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<title level="m">Flicker of Hope (Part II)</title>
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<sp><speaker>Richard (Dick) Holland <roleName>Narrator</roleName></speaker>
<p>At the conclusion of World
War II in May of 1945, the prospect of survivors
rebuilding their lives was daunting. Antisemitism still persisted in parts of
Europe and Jewish survivors feared returning to their former home. Thousands of names of survivors
are posted in newspapers, tracing services, and in
other public archives. Unfortunately, in many cases, survivors were unable to locate loved
ones because either they did not survive or they had
found a way to immigrate after liberation. Immigration possibilities were
extremely limited and often took months or years to acquire the
documentation needed to leave the refugee camps in Europe. An
executive order called the Truman directive required that existing
immigration quotas be designated for displaced persons.</p>
</sp>

<sp><speaker>Eadie Tsabari,  <roleName>Daughter of Holocaust Survivors</roleName></speaker>
<p>So this Rudy and Bea Fox were very good
friends of my parents. And after the war, they all went and ended in Stuttgart
in Germany for a couple of years because they really didn't
have anywhere to go. And these people all lived
in a great big house. Like, I don't know how many couples,
10 couples lived in this house. And they tried to, you know,
find money and jobs and this and that. And they worked and they lived together
in Germany until someone finally got papers to come wherever they were going either the United States or Israel or South America.</p>
</sp>

<sp><speaker>Fred Kader,  <roleName>Child Holocaust Survivor</roleName></speaker>
<p>And by this time I must've been
pretty wild. I must've been, I mean, I had been two years on my own without
much supervision. For two years, I lived with my uncle after
he found me in Brussels, with his family and maybe they're
family, but do they really want me or am I just going through here just
like I went through Wezembeek?</p>
</sp>

<sp><speaker>Richard (Dick) Holland <roleName>Narrator</roleName></speaker>
<p>Finally in 1948, Congress passed
the Displaced Persons Act. This act helped individuals who
were victims of persecution by the Nazi government. They were granted permanent residency
and employment without forcing another individual out of a job. The Displaced Persons Act
authorized 200,000 DPs to enter the United States.</p>
</sp>

<sp><speaker>Alex Grossman,  <roleName>Son of Holocaust Survivors </roleName></speaker>
<p>Coming to the US wasn't an easy thing
for a Holocaust survivor because the, uh, there were quotas on people that
they would let into this country. When my father was in
the displaced persons camp, he got a job with the US Army
working on their vehicles. And, uh, he was befriended by many army officers
and they kind of paved the way, made it easier for him
to enter this country.</p>
</sp>

<sp><speaker>Bea Karp <roleName>Child Holocaust Survivor</roleName></speaker>
<p>My father wrote a letter to my
two aunts that were living in New York City. They were the sisters of my mother that
if anything should happen to my mother or him, we should go to them. And I really didn't want to
come here believe it or not, I wanted to stay in England.
I was perfectly happy.</p>
</sp>

<sp><speaker>Richard (Dick) Holland <roleName>Narrator</roleName></speaker>
<p>The Hebrew Immigration
Society (HIAS) was founded in 1881, although they were not able to
rescue refugees during World War II, HIAS was instrumental in
evacuating displaced person camps and aiding in the
resettlement of some 150,000 people in 330 US communities, as well as to Canada,
Australia, and South America.</p>
</sp>

<sp><speaker>Eadie Tsabari,  <roleName>Daughter of Holocaust Survivors</roleName></speaker>
<p>Rudy Fox lived in the house with
them and he, uh, he had an aunt here. They got them papers and they sponsored
them and they came to Omaha first.</p>
</sp>

<sp><speaker>Richard (Dick) Holland <roleName>Narrator</roleName></speaker>
<p>The American Joint Distribution
Committee provided relief for over 700,000 people worldwide before,
during, and after the war. They supported soup kitchens, hospitals, and established educational
and cultural programs.</p>
</sp>

<sp><speaker>Alex Grossman,  <roleName>Son of Holocaust Survivors </roleName></speaker>
<p>We came in on the, uh, USS Tiger
I was told, which is a, uh, a cargo ship. It landed at Ellis
Island. It was processed through there. They were given by the Jewish Agency,
a, an apartment in New York. My father, he had obtained a job through
again, through the Jewish Agency, in a bicycle factory someplace in
New York. For two or three days straight running, he got lost going to work and coming home from work
and couldn't find his way back home. Of course, they knew no English, so it
was very difficult for them to, uh, to get around.</p>
</sp>

