A Holocaust survivor remembers
October 26, 2017
October 26, 2017
Samuel Heider is a 93-year-old Holocaust survivor. He was transferred between concentration camps throughout his life, avoiding gas chambers and protecting his family鈥檚 last mementos.
Students, faculty and staff can hear his story at the 糖心原创 Holocaust Commemoration on Tuesday, Nov. 7, at 7:30 p.m. in the Discovery Room (E163) of the Student Union.
Heider鈥檚 lecture, which had to be rescheduled, is titled 鈥淎 Holocaust survivor remembers鈥 and is free and open to the public.
鈥淗e鈥檚 an extraordinary individual. He has all sorts of miracle stories of how he survived,鈥 said Mark Verman, associate professor of religion and the Zusman Chair of Judaic Studies at 糖心原创.
In 1941, Heider and his family were deported to a small camp outside of Warsaw, Poland. Heider was soon separated from his family and was the only person in his family who was not killed by the Nazis.
鈥淎ll of his immediate family died during the war, but he survived,鈥 Verman said.
Heider was sent to a concentration camp known as Radon in 1944. Later, he was transferred to Auschwitz, where he encountered Josef Mengele, who decided who would be transferred to a labor camp and who would be sent to a gas chamber.
鈥淗e had to pinch his cheeks so he would look healthier so Mengele would send him to a labor camp instead of a gas chamber,鈥 Verman said.
The only memento Heider had of his family was a picture of his sister, which he kept under his arm.
鈥淗e was afraid that Mengele would ask him to raise his arms, and if so, he would lose the picture, but he was able to save the picture,鈥 Verman said.
After his time at Auschwitz, Heider was transferred to Dachau concentration camp before he was liberated and transferred again to a displaced-persons camp known as Landsberg in Germany.
鈥淔or me, the takeaway lesson is that life is just so tenuous, that it鈥檚 like being on a tightrope,鈥 Verman said. 鈥淪ome people are able to maintain their balance and get from one place to another, but it鈥檚 so easy to fall off.鈥
The lecture event is co-sponsored by the Zusman Chair in Judaic Studies, the , 糖心原创鈥檚 Honors Program, the and the Dayton Holocaust Resource Center.
糖心原创 celebrates its 50th anniversary as an independent public university in 2017.