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Meir T. Holocaust testimony (HVT-3915)

Title
Meir T. Holocaust testimony (HVT-3915) [videorecording], January 29, February 5 and 19, 1998.
Created
Tel Aviv, Israel : Fortunoff Video Archive for Holocaust Testimonies, 1998.
Physical Description
3 videorecordings (8 hr., 50 min.) : col.
Language
Hebrew
Notes
This testimony is in Hebrew.
Summary
Videotape testimony of Meir T., who was born in Jonava, Lithuania in 1920, one of nine children. He recounts attending a Yavneh school; moving to Kaunas in 1937; joining Komsomol; attending school, taking voice lessons, and working; Soviet occupation; marriage in 1940; draft into the Soviet military; posting at Telšiai; German invasion in June 1941; fleeing to Jonava; meeting his wife there; futile efforts to flee east; detention with his wife by Lithuanians; escaping; assistance from a Lithuanian in the forest; returning to their residence in Kaunas; a German bringing them food; ghettoization in August; reunion with his parents and siblings; slave labor building an airfield; hiding in bunkers and attics during round-ups; the round-up and murder of his father and brother, then of his mother and six other siblings at the Ninth Fort; assistance from Yitsḥaḳ Rabinovits, a Jewish official; his son's birth in January 1942; and participating in the ghetto resistance led by Haim Yelin with assistance from Elkhanan Elkes, head of the Judenrat.
Mr. T. recalls a brief stay in Kaišiadorys; his wife leaving their child at a church; her capture when returning (he never saw her again); deportation to Stutthof in June 1944; encountering his brother and his wife's father and brother; their transfer to Dachau, then Landsberg; losing his will to live except for his desire to witness revenge against the Germans; a kapo beating a prisoner to death; slave labor felling trees; a German supervisor giving him extra food; a friend organizing extra food for other prisoners and providing him with shoes when his were stolen; a public hanging; liberation with his brother from a death march by United States troops; assistance from the Red Cross; returning to Kaunas; finding his son with assistance from his wife's sister, whom he married; moving to Vilnius; efforts in 1950 to assist a priest who had protected his son and who had been arrested by the Soviets; helping erect a Kovno ghetto museum; its destruction by Soviet soldiers; increasing antisemitic discrimination; emigration to Israel in 1960; and the births of a son and daughter. Mr. T. discusses continuing nightmares resulting from his experiences and believing he and his son survived by happenstance.
Format
Archives or Manuscripts
Added to Catalog
June 01, 2002
References
Meir T. Holocaust Testimony (HVT-3915). Fortunoff Video Archive for Holocaust Testimonies, Yale University Library.
Cite as
Meir T. Holocaust Testimony (HVT-3915). Fortunoff Video Archive for Holocaust Testimonies, Yale University Library.
Genre/Form
Oral histories (document genres)
Citation

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