An Auschwitz survivor who was 13 when she arrived at the concentration camp says the recent rise in antisemitism is driven by “ignorance”.
Separated from her mother as she passed through the gates, Susan Pollack told Nazi guards she was 15 so they would keep her alive.
“Somebody whispered to me, your mother will be gassed. How could I respond? I was just hopeless.”
Susan, now 94, shared her story with Sky News presenter Sarah-Jane Mee ahead of Holocaust Memorial Day.
Born Zsuzsanna Blau in 1930 in Hungary, Susan became aware of antisemitism around her from a young age. Her uncle was murdered by fascists. His attacker was sentenced to only two years in prison.
After Germany invaded Hungary in 1944, the Nazis and their Hungarian collaborators organised the deportation of Hungarian Jews under the supervision of high-ranking SS officer Adolf Eichmann.
In May that year, Susan and her family were sent to Auschwitz-Birkenau in Poland by cattle truck. In less than two months, almost all of Hungary’s Jewish population, some 825,000, was deported.
“On arrival we scrambled out of the trucks, and men and women were separated immediately,” Susan says, recalling her first moments at the concentration camp.
“I was left on my own, surrounded by shouting. I felt pure terror and devastation.”
Inside Auschwitz, she says she was “dehumanised” and survived by behaving as a robot.
She described having to stand in front of Dr Josef Mengele, the infamous camp physician, every morning, who would look at their naked bodies. Those who were deemed to be losing weight too quickly were sent to the gas chamber, Susan recalls.
“You don’t think that you live in a world which does those things.”
As Allied forces advanced in 1944, Susan and others were put on a “death march” from Auschwitz, like tens of thousands of others.
Prisoners were moved out of camps near the front and forced to walk long distances in the bitter cold, with little or no food, water or rest. Those who could not keep up were shot.
Susan was taken to the Bergen-Belsen concentration camp in Germany, where she suffered from tuberculosis and typhoid.
“I wanted to die. I had no energy any more,” she said.
“When I was liberated in Bergen-Belsen I couldn’t walk, I could hardly talk and I just crawled out to die,” she continues.
“I felt a gentle pair of hands, lifting me up. A gentle pair of hands. And he was a British soldier.”
She and others were then taken to Sweden, where she says they were given regular food.
“And we had a Jewish man in his 20s, and he played music every night,” she says.
“The lights were turned off and he played classical music every night, and that is what saved my life as well, in terms of thinking and hope and understanding.”
Susan Pollack’s full interview will be aired on The UK Tonight with Sarah-Jane Mee programme on Sky News at 8pm this evening.
‘ The preceding article may include information circulated by third parties ’
‘ Some details of this article were extracted from the following source news.sky.com ’