By
Ann Kazimirski's Essay
Montreal, Quebec
Participated on the March in 1997.
From
1939 to 1945, the German machine of destruction systematically
killed six million Jews, including one million children.
Poland, my native country, had a large Jewish population
of approximately 3,011,000 before the Second World War.
By 1945, 3,000,000 of these Jews had been murdered. Fifty
years later, I still cannot forget the scenes of incredible
brutality, torture and killing that my eyes witnessed. The
same questions repeat themselves over and over again after
all these years: Why? Why were so many people killed and
why did the world choose to remain silent?
In 1993, I
published the first edition of my book, Witness to Horror,
fulfilling a promise I had made to my mother before German
soldiers killed her. She had predicted that I would survive
and had begged me to "tell the world what the beasts
have done to us." It had taken me all this time to
bring myself to face the task of remembering and telling
my story.
I was born
and raised in the town of Vladimir Volynski, in Poland,
where Jews had settled as early as the twelfth century.
My father, Joshua, originally had been a teacher of Russian
and my mother, Matilda, had been one of his students. Later
my father could no longer earn his living teaching so my
parents became merchants, selling coal and wood. My parents
were able to provide an education for my brother Benny and
me, an education that included Hebrew school, private high
school and music lessons.
I was seventeen
years old when the Germans invaded Poland. My father and
my eighteen-year-old brother Benny were among the first
group of Jews to be rounded up and then executed in the
town prison. I saw my best friend Sarah being raped by German
soldiers. As a result of this brutality she died.
The Germans
killed my Zeide Aaron, my grandfather, who was a very pious,
orthodox Jew. He was a role model to his children and grandchildren
and taught us the blessings of nature, work, rest and the
Sabbath. But my grandfather's Jewish world, in which he
believed that "God wanted a beautiful land where people
could live and be happy," was almost completely destroyed
by the Holocaust. His world became a world of concentration
camps, ghettos, and systematic mass murder.
Soon after
the arrival of the German soldiers, the Jews of Vladimir
Volynski were forced into a ghetto surrounded by barbed
wire. Then the systematic killing began with the first of
three Aktion, or killing operations. During the first Aktion,
my husband Henry and my mother and I were hidden in the
attic of a military dental clinic. A German dental technician,
who was a friend of my husband, had agreed to let us hide
there. This man, whose name was Hahn, risked his own life
to save us.
The clinic
was right across from the ghetto. Early one morning we heard
terrible screams, and from a small window in the attic we
saw the pogrom unfold. There were big trucks scattered around,
and men wearing prayer shawls were being beaten with clubs
and shoved into the trucks. With arms raised to the sky
they were screaming, "Lama Hazavtonu?" (Why have
You forsaken us?)
Mothers were
screaming out loud, some clutching their babies and trying
to hide them under their dresses. But the little children
were grabbed by the Nazis and thrown into the trucks. Blood
stained the ground and the children's clothing. I covered
my ears; I could not listen to the screaming any longer.
Even today I still hear it in my dreams.
During the
second Aktion, we were hidden in a stable and then in an
attic by a Polish woman, Maria Wierzbovska. We stayed there
for weeks until her husband discovered us. He was a bailiff
and an anti-Semite, and when he discovered our presence
he threatened to report us to the Gestapo. We were finally
forced to go to the ghetto.
We were in
the ghetto when the third and final pogrom broke out on
13 December 1943. This third Aktion was to accomplish the
goal of making our town, Vladimir Volynski, Judenrein -
cleansed of Jews. German soldiers overran the ghetto and
shot Jews at random. Many were killed while trying to escape
by climbing the barbed wire fence.
Miraculously, Henry and I found a cramped hiding place in
the attic of a house, but we were separated from my mother.
During the next few days we watched from our hiding place
as German and Ukrainian soldiers searched the ghetto for
any remaining Jews. To my horror one morning, I recognized
my mother in a group of five people being dragged from a
hiding place in a nearby house. The five were lined up against
a wall and shot. I will never forget the image of the red
blood staining the white snow. I saw my beloved mother die
and there was nothing I could do. To even cry out would
have endangered the lives of everyone in our hiding place
in the attic.
In all, nineteen
thousand Jews, including one thousand children, were killed
in Vladimir Volynski. It was truly a miracle that Henry
and I survived this third killing operation. But although
we had managed to survive we still faced an enormously difficult
road ahead. In March 1944, after escaping from the destroyed
ghetto, we joined a group of Polish partisans. When it became
obvious that the group did not want Jews, we ran away and
headed on foot for the Russian front. Finally liberated
by the Russian army, we were hungry, filthy, covered with
lice and sores, and homeless. But our immediate reaction
was one of joy. It was an incredible feeling to be able
to go outside without being afraid for our lives, after
years of hiding in attics, cellars and barns.
During the
following three months we began to recover our health, and
our first son, Mark, was born in Lwow. Our intention at
this time was to get to Berlin. We made a stop in Krakow
on our way, and to our great dismay we found ourselves in
the middle of another pogrom. Polish neo-Nazis who were
determined to kill the remaining Jews were conducting it.
