Jewish Survivor Tola Hauptman | USC Shoah Foundation
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- เผยแพร่เมื่อ 21 มี.ค. 2012
- You are watching Tola Hauptman, a Jewish Holocaust survivor. To learn more about Tola, and explore the stories of other Holocaust survivors and witnesses, visit vhaonline.usc.edu.
These videos are brought to you by USC Shoah Foundation, which was founded by Steven Spielberg in 1994. The Institute preserves video testimonies of 55,000+ genocide survivors, witnesses, liberators, and others. Each video testimony has been indexed with specific terms, names, places, and dates. Click here to explore the Visual History Archive: vhaonline.usc.edu.
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Your testimony is so interesting and touching. So proud of your Mom.
@3:12:12 “I never judge people as a group, I judge them as individuals. There are good people and bad people”.
Thank you for sharing your story. I saw the shock and horror on your face at the things you witnessed. There were also many amazing miracles. You were very brave.
Thank you for your testimony.
Thank you for sharing your story. I couldnt imagine what you had to go thru.
Tola gave a heartfelt testimony. There was so much she wanted to convey and it was a little hard to follow at times. She was very brave when she needed to be during that awful time. Especially when she confronted that tram driver's family to ask if they would hide her. She knew when to keep quiet and when to act and when to leave Poland.
Thank you for sharing your testimony. Much appreciated!
I respect this woman's testimony.
I. Love listening to her tekk her story
So sad what she went thru. The volume of the interviewer is very low and I could not understand her questions. Thank goodness the survivor was a bit better to hear. Her memory is very good. May this never happen again. The seeds of hate had been planted for many generations by the church. Shameful.
A lucky family that survived... atypical story.
Free book in PDF format can be read online or downloaded:
www.windowview.org/download/jesuswasajew.pdf
I missed the part of large house shared, and fathers work,
What I noticed from a lot of the testimonies that the victims prided themselves and others for not looking Jewish, I understand it is a benefit in situations of survival but it almost seems like they took pride in it and that part saddens me as a person of color.
Obviously not looking Jewish could save them and maybe enable them to buy food for their families. I understand your point of view as a person of colour. However I think their pride in not looking Jewish was only during the terrible times of the Holocaust.
I don't agree. One can only speak from their own historical experience and times they lived in.
Please don't judge, it's the least we can do.
Without prejudice
@@user-ib2no1kr5v I’m not judging I’m just saying from a lot these testimonies they seem to pride themselves and others by saying they don’t look Jewish.
It was literally survival! They are proud to be Jewish@@erinlevere6881
I think this must come from the likelihood of survival. If a person looked like a stereotypical Jew, they were automatic fodder for the many anti-semites that populated Europe at the time. If they could “pass” as gentile, they were much safer in certain situations and possibly even accepted on rare occasions.
Why did she bother to have her son bar mi sphered if she doesn't believe in God or religion?
Culture? Tradition? Family? The same reason why many people christen their children if they are not practicing or believing Christians.