A Story

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Lifestyle

I met her at my Mother’s. Like my Mother, she is a Holocaust survivor. Hers was a different journey… a different story.
She was born in Germany in 1934. As a young child, she escaped to France and was moved to a children’s detention facility in Marseilles.
Incredibly, her Mother found her in Marseilles. A ship was leaving for the United States. Mother and daughter found their way onto the boat. While at sea, her Mother found her husband was also on the boat.
She told us how, after crossing the Atlantic, they waited aboard the ship in New York harbor under the gaze of the Statue of Liberty.
But she, like the others on the ship, was not allowed to disembark. They were not to be allowed into the United States.
Turned away, the ship left….looking for a place that would take them in. Luckily, the Dominican Republic accepted the ship. (Certainly, a far-better fate than for the ships that were sent back to Europe.)
After several years in the Dominican Republic, the family found its way to New York.

There are so many stories. We are lucky to have yet one more shared.

Comments

Fred Klein

I know someone who was turned back on the St. Louis (I think).
Cayce Crown

What a wonderful story of miracles and hope. Your Mother is such a vehicle for love in this interesting world.
Dana Charlton

So pertinent to today's times, but much more fortunate. Thank you for sharing that story.
Gideon Schein

What a great story like so many of those stories. My grandmother had in Berlin for three years somehow without being caught. My father put my grandmother had never met told her that basically one way or the other she was leaving Berlin and that is why it was a far preferable one relented and he got her a spot on one of the last frigates leaving Lisbon Portugal in July of 1940. Talk about yet another miracle.

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