TABLE OF CONTENTS
Chapter
1: My Father, Mother, Brother and Me
Chapter
2: My Teens
Chapter
3: My Years in Brno
Chapter
4: The Long Way Home
Chapter
5: 1939 to 1941
Chapter
6: 1942 to 1943: The Years of Great Hope
Chapter
7: The Destruction of Hungarian Jewry
Chapter
8: 1944: The Russians at the Front
Chapter 9: 1945: The Fight for Survival
and Liberation
Chapter 10: From Bilky to Jabloniec: Helen
Gedajlovic's Story
Chapter
11: From Europe to America
Chapter
12: New Country, New Life
Chapter 13: Maftir
Epilogue
Postscript
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Volume 10
David Jacobs
Remember Your Heritage
published by the
Concordia University Chair in Canadian Jewish Studies
Copyright � David Jacobs, 2001
Dedicated to Eleanor, Larry, Heather
and Jeffrey; Fay, Ronnie, Brandon and Matthew
Editors
Note
David Jacobs complete manuscript included
extensive material on the history of his family we have omitted in order to concentrate
his narrative on his wartime experiences. Thus we begin with Chapter 8. Similarly, we have
omitted the final chapter which presents detailed genealogical tables giving a detailed
history of his family. These excised materials can be consulted in the original manuscript
deposited in the Archives of Concordia University.
Key Words
Chust (town in Carpathian region of
Czech/Hungary/Ukraine), Volove (town in Carpathian region of Czech/Hungary/Ukraine), Brno
(town in Czechoslovakia), Jasina (town in Czech./Hungary/Ukraine), Jablonec (Czech town),
Gyergyo-Verhegy (town in Transylvania), partisan groups in forest, Auschwitz-Birkenau, Dr.
Mengele, Warsaw, Warsaw Ghetto, Zichlin (a town), Dachau (concentration camp), Kaufering
(camp in Bavaria), Allach (camp near Dachau), Liberation of the camps, Bilky (Czech town),
Jewish Immigrant Aid Society (JIAS), Montreal.
Abstract
The author describes his
familys social setting and his youthful activities. His account of the wartime
experiences commences with the German invasion of Czechoslovakia and the occupation of
Brno on March 15, 1939, where the author was attending high school. He observes the defeat
and humiliation of the Czech military. Describes the political effects of the invasion;
the establishment of the Protectorates of Bohemia, etc., and the independent Slovakia as a
fascist state. Ten-day journey to Chust; observes battle between Hungarian and Slovakian
troops. Works in a lumber-mill owned by his father and uncle. In 1943 he meets with
partisan leaders who are camped in the surrounding forests; arranges to bring them
supplies. During 1943 Russians turn back the German onslaught on the Eastern front; the
German retreat begins. Jews in Hungary and Czechoslovakia begin to hope for a German
defeat and an end to the war. But on March 22, 1944 Germany occupies Hungary. Jacobs is
placed in a labour brigade and Jews are forced into a ghetto. He is recruited into the
ghetto police. On May 15, transports from the ghetto begin and he is transported to
Auschwitz. Describes selections by Dr. Mengele and camp conditions. Short time later,
Jacobs is transported to Warsaw where he works with a labour gang in the destroyed Jewish
ghetto of Warsaw. Describes efforts at organizing prisoners. With the Russian advance, the
camp is evacuated; about 10,000 inmates are forced to march--a distance of 110
kilometers--then describes the box-cars to Dachau. After a short stay, Jacobs is sent to
Kaufering in Bavaria. In January 1945 he learns of his fathers death; his father and
uncle had accompanied him in the various camps to this date. Describes sadistic Jewish Kapo.
On April 24, 1945 prisoners are ordered to march to a new camp. German guards begin to
defect. Reaches Dachau and then proceeds to Allach. Camp is liberated by the American
army. Meets with American soldiers--one of whom speaks Yiddish--and with their help, takes
over a farm house. The Czech government provides transportation to bring its citizens
home: Jacobs travels to Prague and seeks out surviving family members. Goes to Budapest,
then returns to Jablonec where he operates on the black market selling cigarettes supplied
by a boyhood friend.
In Chapter 10, Jacobs wife
Helen relates her wartime experiences, including a detailed family history. She was
deported to Auschwitz and later to Camp "D" near Hamburg. She was liberated by
the British army May 9, 1945.
Jacobs returns to his narration. In
the immediate post-war years he goes into business as an exporter of costume jewelry and
crystal--the same business his father had been in. With the Communist takeover of
Czechoslovakia, he makes arrangements to emigrate to Canada, where he has relatives.
Describes the difficulties of obtaining proper documents and the route through Budapest,
Vienna and Brussels. He arrives in Montreal April 24, 1945.
Gives detailed account of settling
in Montreal; his employment record and changes of residence. Among his undertakings are
peddling with partner in Newfoundland, and owning a grocery store in Calgary for some
years. At one time he decides to emigrate to the US where his wife has close family, but
decides to make Montreal his home. For many years he owned a textile business in
partnership with an old friend from his home town. Relates his family history--birth,
education and marriage of children--until his retirement.
In "Postscript" describes
a return visit, after 48 years, to his native district of Carpathia, which had been
incorporated into the Soviet Union.
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