their homeland crossed the Urals mountain
range, middle Russia and the Ukraine, and after three weeks of
travel arrived at the end of [April?] 1946 to Lublin [sic]. The
train, with 60 cars, started on the first of April. It was outfitted
with bunk beds and iron ovens. They prepared and arranged for
such a long journey. The returnees received food rations, and
in the bigger stations warm food was served.
When we left the Urals the
winter was still harsh, the snow heaps reached to the tops of
houses. We arrived in Lublin in the beginning spring; we felt
the pleasant warmness of the sun. It was Chol Hamoed Passover
[the days between the first, and the last days of Passover].
The town representatives were awaiting us, dressed in holiday
summery clothes. Our appearance- the boots, the wool coats, and
fur hats- was very different from what we saw around us. They
provided us with Passover food, matzo and wine.
It is almost two years that
Lublin has been liberated. There are many Zionist organizations
and groups in Lublin. Many families and young men and women expressed
their desire to join these Kibbutzim [seed groups]. They departed
the train and joined groups of pioneers and later immigrated
to Eretz Israel.
In the Lublin train station
one Jew, by the name of Borrick, from Brinsk, recognized me.
I stayed with him a few times when I visited that town. His family
perished; he hid in a village at a Christian house and was saved.
The man tried to convince the town representatives to convince
me to stay in Lublin.
According to the plan, the
final destination for the train was Verotslav and lower Chelziheh.
But I remained in Lublin. The remaining refugees of Lublin and
its surrounding were housed in a large house called "Peretz"
that was erected before the war and still had not been completed.
I was placed in a residence that housed a chemical factory; A
Holocaust survivor and her husband lived there. For six weeks
of my stay in Lublin I stayed in a warm and loving household
that made me forget the wandering and suffering years and restored
my spirit.
I recovered from the long journey and walked
to see the city. At first I went to visit Majdanek. I wanted
to go up to the ancestral graveyard the mass factory for
murder; there perished in gas chambers and were cremated in ovens
more than three million people from all the nations; the number
of Jews who perished was of course the largest of all.
The town representatives took
me for a tour of the city that I did not know. She was destroyed
from 1939, when the Nazis bombed her. In the days that Lublin
was the seat of government after the Polish government fled Warsaw.
They showed me an empty lot and ruins in a place where there
was a ghetto, in between rocks stood a wall that reminds one
of the Western Wall. On the wall there was a sign smeared in
tar: "The Historic Synagogue in memory of Mhrm".
Usually the streets and houses in the city were not damaged,
the theaters and movie houses were untouched. Only the strategic
places were destroyed.
As I said I arrived at Lublin
on Chol Hamoed Passover. Exactly then Easter commenced.
The Polish citizens decorated and dressed fill the streets. From
the churches big crowds swarmed. Lublin, the residence of the
Archbishop was filled with thousands of pilgrims and there were
many parades from the neighboring towns and villages. Slowly,
slowly I start to feel the pervading atmosphere of the neighboring
Polish citizens having lived together many generations
not only did they not feel a need to express even the slightest
sorrow. They looked upon us, the Holocaust survivors, as if we
were strange creatures who came from the land of the dead. "They
were not killed nor were they burned" they call in astonishment.
Among them there are those that express their thoughts in simple
words "Wait! Wait! We will finish the work the Nazis did
not complete".
I gaze at the bright sunny skies. The same sky
was covered nonstop, during three years, in clouds of smoke and
charred flesh that emanated from the smokestacks of adjoining
Majdanek. The smell of charred flesh blurred and poisoned the
Polish minds- from this they have a heart of stone, emotionless.
A similar hate they showed
toward the Red Army, an army that lost thousands of soldiers
when they sacrificed their lives to liberate Poland; many are
buried in the city, and among them many Jewish names. The marble
monuments that was erected to the memory of the liberators of
the city was violated daily.
I meet with remnants of the
survivors of our nation. They are mostly partisans who hid in
the forests or Jews who hid in the bunkers. I hear the story
of an emaciated boy who hid for years in a chimney. I speak with
a few sisters that wandered in the forests and the priest of
the village provided them in secret food and clothing; he consoled
them and foresaw for them "God tells me that youll
remain among the living".
Everyone has the miracle of
their staying alive and their experiences: A Jew in mid-life,
hidden in an attic in a house outside the city by a priest. On
the day of liberation when the Russian forces entered the city,
he wanted to greet the liberators; full of happiness and enthusiasm.
