Wednesday, October 12, 2011

Testimony 2-Cody Bareford

Ursula Levy was born in Osnabruck, Germany on May 11, 1935. Ursula and her brother, George, lived with their parents until their father was taken to a concentration camp. Ursula's mother began worrying for her children's life and decided to send them to a catholic camp in Holland. While at the camp the priest took a liking to Ursula and her brother and even converted them to Catholic and baptized them with their mother’s permission. The priest also covered for Ursula and her brother by telling others that her father was a Catholic from America. Luckily Ursula was with her brother a majority of the time, although not all the camps she visited allowed males and females together. At one of the last camps she visited she was allowed to be in the male barracks with her brother. Ursula went into detail about her time spent at camps, although she was a rather fortunate Jew compared to most. She describes how she was never abused in any way whatsoever, and nobody ever stole her food, even though it would have been very easy to. She states, “A crumb of bread was the difference between life and death.” In 1945 she was finally freed and went on to do great things with her life. She talked about how she resumed school after being free and eventually went to nursing school in Chicago which took her ten years to complete due to her marriage and having children. Despite the atrocities she faced, Ursula overcame the odds and did great things.

Testimony-1 Cody Bareford

David Abrams is a Holocaust survivor from multiple Nazi concentration camps. Mr. Abrams was born on December 8, 1928 in Dej-Romania. Abrams led a fairly normal Jewish life for the most part until he was fifteen. Soon after his bar mitzvah his father passed away, and just a few months later he was taken to the Ghetto. His Ghetto was in a field and families were required to build their own shelter during their stay there. After a month the Jews were quickly rounded up and sent to Auschwitz where they began being separated. People were separated by their ability to work, if they weren’t able to work they were sent to the gas chambers. Mr. Abrams stayed in Auschwitz for approximately a month and was shipped to Mauthausen. He received the number 71,701 after steeping off the train, which was used to identify them. During his time in Mauthausen he began witnessing people stealing from one another and even witnessed a few eating the dead to survive. While being forced to work in Mauthausen David got an infection on the heel of his foot, at first he was skeptical to go get examined, but when he decided he was most likely going to die anyways he went and got checked out by an SS doctor. After seeing David was healthier than most he was admitted to the hospital where he spent two weeks eating and sleeping, which ultimately saved his life. David said he prayed every day at camp asking God that today be his last day at camp and stated, “That was the only thing that kept me going, my faith.”

Wednesday, October 5, 2011

"A Film Unfinished"-Cody Bareford


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Film Unfinished