After liberation

Henry Lowenstein

Jack Adler

In the days and weeks after their liberation, many former concentration camp prisoners succumb to the effects of malnutrition and disease resulting from their treatment by the Nazis. Jack is 16 years old and completely emaciated. Early on, his condition is so poor that doctors do not expect him to make it, but he pulls through.

Jack spends three months in the hospital, regaining his health and his strength. Upon his discharge, he lives in a displaced persons camp with other Jewish survivors.

Transcript

Jack Adler: The hospital was in a-- what, later on, became a displaced-persons' camp, in the city of Foehrenwald, Germany. I think, prior to the liberation, it was a work camp for-- where they provided housing for people to live who worked around the area. The doctors-- very interesting medical team. I remember-- as I stated, I was suffering from-- beside malnutrition-- I weighed 66 pounds-- I-- I had high fever. I had double pneumonia. So the nurses wrapped me in-- in sheets dipped in ice water and alcohol, to draw out the temperature.

But I remember the rounds, the daily rounds, were-- were being made by three doctors. One was an American, one was a Hungarian Nazi-- they call them [? Milos-- ?] and one was a German doctor. And I remember, they make-- you know, there at the beginning, when I was hospitalized, they-- you had your chart at the foot of the bed. So they would look at the chart, talk to each other--

And I could barely-- I was in such high fever-- I had such high fever, I couldn't keep my eyes open, but I could see, barely, through them. And then they look, and they confer, and they go like this. In other words, he's a goner. I said, [INAUDIBLE] that’s what you think. [LAUGHS] More or less. You know.

So I was pretty bad off. I was hospitalized, oh, for about 90 days-- three months. And I got excellent medical care, by the way. The doctors were good. The nurses were good. We received good food and so on.

 

"I weighed 66 pounds."

USC Shoah Foundation Visual History Archive, Interview 18433

Excerpt from Jack's memoir, Y? A Holocaust Narrative:

I was in the hospital for ninety days. I was a skeleton when I arrived, but by the time I was released, I had put on some weight from fluids and food. I slowly began to regain my strength; it was like learning to live again after spending what felt like an eternity in a walking death as a soulless slave. First, I found my composure and ability to think clearly while bedridden. Then, I could move and talk. Finally, I took my first steps as a free man and left the bed, moving about the room and eventually outside of it. After a while I could move about in the main ward that was used for recreation. We patients played cards, checkers, and chess, anything to kill the time and feel like people again.

[...]

I lived in the hospital within the camp from the time of my liberation until sometime around September of 1945. The camp itself then became my home and I lived there until November of 1946. I was seventeen when I left. That year or so was a blur as I rejoined something of a makeshift society. I didn’t feel like I was home or that I belonged there, but I was safe and well-fed, and that was enough for someone who had been denied the basic requirements of humanity for so long.

[...]

I developed friendships, but nothing in terms of lifelong loyalties or remembrances. Our social skills had been stolen and, as much as we rejoiced in our freedom and the reclamation of our names, we still struggled (at least I did) with getting to truly know one another.

At the end of the war, hundreds of thousands of Jewish refugees find shelter in Allied DP camps in Germany, Austria and Italy. In June 1945, Foehrenwald, located just south of Munich near the town of Wolfratshausen, established specifically for Jewish refugees and is one of the largest such camps.  By early 1946, there are more than 5,000 Jewish refugees living here. Some want to return to their homes, but many are waiting for an opportunity to leave Europe and start new lives in Mandate Palestine, the United States, or Australia. Jack has no interest in returning to Poland, a sentiment underscored by news of attacks on Jewish survivors there.

Map showing locations of displaced persons camps in Germany following World War II. Foehrenwald is indicated near Munich in Bavaria.

Displaced persons’ camps, 1945-46. Foehrenwald is indicated. 

United States Holocaust Memorial Museum

Transcript

Interviewer: Jack, the years-- five, six years of life in two ghettos and two camps, witnessing the atrocities around you, the-- your family dying around you, all these things happening around you, what kept you going? What-- what-- what, inside of you, kept you going?

Jack Adler: I tried-- I tried to figure this out. But I think, subconsciously, the fact that, as we arrived at Auschwitz-Birkenau and we were being separated, my sisters from my father and me, and my father told us [PAUSES FOR 5 SECONDS] [CRYING] that we'll meet back home, and not knowing what happened to him or to my sister-- it kept you going-- yes, you're-- you're going to survive. I'm going to do that, you know?

"... and my father told us that we'll meet back home ..."

USC Shoah Foundation Visual History Archive, Interview 18433

During the past six years, from the age of 10 to the age of 16, Jack has endured inconceivable hardship and persecution. The one thing that helped him persevere was hope: that the ordeal would pass, that they would survive, that he would be reunited with his family.

Excerpt from Jack's memoir, Y? A Holocaust Narrative:

Even though all of us found ourselves in a hopeless situations [sic], the one thing the Nazis couldn’t take away was what was in our heads, and for survival purposes or techniques, you have to have a positive mental attitude. Very few people who gave up hope survived. Suicide is a permanent solution to a temporary problem. I just dealt with what was happening to me. My positive mental attitude came from my family. I wanted to see them again.

Jack searches the lists of survivors compiled by the International Red Cross and posted in the camp. He learns that his father died in Dachau just before the end of the war, and his sister Ester perished in the concentration camp Bergen-Belsen, where she was sent from Auschwitz.

He is the only survivor of his immediate family, and one of only five members of his extended family to survive.

Transcript

Interviewer: --what is your understanding of what took place with your father?

Jack Adler: Well, he-- he continued to work at the same place. What happened eventually-- and I was unaware of it-- just a few days before the war ended, he was sent into the main camp of Dachau, as well, but he probably-- well, he did die there, because I found documentation to that effect after the war.

As a matter of fact, I found it in the Jewish paper in New York, The Forward, believe it or not. They listed names. It's unbelievable. So he just died, I would think, of malnutrition, primarily.

Interviewer: And do you-- do you know how-- what-- what the date was, and--

Jack Adler: They published the date-- March 13, 1945, which would be about six weeks before the war ended.

Interviewer: So six weeks prior to liberation.

Jack Adler: Prior to liberation.

Interviewer: How about other family members--

Jack Adler: Well, my sister-- I found out after the war, my older sister, she died in the camp of Bergen-Belsen concentration camp.

Interviewer: From what?

Jack Adler: Probably the same thing. Most of them who died-- oh, of course, there were many tortured and so on. But those who worked usually died from malnutrition-- you know, starvation.

Interviewer: Aunts, uncles, cousins--

Jack Adler: I have-- as I said, there were five survivors, only one cousin from my father's-side family, and then a-- a cousin who went through the camps.

My aunt, who was my father's sister, she was the only one. Her family did escape to Russia, I mentioned briefly before. And they-- a boy of theirs died. They had a young boy died. And I don't know the circumstances how.

And he and my aunt and uncle, and a daughter who lives in Israel now, they survived. And right after the war, they went back to Poland. They had a candy factory in the city of Kalisz, Poland. And they went back to claim their property, after the war, in Poland. And they were told they have 24 hours to leave Poland, or they will finish what Hitler failed to do.

So they escaped. They went to West Germany and, from West Germany, to Israel. This was after the war.

Interviewer: And how many of your family members perished during the war?

Jack Adler: From our immediate and extended family of 83, five survived.

"From our immediate and extended family of 83, five survived."

USC Shoah Foundation Visual History Archive, Interview 18433

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