To his misfortune, the priest removed the ladder from which he
would descend on the same day. The Jew fell and broke his spine
and limbs. Two years have passed and he is still in a cast and
his back is in an orthopedic splint.
The kitchen manager of the
Jewish town representatives in the branch where I got my meals,
was a Jewish woman with Aryan features. Her husband, a well-known
surgeon, was cremated with all the Jews. She wandered as a Christian;
they said that only recently she left a cloister but still wears
a crucifix on her neck. Its impossible to convince her
that there is no reason to fear that as Jew nothing bad will
happen to her. But no reason would help. She has a fear complex
and cannot escape it.
I talk with a young intelligent
girl with a high level of education. "How did you survive?".
"Very simple" she answers. "During the entire
Nazi occupation, I was on the Aryan side dressed as a beggar.
I was dressed with dirty ragged clothes; I would walk around
as a crazy and deaf person begging alms." This is how she
played her role until liberation. There are other stories of
unusual rescue. Those who returned from Russia have innumerable
stories of such miracles.
On the last day of Pesach I had my debut in the
"Peretz Hall". The program consisted of stories of
Shalom Aleichem, stories of Peretz the trust of a Jew
in his G-d and creations by other Jewish writer from Russia.
The production made a big impression on many refugees and provided
me with such strong experiences that I would never forget. By
the way, that was my first artistic evening after the Holocaust.
I had several more presentations. I was asked to go to Chelm
and appear before about one hundred Jews who survived the Holocaust.
I appeared there twice.
I must tell on the atmosphere of the blood libel
that spread in Chelm. I felt it when I visited the town committee.
At 3Oclock in the afternoon, I came to the town representatives
to part before my return to Lublin. Suddenly, two Polish men
in green army uniforms entered; one of them a lieutenant, armed
with a machine gun went inside the room with the other soldier
accompanied by the head of the committee and some other people;
I hear loud voices and warnings. When they emerged from the room,
the committee member faces were pale as limestone. The guest
announced in a threatening voice: "If the boy is not found
today, you will pay dearly." The committee chairman informed
that they came to look for a lost Christian boy that the Jews,
they assume, killed him. A few of the committee members ran to
the police to ask for help. A young lady that hid during the
Holocaust and was saved entered and relates that the same army
men "calmed" her and said: "Its too bad
she saved herself from the Germans." They promised they
would "take care of her" in due time. They attempt
to reach Lublin by phone but the telephone line is busy for unknown
reasons. In great depression I set out to the train accompanied
by an emissary from the committee a young man from Pinsk
named Fuchs. We encounter groups of Christians in the street
that are discussing the lost boy. We feel the atmosphere of a
pogrom.
And as for "desert"
to those events there is to add my experiences. When the train
was stopped at night by a gang of Polish soldiers that emerged
from the forest; there were the white soldiers that
opposed the current regime. Floodlights lighted the train and
the soldiers wearing uniforms of the Polish army before the war
and armed with machine guns gave an order: "Jews! Soviets
and policemen! Outside! Out of the cars!" I felt a trembling
in my bones; a deep fear of death passed me. A few Holocaust
survivors were shot [like this] nearby the cars! Fuchs tells
me: "Pretend you are sleeping." Darkness in the cars.
At the entrance of our cars stood two soldiers. They lit the
car and repeat the same orders. A Christian woman answered: "There
are none like these here." Suddenly there was commotion.
And again darkness. The gang leaves quickly without taking anybody
from the train. A miracle happened. The noticed an approaching
train and fled. With the dawn we arrive in Lublin. Refugees are
already waiting for us. They ask what has happened in Chelm.
Some have relatives there. What could we say to them? We were
later informed that Chelm succeeded in connecting by phone to
Lublin and immediately a security unit was dispatched. And in
this way a slaughter of the remnant survivors was averted.
The Lublin committee asked
that I remain in the city and requested that I conduct drama
classes. But the heart was pulling toward Bialystok and Zabludow.
I leave Lublin and depart for Warsaw, even though the journey
is laden with dangers and risk. But first I ascend to the ancestral
graveyard at Majdanek.
As we were leaving the
city the Polish man on the cart showed us from far away the barbed
wire fence and the crematoria chimney that rose in the distance.
We are approaching a quite large fenced-in field. Many building
stood there a whole city. Near the gate, a Polish army
guard station. The camp remains the same. Today it is a national
museum. Near the gate we meet waiting visitors. There are many
Polish and few tourists, French, Swedish and English among them.
