Duration: 00:30:29
Shelf mark: C0410/030
Recording date: 1989-02-18 and 1989-07-01
Collection: The Living Memory of the Jewish Community
Recording locations: Interviewee's home
Interviewees: Birkin, Edith, 1927- (speaker, female)
Interviewers: Thompson, Katherine (speaker, female)
Recordists: Thompson, Katherine
Abstract:
Part 5: Evacuation from Ghetto in cattle trucks to Auschwitz (1944). Arrival in Auschwitz - separation into groups. Her group of Czech friends were kept together. Procedure after separation in the first 10 days. Roll call, breakfast - 'free time' - soup. Realisation of 'chimney' and what it meant. Talks about food. Frightening contact with Germans. Sadistic block-leaders. Washing facilities and latrines. Naked parade selection for work. Journey to work camp in a forest (ex Hitler-Jugend holiday camp).
Description:
Interviewee's note: Describes early life; born in Prague. Family background, grandparents, family name was Hoffmann. Earliest memories, Jewish school, teaching methods. Arrival of Germans in Czechoslovakia; effect on schooling; father lost his job. Train to Lodz Ghetto. Life in the ghetto. Death of parents and the effect on her; she worked in a tailoring factory; memory of hearing gunfire of approaching Russians. Summer 1944, evacuation from the ghetto; taken by cattle truck to Auschwitz. Description of conditions and routines there. January 1945, the Germans moved prisoners out, beginning of the death march. Description of death march; birth of a baby, joy of hearing bombing outside Dresden. Arrival in Flossenburg camp in March 1945, 10 days there, then by coal truck to Belsen. Details of arrival in Belsen and conditions there; food, gypsies, typhus. Arrival and reactions of the British Army. The Germans forced to clear away the dead. The camp was burned, prisoners re-housed and cleaned. She was filmed for newsreel a few days after liberation. Edith had contracted typhus and was sent to the hospital. Entertainment in the hospital (Scottish dancing and a visit by Yehudi Menuhin). Journey back to Prague; Russian soldiers in Prague. Loneliness; loss of her family and belongings. Decided to go to UK in 1946; impressions. Went to Belfast by boat to visit her sister; attended high school in Londonderry. There was a Jewish community there. She did a teachers' training course in London. After that she worked in Hendon and Edgware. She married in 1962 to a non-Jewish man; they were unable to have children so they adopted two boys, and a girl. She dedicated herself to her family thereafter. She started painting based on the concentration camp experiences; it had a therapeutic effect on her. She exhibited and sold her work. Talks about her paintings, and about being lucky to have survived the holocaust.
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