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Kristine Belfoure
Kristine Belfoure  Kristine Belfoure 
"During the war he asked my mother, "Can you take a Jewish woman into your house?" and, no, he asked me, if my mother would take this Jewish woman, and I said no, never tell her that she is Jewish. This grandmother did not want to go with her Jewish children to Italy, she said I’m too old I am going to die here, I’m not going any place, I love this city, okay. And the cook was left with her, but then when she came to live with us the cook would always come to deliver food so that my mother really didn’t have to do anything except make the toilet paper. But everything else was delivered. And so he was also the one who, she stayed. And I was already in Germany and she died peacefully in our house and nobody knew. Except that I had to teach her, my uncle said, you have to teach her prayers, Catholic prayers, the first thing they do they ask you about the Christian Catholic holidays, and the years of this and that."
(postwar testimony)

Other Survivor Volunteers

 
MEMORY PROJECT

A sense of duty and obligation to share experiences and memories is real and present for many Holocaust survivors. Relatively few, however, have an opportunity to share and many are not comfortable speaking publicly. The Memory Project provides survivors another outlet through which to share their memories. These writing workshops guide the survivor participants in the production of a document for their family members, as well as for historical archives. They are empowered to “speak” on their own terms. This is one more way the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum helps survivors to share their memories and add significantly to Holocaust remembrance. The Memory Project is based on the "Leave-A-Legacy" Writing Workshops developed by the Drew University Center for Holocaust/Genocide Study, to whom we are grateful for training and guidance provided in establishing this important program.

Flora Singer (Mendelowicz) Charlene Schiff (Shulamit Perlmutter) Frank Ephraim Fritz Gluckstein Erika Eckstut (Neuman) Nesse Godin (Galperin) Esther Starobin (Rosenfeld) Manya Friedman (Moszkowicz)


 
Erika Eckstut (Neuman)

Erika Eckstut (Neuman)  Top
Lasting Memory
Remembers an opera singer who helped her outside the Czernowitz ghetto.
Teach Love, Not Hate
Describes how important it is to love and never to hate.
 
Frank Ephraim

Frank Ephraim  Top
Sardines
Describes the canned food his family stored as "escape" provisions.
 
Manya Friedman (Moszkowicz)

Manya Friedman (Moszkowicz)  Top
The Road to Freedom
A story of rescue from a camp during the last days of the war.
Images Etched into my Mind
Descriptions of her memories of her brothers.
A Pleasant Summer Day
Reminiscences of prewar summer days.
 
Fritz Gluckstein

Fritz Gluckstein  Top
TEDIUM!
Describes a forced-labor assignment.
31 Minutes
Describes building antitank obstacles in Berlin toward the end of the war.
 
Nesse Godin (Galperin)

Nesse Godin (Galperin)  Top
The Russian Prisoner of War Grabbed the German Guard by the Neck, Trying to Choke Him
A story about a group of Russian prisoners of war who attempt to escape.
 
Charlene Schiff (Shulamit Perlmutter)

Charlene Schiff (Shulamit Perlmutter)  Top
The Haystack-1942
Describes perils of life in hiding.
 
Flora Singer (Mendelowicz)

Flora Singer (Mendelowicz)  Top
I Was But a Child
Describes locating a young cousin who had been hidden in a monastery during the Holocaust.
 
Esther Starobin (Rosenfeld)

Esther Starobin (Rosenfeld)  Top
Something That Saved Me
Recollections of how working with her hands helped her through difficult times.
The Meal Game
Describes family's stories and recollections.
The Cemetery
Poem about the loss of family.


The USHMM’s Guidelines for Conducting Oral Histories provides guidance on many aspects of conducting an interview. These pointers can also be helpful as a starting point to organize your thoughts and focus on topics of special interest for a writing project.