They allow an entire group enter. The guides, a man and a woman
explain in Polish. They are conversant in five languages and
can answer in all of these languages. They show us the mountain
of shoes spread out in a large warehouse. A large sign indicates
"Dont touch". The shoes were removed from people
before the victims death. I am reminded of the words of
the poet M. Sholstein! "I saw a mountain higher than
Mount Blanc, holier than Mount Sinai; not in a dream, in reality;
it stood on the ground".And it continues! "I hear mixed
steps of sword boots, of plain boots, ordinary, of childrens
knitted shoes, tiny, shoes of small children just beginning to
walk".
We are brought to a building that had the name
"Department of Disinfection". In the first room, they
cut the victims hair. The spokeswoman explains to us that
the hair was sent to Germany and from them they made thousands
of mattresses. A door is opened and we enter a large hall; it
seems as if this is a large military bathhouse. On the deck long
pipes from which steam comes out. From the left and the right
a square wall made from concrete; before the shower, theyve
been told they should exercise; the intention that if
anyone hid any valuables they would drop and fall to the ground.
The Nazi animals would deceive the victims; till the last minute
the victims would not know what their fate would be. After they
cut their hair, they even gave them a towel and soap.
A door is opened for us from the wall in front
of us. We see the gas chambers. They told the victims that after
the shower everyone would go through disinfection. The square
wooden chimney, from which poisonous gas was released, was not
very large. The door closed hermetically. On the side
a small hole glazed with glass the executioner would watch
to see if all the victims had been suffocated and were quiet.
We enter the gas chamber.
I touch the smooth walls and a fear pours over me. On these walls
where I stand, quivering hands of thousands of martyrs groped,
the beautiful and modest Jewish girls, the cheerful and dear
children, Yosselech, Shlemelech, Rivkalech and Saralech; they
pleaded for rescue near these walls and breathed their last innocent
breath.
In a moment I will collapse
and now a door is opened in the opposite wall. This is
also a sealed door. And we see a train track and cars. On the
cars they would heap the bodies that were gassed and were taken
to the crematorium. We are walking on the train tracks toward
the crematorium. The crematorium is a large building, built of
large red bricks. The impression is of a factory. The chimney
is squared and wide. From left and right two mass graves of people
who were gassed. The Nazis did not have time to burn them. On
the graveyards -- fresh bouquet of flowers. The visitors add
more flowers. Near one wall a mountain of human bones, near it
there is a sign: "Do not touch: These are bones that were
taken from the ovens that burned until the last minute before
the liberation". We came closer, and saw five ovens
openings, and big dustpans with wheeled handles, it looks like
an iron plow. With this dustpan the body was thrown to the furnace.
In the side- a room in which stood a unique cement table, on
it they used to extract from the bodies the gold teeth or they
cut the bodies, in order to search their inner organs, out of
the suspicion that they swallowed valuable stones [jewels]. From
the boiler that stood in the crematorium, came out pipes that
through them dripped the fat in which they later on made Jewish
soap with. They show us a barrel full of brown fat that they
caught in the crematorium at the time of liberation.
They showed us a can with
the deadly gas "Zyklon" with which they killed the
people. It looks like a white lime that you cannot suspect it
to be dangerous. They explained to us that the amount of the
gas "Zyklon" that was found at the time of liberation
was enough to kill about 7 million people.
The death camp was divided into
7 "fields" each "field" had a unique role
and bunks of their own. We looked at the different bunks that
have bunk beds. "Slaves" "lived" there; that
the rest of their life was taken away and then they were "thrown"
to the ovens. We see the hospital in which the most horrible
experiments took place. The last "field", is where
prisoners who were unlawful were killed by hanging. The hangings
were done in front of the "slaves" so theyll
see. In this camp the camp officers and his helpers were finally
hung after they were caught during the camp liberation. They
were hung for three days, and the survivors went to watch them,
rejoicing in their suffering.
Finally we were looking at
a big building- the museum. Right at the entrance we are overcome
with fear. The wax figures look as if they are alive; the clothing,
the shoes, the natural colors- that was how the slaves looked
like in the camp. The Jew with a patch and a Star of David; the
French with the letter "F" on his chest; the Polish
with the letter "P"; for each nation- a special sign.
Underneath the glass: different diagrams, statistics, pictures,
torture tools, etc- until the last pictures from the liberation;
pictures of the animal Nazis that were active in the camps and
in the end were caught and hung.
