Roman F. Holocaust testimony

Identifier
HVT 1802
Language of Description
English
Level of Description
Collection
Source
EHRI Partner

Abstract

Videotape testimony of Roman F., who was born in Lemberg, Poland (L?viv, Ukraine) in 1921. He recalls his assimilated family; graduating from gymnasium in 1939; Soviet occupation; attending technical school; German invasion in 1941; anti-Jewish killing and violence; ghettoization; hiding during round-ups; his father's deportation; obtaining false papers; taking his mother to a non-Jewish family outside the ghetto; volunteering to work for Organisation Todt as a Pole; escaping with two Jews to Dnipropetrovs?k; encountering Romanian soldiers traveling to Odesa; hiding with a Polish woman after separation from his friends; traveling to Warsaw; working as a driver in Aiud, Romania in February 1944; traveling to Budapest and Krakow in April; arrest as a German collaborator by the Soviets in Vienna; transfer to Ias?i, then Stalingrad (Volgograd) in December 1944; one year of slave labor; traveling from Rostov to L?viv; learning no family members had survived (he never ascertained his mother's fate); living with a Jewish family in Warsaw; attending dental school in ?o?dz?; reluctance to acknowledge being Jewish; and emigrating to Israel in 1958. He discusses his core Jewish identity, which is not religious; pride as an Israeli; and the importance of his friends to his survival (he never found them after the war).

Extent and Medium

4 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

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Genre

This description is derived directly from structured data provided to EHRI by a partner institution. This collection holding institution considers this description as an accurate reflection of the archival holdings to which it refers at the moment of data transfer.