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Jacksonville-area Holocaust survivors children share stories

So it won t be forgotten : Children of Jacksonville-area Holocaust survivors tell their families stories It’s painful and exhausting for them to talk about it, but they want you to know of their parents as the people they were: tough, scarred, generous. Survivors. Credit: Provided by Louis Post Louis Post s mother, Anna, was a prisoner of the Nazis at Auschwitz. She survived and is still alive at 98. Author: Florida Times-Union, Matt Soergel Published: 3:51 PM EST January 26, 2021 Updated: 4:03 PM EST January 26, 2021 JACKSONVILLE, Fla The children of some of the more than 100 Holocaust survivors still living in Northeast Florida are now telling the stories of their parents European Jews who somehow survived the Nazi concentration and labor camps, set about building families of their own, came to America and dealt with memories of an unspeakable horror that lingered throughout their lives.

So it won t be forgotten: Children of Jacksonville-area Holocaust survivors tell their families stories

So it won t be forgotten: Children of Jacksonville-area Holocaust survivors tell their families stories Matt Soergel, Florida Times-Union © Provided by Louis Post Louis Post s mother, Anna, was a prisoner of the Nazis at Auschwitz. Sher survived and is still alive at 98. The children of some of the more than 100 Holocaust survivors still living in Northeast Florida are now telling the stories of their parents European Jews who somehow survived the Nazi concentration and labor camps, set about building families of their own, came to America and dealt with memories of an unspeakable horror that lingered throughout their lives. It’s painful and exhausting for them to talk about it, but they want you to know of their parents as the people they were: tough, scarred, generous. Survivors.

Children of Holocaust survivors in Jacksonville tell parents stories

The children of some of the more than 100 Holocaust survivors still living in Northeast Florida are now telling the stories of their parents European Jews who somehow survived the Nazi concentration and labor camps, set about building families of their own, came to America and dealt with memories of an unspeakable horror that lingered throughout their lives. It’s painful and exhausting for them to talk about it, but they want you to know of their parents as the people they were: tough, scarred, generous. Survivors. Learn of Gloria Einstein’s father, Frank Colb, who in his early days at a Nazi labor camp was given a rare afternoon off. He was hosted by a Jewish family where he was enchanted by a young woman in a red dress though the homeowner’s daughter kept chatting with him, preventing him from getting near her.

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