LEADER 04226spd a2200733 a 4500001 4285919 005 20180604132506.0 008 980420s1992 ctu eng d 035 (OCoLC)ocn702233055 035 (CStRLIN)CTYV98-A110 035 4285919 035 HVT-2008 035 |9FLW0030YL 040 CtY |beng |cCtY |eappm 079 (OCoLC)702154573 090 |bHVT-2008 100 1 B., Susan, |d1927- 245 10 Susan B. Holocaust testimony (HVT-2008) |h[videorecording] / |cinterviewed by Jaschael Pery, |fFebruary 6, 1992. 260 New York, N.Y. : |bA Living Memorial to the Holocaust-Museum of Jewish Heritage,1992. 300 1 videorecording (1 hr., 26 min.) : |bcol. 520 Videotape testimony of Susan B., who was born in Michalovce, Czechoslovakia in 1927. She recalls cordial relations with non-Jews; increasing antisemitism in 1938; a priest who converted her family to ensure their safety; incarceration with her sister in the local jail for two nights for not wearing the star; hiding with a Christian family; her family's incarceration in Nováky; hiding with non-Jews; obtaining false papers; moving to Prešov, then Bratislava; joining her parents in Novaky; traveling with her sister to Trenčin; her sister's return to Novaky; living in Bratislava under an assumed name; arrest; deportation to Sered,̕ Auschwitz, and Kurzbach; forced labor; a death march to Gross-Rosen; train transport to Bergen-Belsen; meeting her aunt; hospitalization; assistance from her aunt and a friend; and liberation by British troops. Mrs. B. discusses recuperating in Bergen-Belsen displaced persons camp; establishing contact with her father who was in Buchenwald; traveling to Prague; learning her entire immediate family had survived; their reunion in Michalovce; emigrating to Israel in 1949; marriage; and emigrating to the United States in 1958. Mrs. B. discusses many details of life in hiding and the camps, including her state of mind and the deaths of her large, extended family. She shows photographs. 562 |e2 copies: |b3/4 in. dub; |band 1/2 in. VHS with time coding. 524 Susan B. Holocaust Testimony (HVT-2008). Fortunoff Video Archive for Holocaust Testimonies, Yale University Library. 600 10 B., Susan, |d1927- 610 20 Nováky (Concentration camp) 610 20 Sered (Concentration camp) 610 20 Auschwitz (Concentration camp) 610 20 Gross-Rosen (Concentration camp) 610 20 Bergen-Belsen (Concentration camp) 610 20 DP-Camp Bergen-Belsen. 650 0 Holocaust survivors. 650 0 Video tapes. 650 0 Women. 650 0 Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) |vPersonal narratives. 650 0 Concentration camps |xPsychological aspects. 650 0 World War, 1939-1945 |vPersonal narratives, Jewish. 650 0 Concentration camp inmates |xFamily relationships. 650 0 World War, 1939-1945 |xChildren. 650 0 Christian converts from Judaism. 650 0 Family. 650 0 World War, 1939-1945 |xPrisoners and prisons, Slovak. 650 0 Forced labor. 650 0 Death marches. 651 0 Czechoslovakia. 651 0 Israel. 651 0 Michalovce (Slovakia) 651 0 Prešov (Slovakia) 651 0 Prague (Czech Republic) 651 0 Bratislava (Slovakia) 651 0 Trenčin (Slovakia) 655 7 Oral histories (document genres) |2aat |0http://vocab.getty.edu/aat/300202595 690 4 Child survivors. 690 4 Aid by non-Jews. 690 4 Hospitals in concentration camps. 690 4 Hiding. 690 4 Mutual aid. 650 0 Refugee camps. 690 4 Postwar experiences. 691 4 Kurzbach (Poland : Concentration camp) 700 1 Pery, Jaschael, |einterviewer. 852 Fortunoff Video Archive for Holocaust Testimonies, |bYale University Library, |eBox 208240, New Haven, CT 06520-8240. 902 |b4664961 903 |yDigital testimony (mssa.hvt.2008) |uhttps://fortunoff.aviaryplatform.com/r/pz51g0j52j 904 |yFor information on where you can view this digital testimony, click here. |uhttps://fortunoff.library.yale.edu/archive/overview/