From Forced
Death March to Liberation
By Judy
(Weissenberg) Cohen
Toronto,
Ontario
Participated on the
March in 1998.
My
name is Judy (Weissenberg) Cohen. I was born
and lived in Debrecen, Hungary with my large
Orthodox family till I was 15 1/2 years old.
We were seven siblings and my parents. I was
the youngest. We lived quite comfortably,
with other extended family members, in three
separate dwellings, around a courtyard, with
a huge iron door to separate us from the noisy
street. The yard was full of my mother's potted
plants, the scent of which I can still smell
in my dreams. This is where we always played.
This was the eminently loving and safe world
of my early childhood.
In
the beginning of WWII, life for Jews in Hungary
was not exactly a bed of roses, due to the
multitude of anti-Jewish legislation and edicts
under the Miklos Horthy regime. But our lives
were not threatened. This uneasy calm was
shattered on March 19, 1944. The German Nazis
occupied Hungary and the Holocaust, with all
its horrible ramifications, began for us Hungarian
Jews. The pattern was the same as elsewhere
in Nazi occupied Europe.
First
we were forced to wear the Yellow Star, for
specific identification purposes; then we
were ghettoized to be isolated from the population
at large; and finally, we, too, just like
the rest of European Jewry, were driven from
our homes, deported and delivered to one of
the worst death-camps in Nazi-occupied Poland:
Auschwitz-Birkenau.
450,000
Hungarian Jews were killed during the last
ten months of the Holocaust.
Here
my parents, Margit and Sandor, my 18 month
old nephew Peter, with his mother Magda were
immediately murdered in the gas-chambers.
My three older sisters and myself were allowed
to stay alive, for a while. Eventually we,
the four sisters, Erzsebet, Klari, Eva and
I, were separated during the terrible "selections"
by Nazi doctors. After the last such "selection"
I found myself totally alone, at the ripe
old age of sixteen. I was then transported
to another Nazi concentration camp called
Bergen Belsen, in Germany proper.
I
was devastated to be torn from my siblings
and soon found out that in a death camp one
should not be alone. I needed to know that
someone cared whether I woke up in the morning
or not. Thus, I asked the two Feig sisters,
Edit and Sari, who I knew personally from
Debrecen, if I could become their lagerschwester
(camp sister). The answer was an unhesitating
yes.
After
a few weeks of stay and starvation in this
camp, the three of us, along with 497 young
women were taken to another camp to work in
a Junkers airplane factory in Ashersleben,
near Leipzig, in Germany.
Here
we worked 12 hours a day as slaves. But both
the barracks and food was much better than
in the death camps. Here, survival was more
of a possibility. Then sometime in mid April,1944,
the American air force bombed the whole industrial
complex around us, including the factory where
we worked. After the total destruction of
the factory, we had no work.
Two
days after the bombardment, by the order of
a high-ranking Nazi officer, we were ordered
to leave the work camp and go on a forced
march -- to nowhere.
We
marched endlessly and aimlessly -- another
special torture of the Nazis. There was absolutely
no provision for us. Neither food, water,
nor shelter, only two guards with their guns.
We
marched back and forth on the highways of
Nazi Germany. Likewise did the "Toten
Commandos" of the SS in their black uniforms.
They were hunting and shooting prisoners like
us at random at night. We lived in constant
fear for our miserable lives.
We
were not alone. Groups, like ourselves, were
marching or rather dragging themselves everywhere.
The march lasted 10-12 days or was it two
weeks? We had no calendar and after a while
we stopped counting the days. We only knew
that each day we were fewer and fewer. Some
died of hunger, some of disease, some of total
exhaustion and some by not wanting to live
any more. They just fell by the wayside. I
hope some managed to escape.
One
day, we noticed something unusual on the other
side of the highway. Another group of prisoners
was marching in the opposite direction. They
were all soldiers in uniforms who were being
brutally flogged with long leather whips by
their SS guards. Even we, by now rather accustomed
to Nazi horrors, cringed at this sight. These
men, who were supposed to be protected by
the Geneva Convention, were all black soldiers
in various uniforms who looked like they came
from Africa. Some wore white turbans. (Now
I know they were Sikh soldiers.) All of them
had come from British Commonwealth countries
to help Britain to defeat the Nazi enemy.
They came from far and wide to help and die,
if need be, so that the rest of the world
will have a chance again to live decent lives
in democracy.
My
two camp sisters -- Sari and Edith -- and I
were inseparable on this "journey".
To have friends who cared about each other
made all the misery a little bit more bearable.
We encouraged each other. We dragged or held
up each other. Above all, we shared every
little scrap of food, or anything that looked
like food -- rotten little potatoes or carrots
dug up in the fields. We raided the garbage
cans when marching through towns. Occasionally
we dared to beg. Most of the times we were
chased away but on a rare occasion German
women would have pity on us. I remember once
I was given a large slice of bread with marmalade
on it, which the three of us scrupulously
shared. Was that a feast!
