Jakob S. Holocaust testimony
Abstract
Videotape testimony of Jakob S., who was born in Radom, Poland in 1927, one of six brothers. He recounts attending public and Jewish schools; antisemitic harassment; visiting his grandfather in Jedlin?sk; German invasion; anti-Jewish restrictions; ghettoization; forced labor in a kitchen; a German soldier giving him potatoes; his father having him smuggled out of the ghetto; the ghetto's liquidation; slave labor in a munitions factory; sabotaging production; public executions; transfer to Tomaszo?w Mazowiecki, Auschwitz, then Vaihingen an der Enz; constructing underground airplane hangers; hospitalization; transfer to Unterriexingen; privileged work for a physician; befriending a Polish prisoner; that prisoner's murder; a death march to Dachau; train transfer to Seefeld, then Mittenwald; assistance from the Red Cross; liberation by United States troops; hospitalization; transfer to Feldafing, then Fo?hrenwald displaced persons camps; assistance from UNRRA; attending high school in Icking and Munich; enrolling in medical school in 1948; participation in a Jewish student organization; emigration to the United States in 1952; returning to Munich to complete medical school; emigration to the United States in 1954; marriage in 1959; and the births of two children. Mr. S. discusses thinking only of food in concentration camps and the deaths of all his immediate family. He shows photographs.
Extent and Medium
5 videocassettes
Conditions Governing Access
This testimony is open with permission.
Conditions Governing Reproduction
Copyright has been transferred to the Fortunoff Video Archive for Holocaust Testimonies. Use of this testimony requires permission of the Fortunoff Video Archive.
Rules and Conventions
Describing Archives: A Content Standard
Process Info
compiled by Staff of the Fortunoff Video Archive for Holocaust Testimonies
People
- S., Jacob, -- 1927-
Corporate Bodies
- Auschwitz (Concentration camp)
- United Nations Relief and Rehabilitation Administration.
- Föhrenwald (Displaced persons camp)
- Dachau (Concentration camp)
- International Red Cross and Red Crescent Movement.
Subjects
- Concentration camps -- Psychological aspects.
- World War, 1939-1945 -- Atrocities.
- Sabotage.
- Forced labor.
- Child survivors.
- Refugee camps.
- Friendship.
- Death marches.
- Mutual aid.
- Hospitals in concentration camps.
- Aid by non-Jews.
- Antisemitism -- Prewar.
- Postwar experiences.
- Holocaust survivors.
- World War, 1939-1945 -- Personal narratives, Jewish.
- Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) -- Personal narratives.
- Men.
- Video tapes.
- Jews -- Poland -- Radom (Województwo Mazowieckie)
- Jewish ghettos.
- Jewish children in the Holocaust.
- World War, 1939-1945 -- Children.
Places
- Radom (Województwo Mazowieckie, Poland)
- Poland.
- Seefeld in Tirol (Austria)
- Mittenwald (Germany)
- Jedlińsk (Poland)
- Tomaszów Mazowiecki (Poland)
- Radom ghetto.
- (Województwo Mazowieckie, Poland : Concentration camp)
- Icking (Germany)
- Munich (Germany)
- Feldafing (Germany : Refugee camp)
- Vaihingen an der Enz (Germany : Concentration camp)
- Unterriexingen (Germany : Concentration camp)
Genre
- Oral histories. -- aat