Deeply shocked Im leaving
the death factory, our centurys disgrace. The world saw
and remained silent. For a long time I was under the shocking
impression, and even now, at the time of writing these words
the nightmare is relived.
The city of Warsaw was
bombed three times and suffered a great damage; in 1939, when
the war broke out; in the Polish uprising against the Nazi occupation;
and at the time of the ghetto Warsaw uprising, in which the Jews
fought heroically with guns against the German animals, and wrote
a great chapter in the history of the suffering Jews.
Praga- the suburb of Warsaw-
almost complete, except for a few parts that got destroyed. The
Jewish City and regional committee was located in Praga. I arrived
on Sunday to the committee; this is a resting day. The clerk,
a young woman, is writing information about me- "refugee,
born in Zabludow
" she is asking who am I from Zabludow.
It so happens that she is the daughter of Teible Bialistotski,
she was saved and is living with her family in Praga.
I get some helping money and
a place to sleep in beautiful bunks in Praga; there I meet many
acquaintances, survivors from Bialystok. Id like to bring
up a picture that shook my soul and doesnt leave my memory
until this day: on the second day of the holiday of Shavuot a
group of refugees, myself among them traveled to Warsaw for a
memorial commemoration. The beautiful, long streets of Warsaw-
were turned into ruins. Ruins all over. The Nusick famous synagogue
was saved by a miracle, although a big part of it was destroyed.
The synagogue is full of survivors, and Jewish and Russian soldiers
with many achievement metals on their chests. On the bima and
on the tables stood many lit memorial candles, for the memory
of all the martyrs, and the dearest. When the cantor, also a
Holocaust survivor conducts the memorial service in memory of
the burnt, the killed, and the suffocated ones the air is filled
with cries and sobbing. I see, next to me, a few young girls
with crucifixes on their necks; who knows with which circumstances
they survived. They came to the memorial service for their dearest
ones, and still are afraid to remove the crucifixes. They are
standing there, crying, and tears are washing their eyes.
We are going to see the old
ghetto, the places that until recently were filled with active
Jewish life, Nalbaki, Gensha, Telomatska, etc., now there is
stillness. They even cleared the area from the ruins; they are
about to turn it into a big clearing. Among the people that are
with us is a woman that lived in 2 Gensha St., she is looking
for the place, picking out from the ashes a bent, and burnt spoon,
and a biblical paper, half burnt, while sobbing.
In Laudge I met my friend
Greenhois, may he rest in peace, that I had been in his company
until we separated in Paris. We decided to travel to Bialystok,
in spite of the dangers that awaited us.
First impressions from the city were horrible.
It is impossible to recognize the city. Everything is ruined.
There is no sign to family members, I couldnt find anyone.
Avraham Bachrach and his wife Raiseleh
that were expelled to Russia, and survived are living on Surasa
St., in a house that was not damaged, across from the synagogue
yard. I stayed in their warm and friendly house until I left
the city.
The most horrible experience
I had in Bialystok was the murder of four pioneers that were
taken off a train and were killed when they traveled to Warsaw
to take care of the formal papers regarding their aliyah to Israel.
They left at two oclock; the Polish gangs shot them near
Melkin. The next day three boxes containing the dead bodies were
brought to Bialystok and were put in the Beit Midrash
of Ztitron. One of the pioneers was badly wounded and was taken
to Warsaw, and there he passed away. The journey of the funeral
service to the cemetery, in Zhavia St. turned into a huge strike
of those few survivors that brought bouquets of flowers and they
said the eulogy. The cries reached the sky.
In the winter the bones of
72 people, who fought against the Nazis, were brought to a mass
burial in Zhavias cemetery. The crumbled bodies were taken
out of holes, where the Nazis buried them. Chlorine was spilt
on them, and then they were put in bags and were taken to the
cemetery. From their rotten, torn clothes fell rifles and ammunition
that they used against the Nazi animals.
In the fight against the Nazis ghetto Bialystok
takes second place after the Warsaw uprising. We can learn that
the uprising in Bialystok was the second largest, by its three
hundred or more bodies that were murdered in the ghettos
hospital, and were thrown into a huge lime hole, not far from
the ghetto cemetery. On of the Christians that lived near the
place told that he saw everything from the roof of his house,
although it was forbidden to look through the windows. He knew
Fritz Friedel, the Nazi animal that sat on a chair that sat on
a chair and shot with his gun in the patients heads that
were brought out from the hospital and were thrown into the hole.
