From Terezin
to Montreal
by Liselotte
Ivry
Montreal, Ontario
Participated on the March in 1999 and 2001.
I went on the March of
the Living in 1999 and also in 2001 as a survivor
but I prefer being called a "Witness
to History".
It was with a lot of soul-searching
and trepidations that I decided to go on the
March. Once I decided I was involved with
the preparations, that is, meeting the marchers
and speaking to them about my experiences
during the war, I got a very good feeling
to be with these young people and also the
grown-ups (madrichim, bus captains, education
staff, etc.)
I knew it would not be
easy revisiting Auschwitz-Birkenau where I
spent seven months; where my dear mother died
on January 4, 1944; where my brother, Jan
(Hans), two years my junior, went into the
gas chamber on March 8, 1944. My brother volunteered
to join my mother on the infamous transport
from Terezin at the beginning of September
1943. After six months of survival, these
people were then sent to the gas chamber.
This operation was called Sonderbehandling.
The same fate was destined for us.
When we arrived at the
camp on December 15, 1943, we had to sign
a paper acknowledging that we would undergo
a "Sonderbehandling" or special
treatment six months after our arrival (if
we were able to survive until then). We knew
of course from the September transport that
those who survived for six months were then
put to death. It was the middle of June, 1944,
and our allotted time was coming to an end.
Rumours abounded about our fate, so it came
as no surprise that we were told that there
would be a "selection" in the next
few days. We knew that the selection was being
conducted regularly in the "D Lager",
the camp for men. How did we know? There was
a group of young men, "the Dachdeckers,"
who fixed roofs and they travelled from camp
to camp. They would tell us what was happening
in the camps around us. We were quite well
informed about what took place during a selection.
Everyone was very upset, especially the old
and weak and mothers with small children.
When the day of the "selection"
arrived, Mengele and his cohorts (SS Men)
were in camp. We were told to line up one
block (barrack) at a time, get undressed and
carry our clothes on our right arm, visibly
exposing our numbers on the left forearm.
We walked in front of Mengele and with a flick
of his thumb the fate was decided! The ones
who were chosen to live went to one side (the
SS men wrote down our number) and the others
to the other side! Willy, our "Lageralteste",
a prisoner who was in charge of us, told mothers
with small children that if they wanted to
live, they would have to leave behind their
children but of course none of them did.
There was great sadness
and despair in the camp. We had to say good-bye
to all the people with whom we spent close
to seven months, knowing their fate. Our senses
by that time were very numb and that was the
only way we were able to cope with this horror.
They called out our numbers
and we assembled in front of our blocks. They
marched us out of the camp and into the "Frauenlager"
(women's camp). We were a very subdued bunch
but on the other hand, we were "chosen"
to live. As we entered the camp, the orchestra
"welcomed" us with a musical performance.
The girls in the Frauenlager
were quite jealous of us since we had hair
(we were the only prisoners whose heads were
not shaven) and then they knew that we would
be shipped out quite soon. In a few days we
were being divided and some of us went to
Hamburg and the others to Stutthof. What a
miracle we left Auschwitz-Birkenau - we were
born again!
Almost fifty-five years
later, returning to Birkenau following the
3-kilometre March from Auschwitz to Birkenau
with young people from different countries
was uplifting and at the same time, very emotional.
I was asked to address the students in one
of the barracks, the only one left standing,
but when I arrived on the grounds of Birkenau
I literally collapsed; it seemed that I heard
all the voices from the past and I just fell
down. I was helped up and got back my determination
to fulfil my duty. I addressed the children
(as I call them) and gave them a glimpse of
life in Birkenau. We continued with the visit
to all the other horrible places and I tried
to be there for the students when they needed
me. This was my first March and then I went
again in 2001.
Why do I do what I do,
to be involved in the education of the Holocaust?
Unfortunately, every year there are fewer
and fewer of us left and we have to try to
do our best to inform and educate the young
people.
I am also a speaker
for the "Montreal Holocaust Memorial
Centre" and visit many schools. Sometimes
I am asked, "Do you feel guilty that
you survived?" and my answer is "NO".
I feel we are all put on this earth for a
certain purpose and I was chosen to speak
for the 6,000,000 whose voices were stilled.