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D-Day at last. The invasion started about 1 a.m., and I have been listening to the radio since 8. My first reaction, and I’m sure everyone else’s—“Thank God, and God keep…
Contributor:
Helen Jacobus Apte
Places:
Tampa, United States of America
Date:
1944–1945
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Benjamin came back with the same suitcase and the same few sets of underwear he had left with for Germany. He brought back everything—his illness included. The only thing he didn’t bring back were his…
Contributor:
Joseph Buloff
Places:
New York, United States of America
Date:
1972
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The most terrible thing of all, somehow, was that at Brzezinka the sun was bright and warm, the rows of graceful poplars were lovely to look upon and on the grass near the gates children played.
It…
Contributor:
A. M. Rosenthal
Places:
New York, United States of America
Date:
1958
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My mother and father were an embarrassment to me, up until high school. They were much older than my friends’ parents (my dad was forty- seven and my mother was forty- four when I was born), and they…
Contributor:
Paul Wellstone
Places:
Washington, United States of America
Date:
2001
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One week later, as we returned from work, there, in the middle of the camp, in the Appelplatz, stood a black gallows.
We learned that soup would be distributed only after roll call, which lasted…
Contributor:
Elie Wiesel
Places:
New York, United States of America
Date:
1958
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“All right,” someone will say, “granted you are a Pole. But in that case, why ‘we jews’?” To which I answer: because of blood “Then racialism again?” No, not racialism at all. Quite the contrary.
Th…
Contributor:
Julian Tuwim
Places:
New York, United States of America
Date:
1944