<sp><speaker>Richard (Dick) Holland <roleName>Narrator</roleName></speaker>
<p>The United Service for New
Americans had a quota system. It served as a way to distribute Jewish
immigrants nationally also to not burden communities with
overwhelming numbers of new people.</p>
</sp>

<sp><speaker>Alex Grossman,  <roleName>Son of Holocaust Survivors </roleName></speaker>
<p>My father was from a small city in
Czechoslovakia and the Tatra Mountains. He and my mom went to the Jewish Agency
and they asked if they could come to a small city someplace in the mountains. The Jewish agency looked up
their records and they said, we have just a place for you and
loaded the family up on a train and they got off in Omaha. Of course, not a penny to their name
and they had to make their life here.</p>
</sp>

<sp><speaker>Lola Reinglas, <roleName>Holocaust Survivor</roleName></speaker>
<p>After we went on the train
and we started moving. We went to the diner and
since we didn't speak English, the waiter, he said, I'll
do it. And certainly he did. He brought us two hamburgers
with french fries, a small box of milk and a
piece of pumpkin pie since it was after Thanksgiving. We gave him the $20. He brought us some change and
then his hand was sticking out that means he wanted a tip. So my husband gave him the rest of
the money and the $20 were for the food. And since then we didn't eat until we
got to Omaha because we didn't have any more money. And I really cried, cried from all the way
from New York to Omaha. And I talked to my husband,
what are we going to do? We have no language. We have nobody there
that could take care of us. We don't understand a
word they are saying to us. How are we going to make a living when we pay $20 for two
hamburgers? And my husband, the optimist that he always was,
he said, Lola, don't worry. If I get a job, I work hard and we are going to make
a pretty good living.</p>
</sp>

<sp><speaker>Bea Karp, <roleName>Child Holocaust Survivor</roleName></speaker>
<p>My husband, he told me he didn't
want to live in New York City. And I had told him, I want to have a
lot of children. So he says in New York, no place to raise children. His brother-in-law had opened up
some grocery stores in the west. And so he wanted him to come
and manage them and help him. And so we moved out west.</p>
</sp>

<sp><speaker>Eadie Tsabari, <roleName>Daughter of Holocaust Survivors</roleName></speaker>
<p>Rudy Fox came to Omaha, Mrs. Fox wanted to introduce her new nephew
and niece that came from the old country in this. And they pulled out all sorts of
pictures and photographs of my parents' wedding. Cause they had just
been at this huge wedding. And my aunt Eudice was at the
greeting party to meet these new immigrants. And she looked down at
the pictures and said, oh my God, it's my nephew's wedding that you were at. And that's how they discovered that
my uncle and aunt were here in Omaha. Herman and Eudice Mirowitz. And they'd come before the war because
Herman was a religious man and didn't want to serve in the army.</p>
</sp>

<sp><speaker>Richard (Dick) Holland <roleName>Narrator</roleName></speaker>
<p>How did Omaha receive the survivors
as they arrived after World War II? It was difficult and many recall they were often left to start
a new life on their own.</p>
</sp>

<sp><speaker>Eadie Tsabari,  <roleName>Daughter of Holocaust Survivors</roleName></speaker>
<p>Their entire life was
taken away from them. Anything that they knew about was taken
away from them. Any possessions obviously that they had
was taken away from them. They were in their twenties
in their early twenties. And they came to this country and as
hard as they had to work and they had to work very hard because
they came with nothing. They just got to start all over again.</p>
</sp>

<sp><speaker>Richard (Dick) Holland <roleName>Narrator</roleName></speaker>
<p>There were numerous businesses owned
by members of the Jewish community who hired these individuals to work for them.</p>
</sp>

<sp><speaker>Fred Kader, <roleName>Child Holocaust Survivor</roleName></speaker>
<p>Someone else from Omaha had set up the
pediatric neurology division, at the University of Nebraska Medical
Center. So I came back by car, got off the highway and forgot to get
back on and we brought up three kids here.</p>
</sp>

<sp><speaker>Richard (Dick) Holland <roleName>Narrator</roleName></speaker>
 <p>Bob Newman working with
his family business, Hinky Dinky, recalls when Joe
Fishel came to work on their dock.</p>
</sp>

<sp><speaker>Eadie Tsabari,  <roleName>Daughter of Holocaust Survivors</roleName></speaker>
<p>My father worked at the
Hinky Dinky at the, um, at the warehouse. And he, I just remember the story he used
to get on the bus in the morning. And he had a little piece of paper pinned
onto his shirt to tell the bus driver where to let him off. And he would
sling bananas. He used to carry bananas. That's all he could do
cause he couldn't speak.</p>
</sp>

