Read My Bridges of Hope Online
Authors: Livia Bitton-Jackson
S
EPTEMBER
1945 I am back in school.
N
OVEMBER
1945 A stranger returns Daddy's coat.
D
ECEMBER
1945 I find out about
Briha
from Miki.
S
PRING
1946 Miki and Barishna leave for Palestine.
J
ULY
1, 1946 I leave with the boys' and girls' camps for the Tatras.
J
ULY
7, 1946 Frieda leaves the Tatras. I am left alone in charge of the girls' camp.
A
UGUST
11, 1946 The children and I escape
from the partisans in the Tatras.
S
EPTEMBER
1946 I enroll at the teachers' seminary in Bratislava.
M
ARCH
20, 1947 My brother leaves for America.
N
OVEMBER
29, 1947 The UN votes to partition Palestine and establish a Jewish State; Zionist youths dance in the Square.
D
ECEMBER
1947-M
ARCH
1949 My involvement in work for the
Briha.
F
EBRUARY
1948 The Communists take over the government of Czechoslovakia.
M
ARCH
1948 My attempt to enroll in the Haganah camp is rejected; I am appointed school headmistress.
S
EPTEMBER
10-22, 1948 My work in road construction above the Danube; I meet Vilo.
M
ARCH
8, 1949 Mommy and I are crossing the border to Vienna.
S
EPTEMBER
1949 We leave Vienna.
S
EPTEMBER
1949-O
CTOBER
1950 Mommy
and I are residents of Camp Feldafing.
O
CTOBER
1950âF
EBRUARY
1951 Mommy and I are residents of Camp Geretsried.
M
ARCH
19â30, 1951 Our last days in Germany.
A
PRIL
7, 1951 We arrive in New York.
Post-Holocaust Period:
Highlights of Chronology
M
AY
7, 1945 Germany surrenders. The war ends in Europe.
S
UMMER
1945 Displaced Persons Camps established in American and British Zones of Germany and Austria. President Harry Truman sends emissary, Earl Harrison, to visit D.P.s. His recommendation: 100,000 Jewish survivors be sent to Palestine immediately.
F
EBRUARY
1946 Anglo-American Committee of Inquiry recommends that a binational Jewish-Arab government be set up in Palestine.
N
OVEMBER
1945âO
CTOBER
1946 War crimes trials are held in Nuremberg, Germany.
A
PRIL
1947 General Assembly of the UN sets up eleven-nation board, the UN Special Committee on Palestine (UNSCOP), to deal with the Palestine impasse.
N
OVEMBER
29, 1947 General Assembly of the UN votes to partition Palestine and establish sovereign Jewish and Arab states; beginning of widespread Arab attacks.
F
EBRUARY
1948 Communists take over the government of Czechoslovakia.
M
AY
14, 1948 Ben-Gurion reads the Declaration of Independence of Israel; seven Arab armies invade the infant state; Israel wages war of independence.
1949 First Knesset opens; Chaim Weizmann becomes the first president of Israel; David Ben-Gurion elected the first prime minister; cease-fire agreements with Egypt, Lebanon, Transjordan, Syria; Israel becomes a member of the UN; 240,000 immigrants enter the country.
1951 Second Knesset is elected; tension on borders increases; mass immigration continues.
Affidavit
âa-fah-DAY-vitâa voluntary, sworn declaration in writingâL
ATIN
Briha
âBRI-haâflight, or escapeâH
EBREW
Bunker
âBUN-kerâunderground barrackâO
LD
S
WEDISH
Burg
âBOORGâcastleâG
ERMAN
CARE (Cooperative American Remittances Everywhere
)ânonprofit organization begun after World War II to send food and clothing overseas
Diaspora
âdie-AS-pa-raâthe dispersion of the Jews outside their homelandâG
REEK
Eretz
âEH-retzâland-âH
EBREW
Fräulein
âFROY-lineâMissâG
ERMAN
Ghetto
âGE-tohâa part of a city or town where Jews were forced to liveâI
TALIAN
Gymnasium
âjim-NAE-zee-umâclassical secondary schoolâL
ATIN
Haganah
âha-ga-NAHâdefense, voluntary fighting units, later to become the Israel Defense ForcesâH
EBREW
Halakhah
âha-LAH-khaâJewish lawâH
EBREW
Hanukkah
âHAH-noo-kahâJewish holiday (usually in December) celebrating the successful revolt against Greco-Syrian occupation and liberation of Judea from religious oppressionâH
EBREW
Havera
âha-VEH-rahâfriend
if)â
H
EBREW
Kibbutz
âki-BUHTSâcollective settlement, communeâH
EBREW
Kuchen
âKOO-khinâa yeast-dough coffee cakeâG
ERMAN
Maccabees
âMA-kuh-beezâJewish patriots who led a successful revolt against the overwhelming might of the Greco-Syrian empireâH
EBREW
Mizrachi
âmiz-RAH-khiâreligious Zionist organizationâH
EBREW
Nazdar
âNAH-zdahrâgreetingâC
ZECH
and S
LOVAK
Nie nada
âNEE NAH-duhâ“Nothing doing”âR
USSIAN
ORT (Organization for Rehabilitation and Training
)ânetwork of vocational schools
Pan
âPAHNâMr.âC
ZECH
and S
LOVAK
Pharaohs
âFAR-ohzâancient Egyptian monarchs who enslaved the JewsâE
GYPTIAN
Prater
âPRAH-terâfamous Viennese amusement park
Raison d'être
ârae-ZONE de-TREâreason for being, rationale for existingâF
RENCH
Riesenrad
âREE-zen-rahdâgiant wheelâG
ERMAN
Schmaltz
âshmahltzâchicken fatâG
ERMAN
, Y
IDDISH
Shaliah
âshah-LE E -ahâemissaryâH
EBREW
Sle
Ä
na
âSLECH-nahâMissâC
ZECH
and S
LOVAK
Talmud
âTAL-moodâbody of Jewish civil and religious lawâH
EBREW
Torah
âTOHR-ahâthe Pentateuch; the sacred text of Jewish law and teachingâH
EBREW
U
Ä
itel
âUCH-it-yelâteacherâC
ZECH
and S
LOVAK
UNO
âThe United Nations Organization
USSR
âUnion of Soviet Socialist Republics
White Papers
âdecrees the British government issued restricting Jewish immigration to Palestine
Yeshivah
âyuh-SHEE-vuhâinstitution of Jewish learningâH
EBREW
L
IVIA
B
ITTON
-J
ACKSON
, born Elli L. Friedmann in Czechoslovakia, was thirteen when she, her mother, and her brother were taken to Auschwitz. They were liberated in 1945 and came to the United States on a refugee boat in 1951. She received a Ph.D. in Hebrew culture and Jewish history from New York University. Dr. Bitton-Jackson has been a professor of history at City University of New York for thirty-seven years. Her previous books include
Elli: Coming of Age in the Holocaust,
which received the Christopher Award, the Eleanor Roosevelt Humanitarian Award, and the Jewish Heritage Award. Dr. Bitton-Jackson lives in Israel with her husband, children, and grandchildren.
About the photo on the front cover:
This picture was part of a family passport photo taken of Elli, her mother, and her brother in the winter of 1946. It was attached to an application form for an American visa. Elli proudly sports a permanent wave, a popular hairstyle at the time, and a hooded coat made by her mother from an army blanket. Although the American visa was not granted and her Czechoslovak passport has long lost its validity, the picture has remained in Elli's possession.