First Person Podcast

This podcast series features excerpts from interviews with Holocaust survivors presented at the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum's public program, First Person -- Conversations with Holocaust Survivors.

  • Holocaust Survivors’ Reflections and Hopes for the Future
    In today's episode, Holocaust survivors share their thoughts on the importance of speaking about their experiences. It is our tradition at First Person that each guest speaker ends the program with their "final words." In our final podcast of the series, we close with those thoughts, reflections, and hopes for the future.
    29 September 2010, 2:00 pm
  • Estelle Laughlin: The Warsaw Ghetto Uprising
    Estelle Laughlin discusses the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising, when German forces, intending to liquidate the ghetto on April 19, 1943, were stunned by an armed uprising from Jewish fighters. Estelle and her family hid in an underground bunker during the uprising but were eventually captured and deported.
    11 August 2010, 2:00 pm
  • Theodora Klayman: Shelter in Ludbreg
    Theodora (Dora) Klayman discusses surviving the war in hiding with her brother in Ludbreg, Yugoslavia. After her parents were deported in 1941, she spent the war first with her maternal aunt and then, after her aunt was denounced and deported, with non-Jewish neighbors.
    13 July 2010, 2:00 pm
  • Steven Fenves: Neighbors in Subotica
    Steven Fenves discusses being forced into a ghetto immediately following the German occupation of his hometown of Subotica, Yugoslavia, in March 1944. As his family was forced out of their home, they encountered a range of responses from their non-Jewish neighbors.
    8 June 2010, 2:00 pm
  • Josiane Traum: Hiding in a Convent in Brugge
    Josiane (Josy) Traum discusses her memories of life in hiding at a Carmelite convent in Brugge, Belgium. In 1942, as conditions grew increasingly more dangerous for Jews living in German-occupied Belgium, her mother, Fanny, arranged to have Belgian nuns hide her three-year-old daughter in the convent.
    27 April 2010, 2:00 pm
  • Henry Greenbaum: Attempting Escape from a Slave Labor Camp
    Henry Greenbaum discusses his attempt to escape from a slave labor camp near Starahowice, Poland, with his sister Faige and a Jewish policeman in July 1944.
    26 August 2009, 2:00 pm
  • Haim Solomon: Hiding during the Pogrom in Iasi
    Haim Solomon discusses hiding during the pogrom that Romanian authorities staged against the Jewish population in Iasi, Romania, within days of the German invasion of the Soviet Union in June 1941. Haim and his family hid in various different locations across the city. At least 4,000 Jews were murdered in Iasi during the pogrom.
    19 August 2009, 2:00 pm
  • Margit Meissner: Flight from Paris on a Bicycle
    Margit Meissner discusses her flight from Paris just before the city fell to the Germans in June 1940. Margit and her mother were Austrian citizens living in Paris, which meant they were considered “enemy aliens” because Austria was annexed by Germany in 1938. They were ultimately separated and Margit was left with the responsibility of getting safely out of Paris on her own.
    12 August 2009, 2:00 pm
  • Gerald Schwab: A German Jewish Refugee Returns as an American Soldier
    Gerald Schwab discusses his experience being drafted into the US Army in 1944 after fleeing Nazi Germany just four years earlier. After the war, he assisted with the trials of leading German officials before the International Military Tribunal at Nuremberg.
    5 August 2009, 2:00 pm
  • Helen (Lebowitz) Goldkind: A Grandfather’s Humiliation
    Helen Goldkind discusses the humiliation she and her family experienced as they were forced by the Germans to move from their hometown of Volosyanka to the Uzhgorod ghetto in Czechoslovakia in 1944.
    28 July 2009, 2:00 pm
  • Emanuel (Manny) Mandel: Wearing the Yellow Star as a Child in Hungary
    Manny Mandel discusses wearing a yellow star as a young boy in Budapest. Hungary fell increasingly under the influence of Germany in the 1930s and joined the Axis alliance in 1940. During this time, Jews in Hungary were increasingly subjected to discriminatory anti-Jewish laws modeled on those in Germany.
    22 July 2009, 2:00 pm
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