Anita Ekstein:
A Profile
by Anita
Helfgott Ekstein
Toronto, Ontario
Participated on the March in 1996, 1998, and
2000.
I
was a child of seven when the Nazis came to
our town in Poland. We had been occupied by
the Soviets for nearly the first two years
of the war.
We were taken to a ghetto in a larger town.
My parents went daily to different work sites,
in the fall of 1942 my mother was picked up
on the street in the ghetto. My father in
desperation approached a Polish man, a Catholic
who was a stock keeper at the site of a railway
bridge where my father was working and asked
him to save his child.
Josef Matusiewicz was a
stranger, he had not known my father for long
and did not know me. It took a great deal
of courage and determination and faith in
G-d, to take a risk to save a Jewish child.
There were stringent edicts punishable by
death for helping a Jew.
I
was taken to his family a wife and eighteen
year old daughter, given a new name and taught
to be a Catholic. Several months later I was
denounced by a neighbour and had to be returned
to my father. I spent seven weeks hidden in
a wardrobe, and rescued for the second time
by the same man. I was taken to his nephew
a Catholic priest close to the Russian border,
where I remained for the next two years.
My father did not survive.
In 1946 I was reunited with my aunt and left
Poland, hoping to immigrate to United States
where I had family. It was not possible at
the time to obtain an U.S. visa, and so in
1948 I arrived in Canada. I was fourteen years
old. Today I have three children and eight
grandchildren, because one person made a choice
to save my life.
I
have dedicated the last fourteen years to
educate young people to the evils of anti-Semitism,
racism and bigotry, and where it could lead.
I hope to impart to them that we have a choice
in life, not to be a perpetrator or a bystander,
but to step forward and have the courage to
do the right thing. I had the privilege of
being a survivor chaperone on the March of
the Living three times, I have met and bonded
with wonderful young people, and my hope is
that they will never forget, and continue
to remind the world when we survivors are
no longer here.