Barbara Schechter Cohen By: Lindsey Diekemper
Me and my mother, Jean, Dürnholz, Germany I was 2 years old. Me my aunt and my mother, I was 5 years old. November 20, 1943 The war started in ‘39 so I was born about 2 years into the war in Bukaczowce, Bukaczowce 1946
We were forced to wear yellow stars on our clothing or armbands to make sure people knew we were Jewish. My mother and father didn’t wear them because they didn’t want to be sent to a ghetto. Because father was a lawyer he could get forged papers that helped somewhat.
Labor workers, my mother worked as one while we were in Germany. And my father worked as one in Poland with his fake papers
Me and my mother ran away to Dresden towards the end of the war. There was a bombing. She was running the bombs were coming. And we thought that this was the end.
Newspapers from the bombing
Me and my mother were at a DP camp where my father had found us in Stuttgart.
It was in May of When we arrived in New York on a refugee ship, we were bombarded with newspaper people and movie people because we were the actual first ship. There were two ships...this was the Marine Fletcher. A newspaper clipping from our ship arriving, me and my mother are marked with X’s
In New York, under 3 rd avenue We lived in New York until I was about 11 until we moved to Detroit
This is the house we stayed in while we lived in Detroit with my dads side of the family My mom worked as a manicurist while in Detroit and my dad worked in a tie store