Alice B. Holocaust testimony
Abstract
Videotape testimony of Alice B., who was born in Hungary, the youngest of three children. She recounts her family's export business and their farm in the country; harassment by non-Jews; visiting a cousin in Budapest; her brother's draft into a Hungarian slave labor battalion; completing high school; German invasion in March 1944; ghettoization; deportation with her family to Auschwitz-Birkenau; separation with her sister and cousins from their parents; reciting poetry, singing, and discussing their previous lives to raise their morale; her sister protecting her; their separation (she never saw her again) when Alice B. was selected for transfer to a labor camp; slave labor in a munitions factory; sabotaging the work; clearing rubble from the nearby town after Allied bombings; liberation from a death march by United States troops; assistance from the Red Cross; and working for the British occupying forces. Ms. B. discusses continuing nightmares and physical ailments resulting from her experiences and attributing her survival to the hope of going home, which she never did.
Extent and Medium
3 videocassettes
Conditions Governing Access
This testimony can only be viewed by Yale students and faculty on the Yale campus.
Conditions Governing Reproduction
Copyright has been transferred to the Fortunoff Video Archive for Holocaust Testimonies. Use of this testimony requires permission of the Fortunoff Video Archive. This testimony cannot be used for publication.
Rules and Conventions
Describing Archives: A Content Standard
Process Info
compiled by Staff of the Fortunoff Video Archive for Holocaust Testimonies
People
- B., Alice.
Corporate Bodies
- Auschwitz (Concentration camp)
- Birkenau (Concentration camp)
- International Red Cross and Red Crescent Movement.
Subjects
- Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) -- Personal narratives.
- Women.
- Video tapes.
- Holocaust survivors.
- Concentration camp inmates -- Family relationships.
- Sisters.
- Jewish ghettos.
- World War, 1939-1945 -- Personal narratives, Jewish.
- Sabotage.
- Death marches.
- Concentration camps -- Psychological aspects.
- Forced labor.
- Postwar effects.
- Antisemitism -- Prewar.
- Mutual aid.
Places
- Hungary.
- Budapest (Hungary)
Genre
- Oral histories. -- aat