United States Holocaust Memorial Museum The Power of Truth: 20 Years
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Meet our Survivor Volunteers

Frank Ephraim

“The way the trip went was we left one evening, went to the local railroad station in Berlin, that at that time was called Anhalterbahnhof. It no longer exists as such. Hopped on a train. It was a sleeper. We went overnight, changed in Munich, next morning, and from there we began to head toward Italy, the border. We went through Austria, and the train was stopped in Brenner, Brenner pass, which is the border between Austria and Italy. There everybody had to get out. The German side, we were searched, body search, all the luggage was searched. That delayed everything. The train left without us. We had to wait another six hours for the next train.”
(postwar testimony)

Other Survivor Volunteers »

Survivor Affairs

Who is a Survivor?

The Museum defines a survivor as a person who was displaced, persecuted, and/or discriminated against by the racial, religious, ethnic, social, and political policies of the Nazis and their allies between 1933 and 1945. In addition to former inmates of concentration camps and ghettos this includes, among others, refugees and people in hiding.

Contact Us

Diane Saltzman
Director, Survivor Affairs
United States Holocaust Memorial Museum
100 Raoul Wallenberg Place, SW
Washington, D.C. 20024-2126
E-mail: survivoraffairs@ushmm.org
(202) 488-0414

Rachel Wagner
Program Coordinator, Survivor Affairs
United States Holocaust Memorial Museum
100 Raoul Wallenberg Place, SW
Washington, D.C. 20024-2126
E-mail: survivoraffairs@ushmm.org
(202) 479-9732


Collections: The Museum has the most comprehensive collection of Holocaust-related materials in the world. Included in its holdings are works of art, artifacts, photographs, archival documents, manuscripts, historical film footage, music and sound recordings, and oral testimonies.

The Registry of Holocaust Survivors seeks the names of all Holocaust survivors—whether or not they are currently living—in order to assist survivors and their families in attempts to trace missing relatives and friends, as well as to provide resources for historical and genealogical researchers. Inclusion in the Registry is voluntary and assures that the names of survivors will be preserved for future generations.

 

Hear from a Survivor

If you are interested in arranging a speaking engagement with a survivor either at the Museum or in your community, please download the Survivor Affairs Speakers Bureau presentation guidelines (PDF).


What We Do

The Office of Survivor Affairs coordinates the work and activities of survivors who volunteer at the Museum, and who donate thousands of hours of service annually to the Museum; organizes programs at the Museum for and involving Survivors, including Conversations in the Wexner Center: Meet and Learn from a Holocaust Survivor, The Memory Project, and First Person; sends representatives to conferences and events outside of the Museum in order to establish and strengthen relationships with survivors and survivor groups throughout the U.S. and internationally; provides links to Museum and other resources that assist survivors and their families.


The Museum is SEEKING SURVIVORS who resided in France, Italy, Switzerland and Germany in 1946.
Learn more »


Bringing the Lessons Home students interact with a survivor.
View video »