The pictures, of taking the bodies and transferring them, were
shocking; a body of a mother whose baby was attached to her breast.
Of course, it was impossible to recognize the identity of the
buried ones. Who knows how many close and dear people were taken
out from those graves?
I want to tell about the Action
that started on Friday, February 5th, 1943. Its a story
about a heroic action of Malmed, that was an acquaintance
of my Uncle Motke Zabludovsky, may he rest in peace.
The streets were filled with
SS and special Gestapo units with cooperation with the Jewish
police in the ghetto. They went out to hunt Jews according to
a list that was made ahead of time. Those who were caught were
taken to the train. The smallest resistance resulted in death.
The people without working certificates were taken away from
the factories and shot on the spot, the Gestapo and the Jewish
police looked for the bunkers in which the Jews were hiding,
they were taken out from there and were brought to the trains
and sent to the death camps.
Unfortunately there were Jewish
squealers that gave out the location of the bunkers, for the
exchange of a conformation: "this Jew is exempt from the
transporting". The famous author from Bialystok, Pesach
Kaplan, may he rest in peace, writes in his memoirs about the
ghetto: during a whole week pictures from Dante's hell are taking
place here. The butchers slaughtered, and then the Chevra
Kadisha came and moved the bodies to the ghettos
cemetery in Zhavias Street. Appalling was the picture of
hands and legs hanging over the death wagons. The crushed and
torn bodies like butchered wagons. The animals shot the people
with dum dum bullets that shattered the bodies.
When, on the first day
of the action the kidnaps started in my uncles house,
Motke Zabludovsky, on 29 Kopiatski St., a matter arose that brought
a big disaster. Yitzchak Malmed, a youngster from Slonim who
worked in Weinbergens paint store drew out a bottle of
vitriol that was prepared ahead of time and sprayed it on the
SS man's eyes. The SS guy blinded and crazed from pain, shot
from his gun and killed another German. Immediately Fritz Friedel
arrived. He gathered a hundred people that were in that very
crowded place and ordered to take them to Pragas garden,
there they were put against the fence and shot with a machine
gun. Among the dead were my uncle Motke, and his family.
Yosef Zabludovsky, that was
saved and is now in Israel hid on the roof of one of the houses
and saw the horrible scene from the time they were gathered until
they were shot.
Friedel told the Judenrat that if Malmed will
not show up until the next morning he will shoot five thousand
Jews. Malmed knew in his hiding place about the threat and he
gave himself up to the murderers. After he was tortured badly
he was sentenced to death by hanging. Malmed was hung across
my uncles house, and near the Beit haMidrash
he acted proudly. He spit in the faces of the murderers and before
he let his soul out he threw in their faces the words "robbers,
murderers, you will pay for this; your end is not far".
For three days his body was hung for others to see and be warned.
Kopiatski Street now has the heros name "Malmed St."
My uncles house and
the buildings around were not damaged. When I look at the passing
door from room to room in my nephews apartment, Chaim Zabludovsky,
may he rest in peace, and also in the place with the stain from
the vitriol that was sprayed in the Nazi's eyes. I remember the
words of the poet Morris Rosenfeld: "You are telling about
blood, suffering, and courage that once were." Yes! But
those werent once, but not too long ago in my uncles house,
Motke.
Not once I went to the Praga garden, the place
of the murder, where a big part of my family was killed. I stood
there, frozen, and looked quietly to the ground that absorbed
the blood of innocent victims, and the world was silent.
I would like to mention here
the tragic Friday, immediately with the invasion of the Nazi
units; 1,500 Jews from Bialystok and the surrounding areas were
put in the big synagogue and were burnt alive; among them was
my cousin, Aaron Zabludovsky, that for years was a famous chess
master. Among the burnt ones named "people of Shabbat"
were many from Zabludow.
My father, Yosef Zabludovsky, that lived in the
ghetto in my uncle Motkes attic, died, as I heard, before
the first action, I never found his grave.
On one sunny afternoon
three of us, all Holocaust survivors, left for Zabludow: Chaim
Itzick Miller, Avrahamel Bachrach, and this writer. The drive
was very dangerous because of the Polish gangs who lay in ambush
in the forests, but our eagerness to go to Zabludow rose above
the risk, to see the place where we were raised, and spent our
childhood and most beautiful youth.