Most
of the time we had to sleep outdoors, in ditches
or in small forests. As a result lice attached
themselves to our bodies, especially in the
armpits, where it was warm, and anywhere where
hair grew, and even in the seams of our clothes.
Lice were our constant companions. We must
have been an awful sight to the ordinary observer.
My "shoes" consisted of wooden soles
with canvas tops that were in tatters. While
we worked in the factory I could tie the top
and bottom together with wire, like a muzzle
on a dog. But on the road, my "contraption"
was coming apart and my feet were a mass of
bleeding flesh.
Was
it April or was it already May? We didn't
know or care. By now, we were excruciatingly
hungry, exhausted, dirty and utterly hopeless.
Our
numbers dwindled to approximately 190-192
women at various stages of disintegration.
We were the pitiful remnant of the 500 women
who started out from Aschersleben. Our forced
march turned into a death march.
I
have absolutely no idea how I, along with
the few others, survived. I cannot even remember
everything. Our minds were clouded from starvation
and hopelessness.
This
particular night we happened to sleep in an
abandoned, dirty stable. It had a roof and
four walls and some damp straw on the earthen
floor. After having slept outdoors for days
this seemed like heaven, albeit a rotten one.
The Mayor of this small town, the name of
which escapes me, surprisingly, allowed us
to use it.
On
the next and memorable morning we were awakened
from our fretful sleep by the Mayor himself.
I vividly remember how he stood in the doorway
of the stable. With bright sun light behind
him all we could see was his dark silhouette.
In a loud and not unpleasant voice he addressed
us as "Freuleinen." We looked at
each other in disbelief. "Freuleinen"
(?) and not "verfluchte Judin?"
(Damned Jewess.)
We
immediately understood this subtle change.
Then he kindly explained to us that the war
is coming to an end. "You are all free
to go". "Free? Did he really say
free?" "You mean they won't kill
us?" "You mean this nightmare is
truly over?" we asked each other. Our
two guards had disappeared, so it must be
true!
Once
the message sank in we kissed and hugged each
other with our parched lips and weak, skeletal
arms.
"Please
come outside and see all the white flags on
every house. There is no fighting here anymore"
he told us. (This was the last town in the
area that was not yet liberated.) Once we
were outside we saw white flags flying from
every house. As I recall he showed us that
the allied forces are closing in. The Russians
were 10 km, and the Americans 6 km. away in
the nearest towns. No matter how weak and
hungry we were, we could still count. We looked
at each other and agreed that 6 km. was the
shorter distance. We turned in that direction
and started to drag ourselves to meet the
liberating forces instead of waiting for them.
We learned that this day was Saturday, May
5th, 1945.
I
remember very clearly, even today, that as
we were walking very slowly, but with renewed
hope, suddenly we came to a halt. We saw a
huge truck of a peculiar and unfamiliar colour
coming towards us. "What kind of colour
is this?" We asked each other. "Could
this be a new, hitherto unknown Nazi division?"
We could not think in any other term. We stood
there frozen with fear. The truck came nearer
and nearer and finally stopped. Strange looking
soldiers jumped off it and they looked at
us in disbelief. First horror then pity on
their faces. They never saw or could imagine
people looking like we must have looked. It
seems, we were the first survivors they encountered.
They told us we have nothing to fear. "We
are with the American Red Cross." They
reached into their pockets and started to
give us chocolates and chewing gums. That's
all they had with them. They gently encouraged
us to go on because Duben, the next town,
was a short distance away and already liberated
by the Americans. With renewed energy, we
walked on. Hope was a marvelous elixir.
On
May the 8th, 1945, the war officially ended.
The military authorities came to take a look
at us and tried to really help in any way
they could, with regular and proper meals,
and hospitalization for those who needed it.
Thus
our physical and mental rehabilitation began:
Not to be hungry or terrified any more; To
sleep on a bed with clean crisp bed linen;
To have a decent dress on our skinny bodies;
To have shoes that really fit with no more
bloody toes or heels. Mundane things to others
but, to us then, utter luxury.
My
emotional recovery started somewhat later
and lasted for decades. That process was slow
and painful as the enormity of my losses unfolded.
Especially, when a couple of months later,
in search of possible family members, I re-entered
the once family home and found nothing but
stark emptiness.
Still
I was lucky because eventually I was reunited
with my sister, Eva and my brother, Leslie.
The
war and the Holocaust was over, but for us
survivors it never really ended. The memories
of a once wholesome but brutally shattered
life will never fade.
As
a warning, someone said: "We have neither
the moral right to forgive nor the historical
right to forget."
On
the other hand I am no longer a victim. I
was given a chance to build a new, productive
and happy life. I married Sidney Cohen and
have two children, Michelle and Jonathan.
However,
the struggle to keep this world safe, just,
equitable and peaceful for all, is never ending.
In my own, small way I am too trying to work
for Tikkun Olam. Won't you do the same?