We managed to reach Berlin, but it was only to discover
that we were stepping into an inferno. The Russian bombardment
had put the city on fire and epidemics of dysentery and
cholera were raging. Our son Mark took sick and we almost
lost him.
From Berlin
we went to Munich, where we applied for help from the United
Nations Relief and Rehabilitation Administration (UNRRA),
and then settled in Garmish, where our second son, Seymour
was born. But even now, we were not free of the violent
hatred of anti-Semites. A young girl we hired to help us
in the house made an attempt to poison our son Mark. We
found out later that she had been active in the Hitler Youth
movement.
When we received our visa to come to Canada in the spring
of 1948, we could not wait to leave behind us the war-torn
and bloody soil of Europe. I will never forget the day we
arrived in this country. We were greeted by a large sign
saying WELCOME TO CANADA. Overwhelmed, we cried tears of
joy.
We settled
in Ste. Agathe, north of Montreal, and it was here that
our daughter Heidi was born. Like many other survivors,
we did not discuss the Holocaust with our children until
they were older, and even then, not in any detail. It was
still too painful. The wounds were too deep. They had not
yet begun to heal.
In 1971, and
again in 1982, I was invited by the German government to
be a witness at Nazi war crimes trials. At one of these
trials, Gebietskommisar Westerheide, the German regional
commander who was in charge of the massacre of eighteen
thousand Jews in my hometown, was tried and found not guilty.
As far as I am concerned, this was the final injustice.
Like many others, Westerheide maintained that he had not
been in charge and that he had only followed orders.
Since publishing
the first edition of my book, Witness to Horror, in 1993,
I have told the story of my experiences during the Holocaust
many times: at elementary and high schools; at colleges
and universities; and at synagogues, libraries and various
associations both in Canada and the United States. The book
has made me a public speaker and launched me on my mission
to preserve the memory of the Holocaust for succeeding generations.
In 1996, fifty years after leaving Poland during the aftermath
of the Holocaust, I returned with my daughter to visit my
native country. We visited the sites of the concentration
camps at Auschwitz, Birkenau and Maidanek, and Plaszow,
where the movie Schindler's List was filmed. This trip was
a bittersweet experience for me; a painful but necessary
pilgrimage to the past.
The following
year I was invited to accompany a group of teenage students
to Poland and Israel on their March of the Living. It was
a memorable event for me, first to share their grief and
anger and then secondly to realize that in the end it was
a dynamic and empowering experience for them. And it has
been very gratifying to me to see my three children and
my grandchildren take an active interest in my mission to
preserve the memory of the Holocaust.
The attentive students of the March of the Living and the
various audiences that I speak with all want to know my
opinions and thoughts of such esoteric concepts of whether
GOOD will ever triumph over EVIL; why do I think I was spared
while six million others were slaughtered; why didn't the
world community try to stop the Nazis' Final Solution, etc.
After living in and seeing hell with my own eyes, the major
life-lesson that I have learned is that humanity will endure.
Despite the unbridled evil that the Nazis imposed on Europe,
some people still retained their GOODNESS, their sense of
HONOR, their RIGHTEOUSNESS and their HUMANITY. Individuals
like Oskar Schindler, Count Raoul Wallenberg, Abbe Joseph
André, Aristides de Sousa Mendes, Carl Lutz and many
others, including my own righteous-gentiles, Maria Wierzbovska
and Hahn, the German dental technician, held onto their
humanity in the face of immense danger and risk of losing
their own lives (and a lot of righteous-gentiles did lose
their lives for their acts of bravery and kindness). The
Hope, Ha'Tikvah, that good will triumph over evil is NOT
esoteric in nature, but rather is real. I am living proof
that for those who retain their humanity in the face of
incredible danger and rampant evil, good will always prevail.
In 1997, I
published a second edition of Witness to Horror, where I
speak of how the book has influenced my life. Witness to
Horror is my legacy to the world, to my children, to my
grandchildren, and to future generations. In the Torah we
are taught that we are responsible for three generations
of our own, that of our children, and that of our grandchildren.
The concept is I'dor v' dor - generation to generation.
I want to pass on the legacy from my Zeide Aaron and my
mother to my children and their children.
In recent years there has been an outpouring of Holocaust
memories. There is a rush to get everything down in writing
before the generation of survivors dies away. There is also
a search for knowledge and understanding by the descendants
of survivors, a search that is leading the young to rediscover
their Jewish heritage. Jews are proudly calling themselves
Jews once more.
In August of
2001, I was honored with an invitation by the United States
Armed Services to speak to 1,000 soldiers and sailors at
Pearl Harbor, Hawaii. I successfully conveyed to the most
powerful military in the world and the former liberators
of Europe the need for them to understand the plight of
refugees due to genocide. These proud young men and women
have come to realize that their oath to protect their homeland
also extends to protect those who cannot protect themselves
from persecution and evil. If only this simple and human
concept was recognized in 1939.
The young people
of today and those who participate in the March of the Living
are the leaders of the next generation. When we say, "Never
Forget," young people should interpret this maxim two-fold:
1) They and people of all nations have an obligation to
protect the memory of the Holocaust; and 2) To make sure
that the world and humans never lose its/their humanity.
Ann Kazimirski
Montreal, Quebec
June 19, 200