We drove in an army jeep- the only means of transportation
that left for Zabludow twice a day. We passed Skorop, and we
were on our way- to Corian-Shovrecki; the heart begins to pound.
The jeep wobbles along the rough road.
In front of our eyes appears
the Polish cemetery, surrounded by an iron fence. Here is the
house of Yankle Fanetesh, behind the leather factories; over
there, there was the Zabludow ghetto that from which the Jews
were taken to their deaths. Now silence fell over the area. We
passed by the second cemetery in which there was a church, nearby
there was Plavskis leather factory and some other buildings,
and one more minute of driving. The jeep stopped. Chaim and Avrahamel,
who were already in Zabludow a few times already tell me "well,
my son, get out of the jeep, we are already in Zabludow."
I stand in astonishment, and
unable to move
I have difficulties continuing with my writing.
The pen does not respond. The emotions and the experiences are
ineffable, and what, actually, can I say; we are standing by
the church and beyond the church, where we stand, is desolate.
The area is covered with wild, high grass; somewhere there a
local Christian built a hut. I close my eyes, the old Zabludow
appears in my imagination; two markets, its shape, its webbed
streets and alleys are intertwined. I open my eyes; its
an illusion, everything was erased, a sediment of a hundred years
was wiped out. "Bialystok near Zabludow" is written
in the sources. The town is no longer; its inhabitants are gone.
In some distance the Pravoslavic church is standing; near it
are sitting some city people; they recognize me and said "here
is the midwifes son, how did you survive?"
Near the Pravoslavic church are still standing
the houses of Yoel Miller and Mordechai Leib, where the municipal
buildings stood. On the other side there was the Bilsk "Beit
Midrash" that was converted to a barn.
We continue to the courtyard
where the ruins of Shepsl Mordechai Bakers house stood. We passed
the big river path and arrived to Chaim Millers leather
factory.All the buildings remained intact, in the big wooden
house, near the garden, are living some Christian families. Everyone
gathers; the main spokeswoman is Malashka, who, for many years,
served Chaya Zlote, and speaks a fluent and rich Yiddish. She
lives in the house with her husband and children.
From the eyes of the Christians there was a fear
in the Christians eyes that somehow they may be evicted from
their houses. Chaim, a goodhearted person, calms them, "nothing
bad will happen to you
he just wants a little bit of rent
money for a bottle of vodka
" Malash, the shepherd,
is telling me how he was drafted to transport the Jews to the
military camp of the tenth cavalry camp. He gives me many details.
I exploit the opportunity to return the fields
that my grandfather owned that I legally own. A few citizens
witnessed and signed that I am his grandson, but the court denied
the petition with different excuses.
We are roaming around, among
the ruins and arguing near the foundation that separated the
two markets talking about which store stood where. We are picking
through the weeds; we are trying to find where the old synagogue,
which existed for hundreds of years, stood; we were not able
to find the place. Time goes by. We are running to the new cemetery,
most of the gravestones were uprooted and were stolen. Some of
them are still unharmed. Among those was Aharon Hirsch Zeslers
gravestone. Meaning, their heart couldnt let them take
the gravestone of their doctor and savior.
The two city people are asking
for drinks in exchange for their testimony. We entered
to kind of a bunk and ordered a bottle of vodka, and a bite to
eat. "Do you know where we are sitting?" Asks Avrahamel-
"at Paltiels, the barley maker" in this place
stood his big house
From an inner impulse I ordered another
bottle of vodka to at least rid the depressing thoughts, that
take over me when I look through the open door to the ruins of
our unforgettable houses where we had our cribs.
Only when I returned to Bialystok
did I start to feel the deep pain; this is also my feeling now,
at the time of writing those lines. I can only wish that my writings
and the pictures from the Great Holocaust will be a contribution
to the modest memorial that we are establishing for our most
beloved and dear ones, so that our children, grandchildren and
great grandchildren will know how our fathers, mothers, sisters,
and brothers from Zabludow and Bialystok suffered, were tortured,
and fought together with six million martyrs.
Im writing these lines
and the tears are washing my face, Im enclosing with the
words from the great lamenter, Z. Sgalovitz:
JewishGen, Inc. makes no representations regarding the accuracy of the translation. The reader may wish to refer to the original material for verification. JewishGen is not responsible for inaccuracies or omissions in the original work and cannot rewrite or edit the text to correct inaccuracies and/or omissions. Our mission is to produce a translation of the original work and we cannot verify the accuracy of statements or alter facts cited.
Zabludow, Poland
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