{"id":3648,"date":"2016-02-23T11:07:33","date_gmt":"2016-02-23T16:07:33","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/svetanyc.com\/?p=3648"},"modified":"2017-10-06T15:54:29","modified_gmt":"2017-10-06T19:54:29","slug":"terezin","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"http:\/\/192.168.2.119:1984\/svetanyc\/2016\/02\/terezin\/","title":{"rendered":"Terezin. Czech Republic. February 2016"},"content":{"rendered":"

“Anything can happen if we want to, if we just pull together, and we’ll be laughing on the Ghetto’s ruins”. Lyrics of a Karl Svenk’s cabaret song.<\/em><\/p>\n

“Beasts of burden, we shouldered bundled of what pieces of past we were allowed to keep as we joined the river of fear, a current of shuffling feet, sobs, and whimpers that crept past dark mouths of archways and windows of Terezin” Paul Janeczko “Requiem: Poems of the Terezin Ghetto”.<\/em><\/p>\n

I grew up in Belarus, where even in 1980s, the horrors of the WWII were engraved on everyone’s DNA and where history wasn’t just “somebody’s story”, but it was tightly intervened with my family and with families of everyone I knew or grew up with. Hence, I was a bit surprised to find out that Czech Republic, which submitted itself to the Third Reich without firing a shot, had a history of concentration camps. I absolutely had no idea about\u00a0Terezin<\/a>. Well, technically it was a transition camp for Jews, with no gas chambers, mass executions or medical experiments. Nevertheless, from November 1941 till May 1945, 139,667 people went through Terezin (not counting 1260 children from Belarusian Bielostok who, just 3 months later, were taken to Auschwitz for extermination). 86,934 of Terezin “inmates” were deported to the East (mostly to Treblinka and Auschwitz), with only 3,586 survivors. 35,384 prisoners died in Terezin. It is a story about a Nazi’s founded Czech “transportation hub for Jews” that very few people know about. I was especially keen on writing about it, because just a few months after visiting Terezin, I learnt that a mother of my old New York friend was a teenage prisoner at Terezin camp. Later she went on to tell the world about it in her documentaries.<\/p>\n

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Media.<\/strong><\/p>\n