Maurice E. Holocaust testimony
Abstract
Videotape testimony of Maurice E., who was born in Warsaw, Poland in 1925, the youngest of three children. He recounts his family's 1929 move to Antwerp, then Brussels, to escape from the orthodox community; their assimilated life style; attending school until age fourteen; participating in socialist groups; his family housing a German-Jewish refugee; German invasion in May 1940; he and his brother fleeing to Paris to join the military; his rejection though his brother was accepted; living in a facility for Belgians in Montpellier; working at a vineyard; incarceration at Agde; escaping with a group; recapture; a beating; escaping again; returning to Brussels; refusing to register as a Jew; joining the Resistance; distributing pamphlets and painting swastikas on homes of collaborators; narrowly escaping arrest; obtaining false papers for his parents; their escape to France; joining the armed Resistance; blowing up rail lines and assassinating collaborators; hiding under false papers; arrest as a Resistant in February 1944; incarceration at Avenue Louise; interrogation and beatings for several weeks; and deportation to Malines, then Auschwitz/Birkenau in April.
Extent and Medium
19 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
- E., Maurice, -- 1925-
- Kaduk.
Corporate Bodies
- Agde (Concentration camp)
- Waldlager V (Concentration camp)
- Gross-Rosen (Concentration camp)
- Birkenau (Concentration camp)
- Dachau (Concentration camp)
- Malines (Concentration camp)
- Auschwitz (Concentration camp)
Subjects
- Holocaust survivors.
- Video tapes.
- Hiding.
- Mutual aid.
- Child survivors.
- Resistance.
- Postwar effects.
- Survivor-child relations.
- Aid by non-Jews.
- Postwar experiences.
- World War, 1939-1945 -- Children.
- World War, 1939-1945 -- Personal narratives, Jewish.
- Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) -- Personal narratives.
- Men.
- World War, 1939-1945 -- Underground movements -- Belgium.
- Jewish refugees.
- Jews -- Migrations.
- Jewish children in the Holocaust.
- Refugee camps.
- World War, 1939-1945 -- Prisoners and prisons, German.
- Forced labor.
- Identification (Religion)
- World War, 1939-1945 -- Atrocities.
- Concentration camps -- Sociological aspects.
- Death marches.
- Escapes.
Places
- Tutzing (Germany)
- Munich (Germany)
- Poland.
- Warsaw (Poland)
- Paris (France)
- Montpellier (France)
- Antwerp (Belgium)
- Brussels (Belgium)
Genre
- Oral histories. -- aat