We Were Terrified and Wanted to Go Home
At the end of 1944, eight-year-old Alžběta, due to her half Jewish origin, was transported to the Jewish ghetto in Terezín along with her siblings. She remembers that all the children were afraid: “We were dumbfounded and diffident because we did not know what was going on. Imagine you are nine and under the command of German speaking ladies. A lot of children were crying. We were hungry; children who were supposed to grow were starving.” The very first day in the camp they separated the siblings into individual buildings. Little Alžběta stayed with her younger sister Maria in the so called kinder house. There children suffered from hunger, cold and were constantly bullied. For example, they had to watch the execution of their teacher Hela. The Nazis killed her because she taught children Czech. Right before the liberation of Terezín, the German wardens and teachers ran away leaving the children alone and without food. Both sisters decided to go home to Loštice and left the ghetto. Two days later they stayed on their own in a nearby park. “So, we made our bed on one of the benches. We were holding each other and sleeping. Imagine two children, in May, two little kids and nobody noticed us because everybody took care of themselves,” remembers Alžběta. By coincidence they were found by their father who was returning from a concentration camp: “And suddenly – it was a miracle; I cannot imagine how it was possible. Our father coming back from Germany, searching for us and finally he found us."
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