<sp><speaker>Richard (Dick) Holland <roleName>Narrator</roleName></speaker>
<p>Hinky Dinky was a grocery store
chain started by the brothers, Jule, Henry, Albert Newman and
cousin Ben Silver in Omaha in 1925. Bob who was working summer shifts, often heard horrific details
of the Holocaust and remembers them to this day. Another cousin, Herb Berkowitz, recalls that
those survivors who worked at Hinky Dinky made a great impression
in terms of morale, gratitude, work ethic, and learning aptitude.</p>
</sp>

<sp><speaker>Lola Reinglas, <roleName>Holocaust Survivor</roleName></speaker>
<p>My husband was a cabinet
maker and he started working delivering the furniture and it was such a waste of his talent.
Finally, he found a job, not making furniture, but store fixtures. He was working for Jack
Newman on F Street in South Omaha. They hired him and they
paid him 75 cents an hour. And after awhile, they saw how talented
he was so they raised his wages 25 cents and he was making a dollar.</p>
</sp>

<sp><speaker>Alex Grossman,  <roleName>Son of Holocaust Survivors </roleName></speaker>
<p>And the Jewish agency helped them
obtain a job with a local car dealership called Morton Motors
on 3141 Farnam Street. And, uh, he was a mechanic there
for Morton for many, many years, and then moved on to become a machinist
over at Sperry Vickers on 72nd and Crown Point until he retired
when he was 65 years old.</p>
</sp>

<sp><speaker>Eadie Tsabari, <roleName>Daughter of Holocaust Survivors</roleName></speaker>
<p>And over time, uh, he went to work for
his uncle, my great uncle Herman. And he, uh, he owned the Herman Nut
Company. My mother worked full time, helped my father run the business. My
father was active in his community. He was, I mean, there wasn't a grocery store that
you could walk into that didn't know the nut man. I mean, everybody
knew him because his policy was, you got to shake hands with
everybody. He was always kind very, very kind to people.</p>
</sp>

<sp><speaker>Alex Grossman,  <roleName>Son of Holocaust Survivors </roleName></speaker>
<p>There's a number on my father's arm
number was 33072. When you're young, you, you ask what that's for and he told me. It was kind of a foreign
concept to have a number on your arm and why somebody would imprison and
torture you for just being Jewish.</p>
</sp>

<sp><speaker>Mary Sue Grossman,  <roleName>Daughter-in-Law of Holocaust Survivors</roleName></speaker>
<p>I.G. would use his
tattoo as his identifier, 33072, and where some people
will etch a social security number or a code or something on things
that they own. He would etch his
concentration camp number. So to this day we have
machines. We have tools. If you pick it up and look at it, it'll have his concentration
camp number on it. That was his identifier.</p>
</sp>

<sp><speaker>Eadie Tsabari,  <roleName>Daughter of Holocaust Survivors</roleName></speaker>
<p>Everything about our
life was based on what happened then I think, uh, my father had a number on his arm tattooed
on his arm and that was always there. And then we always saw that and it's
not like he talked to us and made them horror stories. And he likes
to talk about before the war. And he likes talks about
after the war also.</p>
</sp>

<sp><speaker>Alex Grossman,  <roleName>Son of Holocaust Survivors </roleName></speaker>
<p>Daily events that triggered something
with them that they would then tell me about, uh, the history. You
finish everything on your plate. Do you treat food as if it was valuable, prisoners fought each other for food. There was a dying person and
I had to carry food to them.</p>
</sp>

<sp><speaker>Eadie Tsabari,  <roleName>Daughter of Holocaust Survivors</roleName></speaker>
<p>You know, their behavior was a little
bit different. They were survivors. So everything that they
had, they had to, you know, they tried to hold on
to food, for example. My dad was came out of the concentration,
camp after the war he weighed 80 pounds, but when it came to food, we like to eat
a lot of food. They were good people, you know, they were funny
people. They, they love to live.</p>
</sp>

<sp><speaker>Alex Grossman,  <roleName>Son of Holocaust Survivors </roleName></speaker>
<p>I grew up understanding both Czech and Polish
and whatever this language was that was the combination. They often spoke to me in another language, in
their language, their native language. And I would answer in English. And then
that's the way the conversations went.</p>
</sp>

