Maria G. Holocaust testimony
Abstract
Videotape testimony of Maria G., who was born in Warsaw, Poland in 1922, one of five children. She recalls living in a Jewish area; her parents realizing Kristallnacht was the end of German Jewry; German invasion; one sister fleeing east; anti-Jewish laws; ghettoization; starvation; smuggling food; escaping; assistance from her father's former business colleague; posing as a non-Jew; obtaining papers as a non-Jew when she traded her pocketbook (the owner did not realize her papers were in the traded pocketbook); volunteering for forced labor in Germany as a Pole; working in a garden-nursery near Berlin; frequent Allied bombings; liberation by Soviet troops; learning her sister had survived in the Soviet Union; receiving papers from an aunt in the United States; waiting until her sister, brother-in-law, and their baby could join her; their emigration; and marriage in 1948 to a man who had left Poland when he was four. Ms. G. discusses continuing to dislike the German language and the war being beyond comprehension.
Extent and Medium
1 videocassette
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
- G., Maria, -- 1922-
Subjects
- Jewish ghettos.
- World War, 1939-1945 -- Personal narratives, Jewish.
- Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) -- Personal narratives.
- Women.
- Video tapes.
- Holocaust survivors.
- Aid by non-Jews.
- Hiding.
- False papers.
- Postwar experiences.
- Escapes.
- Jews -- Poland -- Warsaw.
Places
- Germany.
- Warsaw (Poland)
- Warsaw ghetto.
- Poland.
Genre
- Oral histories. -- aat