News of the war in Europe

Fred Marcus

Fred Marcus

While little news of the Allied war against Japan reaches the refugees in Shanghai, refugees are able to follow events in the war in Europe through Russian radio broadcasts. Fred records the progress of Allied forces on the Eastern and Western fronts every day in his diary by tracking the names of locations now under Allied control. He also notes important events such as the death of U.S. President Franklin D. Roosevelt. In May 1945, refugees in Shanghai quietly celebrate the Allied victory in Europe, but the war against Japan continues through the summer.

News of the horrific crimes of the Nazis against the Jews of Europe does not reach the refugee community in Shanghai until after the Japanese capitulation in the fall of 1945. Fred first learns of the atrocities at the movies, from British newsreels documenting the liberation of concentration camps that were screened to audiences before the main film. As the magnitude of the Holocaust becomes clear, refugees in Shanghai are filled with despair, while recognizing how fortunate they are to have escaped. Although Fred has no family remaining in Europe, many of his friends in Shanghai have lost relatives.

Transcript

Interviewer: While you were in Shanghai, what were you hearing, as the war years continued, about what was happening in Eastern Europe and how the Jews were being treated back in Germany and in Poland?

Fred Marcus: Hardly anything about the Jews. We did have a lot of news. Because Russia, as you may recall, did not enter the war [against Japan] until two weeks before the—the Japanese capitulated. So Russia was theoretically neutral, and we received lots of radio broadcasts from Russia.

And when the Germans began to be expelled from Stalingrad after staying out of Germany, we listened to Russian newscasts every day, and you could tell the place names. And then there are enough people in the ghetto who could speak Russian, because they came from Eastern Europe, that we all had maps, and with a crayon, every day, we would fill in that area that was being reconquered by the Russians of their own land.

And we knew how the war progressed. I don't think that we had any news about the persecution, the Nazi persecution. At least I don't remember that we did.

"We all had maps, and with a crayon, every day, we would fill in that area that was being reconquered by the Russians of their own land."

USC Shoah Foundation Visual History Archive, Interview 9214

Excerpt from Fred’s unpublished autobiography

Tuesday, March 27, 1945—ALARM NO. 58
3rd Duty: 21:30-5:30. ½ hour: coal site, ½ hour: patrol, 1 hour in readiness. Mild, moonlit night. Inv.: Breakthrough till Aschaffenburg, Itanau or Hanau. Darmstadt, Dinslaken.

Saturday, March 31, 1945—ALARM NO. 61
Morning at 10:00: muster for OD in Ward Rd. Heim. General instructions. Visit to Alexanders. Take a shower in Seward Rd. Heim. Pick up food. 13:75: prec. 14:05: acute. 14:30: prec.: 15:35: all clear. 6th Duty: 21:30-5:30. As usual. Russ.: 1) Komarow, 2) Danzig, 3) Places in Austro-Hungarian border. Inv. Giessen, Wetzlar, Bad Nauheim, Buelon, Wildungen.“

[...]

Saturday, April 14, 1945—ALARM NO. 68
President Roosevelt died suddenly of a stroke.

Sunday, April 15, 1945—13:30-21:30. 17th Duty. Russ.: 14.4. [April 14]: Vienna. Moedling. Reached Elbe near Magdeburg. Bad Rodach near Coburg. Weissenfels in Thüringen. Baden-Baden. Weimar.

Tuesday, April 17, 1945—Sleep till noon. 13:30-17:00: special duty at the Alcock Heim—payouts. Home. Russ: Germans inform that a big Russian offensive is beginning between Kuestrin and Neisse. Inv.: Bamberg, Erlangen, Bayreuth, Hagen. Leipzig. Halle. Food prices going sharply up. Sugar from $1,100 to $1,600. Rice from $600 to $1,400. …

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