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Harry Z. Holocaust testimony (HVT-2504)

Title
Harry Z. Holocaust testimony (HVT-2504) [videorecording] / interviewed by David Krakow, Sonia Simons, Nat Arkin and Rebecca Berman, November 5 and November 19, 1993.
Created
Mahwah, N.J. : Center for Holocaust and Genocide Studies, 1993.
Physical Description
2 videorecordings (2 hr., and 1 hr, 57 min.) : col.
Language
English
Notes
Associated material: Zansberg, Harry. Interview 5983. Visual History Archive, USC Shoah Foundation. Access at https://vha.usc.edu.
Summary
Videotape testimony of Harry Z., who was born in Bełżyce, Poland in 1926. He recounts the war starting his first day of school; his father doing forced labor; working as a messenger for the Judenrat; the arrival of Jews deported from Germany (one family lived with them); hiding during round-ups; capture by Ukrainian guards; escape; locating his father; hiding in a cellar with his family and several others; entering the Lublin ghetto with his parents, then Bełżyce concentration camp (his sister was hidden by non-Jews); slave labor in a shoe workshop, then demolishing buildings in Głusk; a prisoner-official preventing his execution; burying victims of a mass killing; witnessing a mass killing including his mother and sister; transfer to Budzyń; separation from his father (he never saw him again); slave labor doing road construction; punishment for escapes of fellow prisoners; working as a carpenter in the Heinkel factory; transfer in February 1944 to Mielec, Wieliczka, then Flossenbürg; encountering an uncle who treated him like a son; assistance from Noah Stockman, the head Jewish prisoner; transfer to Hersbruck; slave labor in a mine; transfer back to Flossenbürg; working in a Messerschmitt factory, then felling trees for wood to burn corpses; his friend who worked in the laundry (Jack T.) giving him a heavy coat; working on the railway in Regensburg; return to Flossenbürg; contemplating suicide; evacuation by train; Allied strafing resulting in prisoner deaths; a death march; and liberation by United States troops in Stamsreid. He shows a photograph entrusted to a non-Jewish neighbor by his mother.
Format
Archives or Manuscripts
Added to Catalog
June 01, 2002
References
Harry Z. Holocaust Testimony (HVT-2504). Fortunoff Video Archive for Holocaust Testimonies, Yale University Library.
Cite as
Harry Z. Holocaust Testimony (HVT-2504). Fortunoff Video Archive for Holocaust Testimonies, Yale University Library.
Genre/Form
Oral histories (document genres)
Citation

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