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Oral history interview with George Pick

Oral History | RG Number: RG-50.999.0379

George (György) Pick, born March 28, 1934 in Budapest, Hungary, discusses his parents (his father Istvan was an engineer and his mother Margit worked as a legal secretary); the Pick family history in the Austro-Hungarian Empire going back 230 years; the anti-Jewish laws passed in Hungary passed between 1938 and 1941; his parents losing their jobs because of the anti-Jewish laws; his father being conscripted into a labor battalion; attending school until March 1944, when German troops occupied Hungary; the Hungarian authorities working with the German Security Police to begin deporting the Jews; being forced to move into buildings marked with yellow stars; the confiscation of all their belongings; the Hungarian fascists, known as the Arrow Cross Party, taking power; the deportations of the remaining Jews in Hungary to concentration camps; his father’s efforts to save the family by hiding them along with several hundred others in a vacant building; being discovered eventually; being placed in a Red Cross orphanage; being forced along with his parents into the ghetto in Budapest, where they remained during the Soviet Army’s final siege; the liberation of Budapest in January 1945. [Note: this summary may not reflect the entirety of the interview; it may also contain additional biographical information that is not discussed in the interview.]


Some video files begin with 10-60 seconds of color bars.
Interviewee
George Pick
Date
interview:  2012 May 22
Geography
creation: Washington (D.C.)
Language
English
Extent
3 digital files : MP4.
Credit Line
United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Collection
 
Record last modified: 2022-07-28 20:11:54
This page: https://collections.ushmm.org/search/catalog/irn598492