This video from the USA says about itself:
Witness: Voices from the Holocaust
27 August 2009
Nineteen first-person accounts of witnesses, including Jews, non-Jews, American POWs, GIs who first entered the camps, a member of the Hitler youth, a Jesuit priest, resistance fighters, and child survivors are woven into a single narrative of World War II and the Holocaust. They tell stories of life under the Nazis, the ghettos, concentration and death camps, liberation, and the challenges they faced after the Holocaust. Includes some documentary footage with graphic violence and detailed descriptions of violence.
From People’s World in the USA:
Lilo Heller, 94: Holocaust victim and citizen of the world
February 18 2015
Lilo Heller, a Holocaust survivor, was born in Germany in 1921 and witnessed the rise of Nazism. In 1939, she and her parents escaped the Nazis – by traveling to Holland and then to Jakarta, Indonesia, where she studied to be a nurse before joining the Dutch Army – and her parents by traveling to Quito, Ecuador.
All the other family members in Germany and Holland died in the Nazi death camps.
In 1942 the Japanese invaded Indonesia, and because she was a nurse in the Dutch Army, she was interned in Japanese prison camps for four years. After the Japanese surrendered in 1945, Lilo was caught up in the Indonesian War of Independence. She finally escaped on a boat to the U.S., with the help of the International Red Cross.
Settling in San Francisco, she met and married Harold Heller in 1949, and her twins Michael and Lee were born. The family then moved from San Francisco to Mill Valley, Calif. Lilo and Harold spent 50 years in the restaurant business in San Francisco, Mill Valley and San Rafael.
From the start of their marriage, Lilo championed progressive causes. She was inspired by Dr. W.E.B. DuBois‘ book about his life and she eventually ran the progressive bookstore in San Francisco.
Lilo was a friend of Harry Bridges and the International Longshore and Warehouse Union, the United Farm Workers, and the Women’s International League for Peace and Freedom. In 1984, she was a delegate to an international peace convention in the German Democratic Republic.
She supported the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, the Congress of Racial Equality and the marches of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., sending food and clothes to Mississippi and Alabama to support voter registration in the South.
Lilo also collected clothes and food to send to striking miners in Harlan, Ky., and in Idaho and Montana. She participated in peace marches in San Francisco and Berkeley to protest the Vietnam War, even picketing at the Naval Weapons Station in Concord. She traveled to Sacramento and throughout the Bay Area to support the United Farm Workers’ boycotts and the march from Delano to Sacramento. Her favorite folk singer was Pete Seeger.
Lilo and Harold Heller will also be remembered for the picnics and events they held at their home for the People’s World, which they helped to distribute in the Bay Area.
In her 2011 memoir, Lilo Speaks, written with author Tom Adams, Lilo details the journey of her life and spirit. The book received a Silver Medal for Memoirs from the Independent Book Society in New York. It is featured in the United States Holocaust Museum in Washington, D.C., as well as in Steven Spielberg‘s Holocaust Memorial Library at the University of Southern California Shoah Foundation. An hour-long video accompanies the book.
In 2012, Lilo was recognized at the California Holocaust Memorial Ceremony in Sacramento.
In her last year, Lilo moved to Walnut Creek, residing in Byron Park, a community for active seniors.
Lilo leaves behind her two children, Michael Heller and Lee Heller, three grandchildren, four great-grandchildren, and three great great-grandchildren.
Reblogged this on IdealisticRebel's Daily View of Favorites.
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If people have not seen this, it’s the least we could do for remembering, respect and humanity(for those age 15+). What the Jewish people and other prisoners endured is beyond comprehension. For the last lady speaking, bless her pained soul. In her words “was it worth it?, have we learned?” ….So very applicable to todays society.
The brutality resonates with recent terrorism acts. Some nations/ beliefs/ religions have not learned and brutality lies in their souls. When remembering the Holocaust, I don’t understand…how could so many Germans approve of this brutality? Why ?
It was interesting to listen to the sorrowful Hitler Youth member. Yes, it was a mixed up time of war, but to have your baby brother die in your arms from starvation, how did they carry on?
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Hi, thanks for your comment! One part of the answer to the question why many Germans approved of nazi anti-Semitism is the German corporate media, already even before Hitler became dictator. Many of these media were owned by Alfred Hugenberg (who also helped Hitler to become chancellor in 1933). Hugenberg was an anti-Semite, who railed against ‘the Jewish press’ even though he himself as an anti-Semite owned much of the press …
Hugenberg was somewhat like Rupert Murdoch is today:
https://dearkitty1.wordpress.com/2012/11/20/rupert-murdoch-pro-israel-anti-semite/
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Well, there you go, thanks for the link petrel, I will follow it up.
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Reblogged this on adelemiranda and commented:
If you have not seen this, you should to remember, respect and for humanity(for those age 15+). The recounts are unnerving. For the last lady speaking, bless her pained soul. In her words “was it worth it?, have we learned?” ….So very applicable to todays society.
The brutality resonates with recent terrorism acts, although on a different scale. Some nations/ beliefs/ religions have not learned and brutality lies in their souls. When remembering the Holocaust, I don’t understand…how could so many Germans approve of this brutality? Why ?
It was interesting to listen to the sorrowful Hitler Youth member. Yes, it was a mixed up time of war, but to have your baby brother die in your arms from starvation, and lack of oxygen, .. i could not survive.
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Thanks for your reblog!
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