<sp><speaker>Eadie Tsabari,  <roleName>Daughter of Holocaust Survivors</roleName></speaker>
<p>My mother was, um, was
a real educated person, even though she didn't make it past the
very far in pub-, you know, in school, she read very well and she was
bound and determined to speak, write, and read in English. She wanted
to. My father on the other hand, um, had a little bit more of
an accent and he, uh, he, I don't think he ever got
through the eighth grade. I don't think he made it
because he had to go to work and then he got taken to the camps.</p>
</sp>

<sp><speaker>Lola Reinglas, <roleName>Holocaust Survivor</roleName></speaker>
<p>I didn't understand a
word of English. Finally, I decided that I have to
do something about that. I started going to high
school in the evening. I left my baby with my husband when he came
from work and I took a bus. And most of the time I came home about 11:30 to 12 o'clock midnight on the bus. And certainly after three or four years, I could speak and I could
write and I could read. And finally I felt the
same way as all the other people.</p>
</sp>

<sp><speaker>Eadie Tsabari,  <roleName>Daughter of Holocaust Survivors</roleName></speaker>
<p>They wanted to be American. Uh,
they wanted to dress like Americans. They wanted to have
things that Americans had. My mother could have been
the ambassador for Omaha. Both my parents loved this country. And you could never say anything bad
about this country because they came from a place where it was so
awful and so wrong to this country and there were so
many opportunities here.</p>
</sp>

<sp><speaker>Bea Karp <roleName>Child Holocaust Survivor</roleName></speaker>
<p>I would say that it's very
important to study hard because the only way that you
can have a democracy I feel is by an informed public and they
should, and because of that, also, they should take an interest in
what is going on in the world and in the United States
and in your state, and even in your town.</p></sp>

<sp><speaker>Mary Sue Grossman,  <roleName>Daughter-in-Law of Holocaust Survivors</roleName></speaker>
<p>We each have a personal responsibility
to stand up for the rights of others, be it from bullying in school, to
standing up to Holocaust deniers. It's, uh, it's each of us is a
personal responsibility for
each and every one of us.</p>
</sp>

<sp><speaker>Eadie Tsabari,  <roleName>Daughter of Holocaust Survivors</roleName></speaker>
<p>The Holocaust is such an important
thing to study and to understand, and to realize that it happened in not
too very long ago and the things that are happening in the world today, we have to really pay close
attention to and not just say, oh, it's happening over there
because it can happen anywhere. It can happen anywhere
with anybody, but it, it has such a spiraling
effect on so many generations. And it continues to have an effect
in my life, out of, you know, from day to day.
So study hard and try to
understand your history so that it doesn't repeat itself.</p>
</sp>

<sp><speaker>Matan Gil, <roleName>High School “March of the Living”<ref target="#soh.sto000.00004.n01">1</ref> Student </roleName></speaker>
<p>My responsibility now is to go and
educate other people, you know, and therefore it kind of starts like
a chain. The youth now we have, uh, I believe we have much more power
than what the youth of, you know, generations before had. So I think we, we need to take advantage
of that power that we have.</p>
</sp>

<sp><speaker>Tali Levin, <roleName>High School “March of the Living”<ref target="#soh.sto000.00004.n01">1</ref> Student </roleName></speaker>
<p>I would say our responsibility is looking
at the issues that are going on now to say, okay, we know we've learned.
So now what can we do about it, there was Rwanda
a couple of years ago, the Holocaust is not the only
genocide that's happened in history. So it's like we have all this
information. So now what do we do? And kind of take charge
and do something about it.</p>
</sp>

<sp><speaker>Daniel Grossman,  <roleName>Grandson of Holocaust Survivors, High School “March of the Living”<ref target="#soh.sto000.00004.n01">1</ref> Student </roleName></speaker>
<p>We're looking to change the
world no matter what people say. And I think that we have the power
and through education, through going on the trips,
through talking to survivors, to becoming living memories in
Omaha, in Nebraska and United States, anywhere I'm telling you if you care about something and if
you know what you're talking about, people will listen and people
will change their actions.</p>
</sp>

<sp><speaker>Richard (Dick) Holland <roleName>Narrator</roleName></speaker>
<p>Menachem Z. Rosensaft,
author of Second Generation Voices: Reflections by the
Children of Holocaust Survivors and Perpetrators said, "Remembering the Holocaust is not an issue for
us. We are in our parents' mind the answer to the Holocaust.
We are in our own minds, the guardians of a problematic,
unique and volatile legacy. We do not need to be
reminded of it. Rather, we need to learn how to translate our
consciousness of evil, or skepticism, or sense of outrage into
constructive action."</p>
</sp>


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<back>
<note xml:id="soh.sto000.00004.n01">1. March of Living is an educational travel program for students from around the world to Poland.</note>
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