Yochanan K. Holocaust testimony

Identifier
HVT 3775
Language of Description
English
Level of Description
Collection
Source
EHRI Partner

Abstract

Videotape testimony of Yochanan K., who was born in a village near Nowy Wiśnicz, Poland, in 1923, the second of six children. He recounts his family's orthodoxy; attending cheder, school, and synagogue in Nowy Wiśnicz; antisemitic harassment; leaving school at thirteen to become a cattle merchant; German invasion; anti-Jewish restrictions; he and his older brother smuggling food to several ghettos; denouncement by a Jew; arrest and release; volunteering to enter Płaszów in his brother's place; slave labor laying rail lines; escaping after a severe beating; fleeing to the forest with his brother; assistance from Polish villagers; building a bunker at a farm house; smuggling himself into the Bochnia ghetto; locating relatives; learning the rest of his family had been killed in a mass shooting; beating a Jewish collaborator; escaping with his aunt and others to the forest; building a bunker; obtaining food and supplies from Poles, including Seventh Day Adventists; obtaining a revolver and ammunition; hiding other escaped Jews; his cousin's death; contact with Jewish partisans; building a bunker for another group; the Germans killing everyone in it; his brother being wounded; splitting into groups; learning everyone in his brother's group had been killed; building a bunker in a Pole's barn; liberation by Soviet troops; returning to Nowy Wiśnicz; disinterring friends' bodies for burial in the Jewish cemetery; traveling to Kraków; witnessing the execution of Amon Göth, Kommandant of Płaszów; arrest; changing his name to avoid a trial; returning to Nowy Wiśnicz; a gunfight with antisemitic Poles; fleeing to Germany in 1947; returning to Poland; emigration to Israel in November 1948; serving in the Arab-Israel war; locating a paternal aunt; traveling to Nowy Wiśnicz in 1964, hoping to find his family's bodies and rebury them in a Jewish cemetery (an unsuccessful effort); friends in Poland later notifying him the bodies had been found and transferred to a Jewish cemetery in Kraków; and erecting a gravestone memorializing his relatives and friends. Mr. K. discusses keeping a wartime diary and not sharing his story with his wife or children. He shows photographs.

Extent and Medium

10 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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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.