From MSN:
The father told the son of the letter's existence back in 1946, right after the war, but the son, who was 11 years old, did not want to read it. He avoided even seeing it. "I was scared of the letter," said the son, then known as Misa Grunwald and now Frank Grunwald. Grunwald, who survived a Nazi concentration camp, is now a retired industrial designer living northeast of Indianapolis on Geist Reservoir. He is 85. "I was curious about the letter," he said, "but at the same time afraid, I think, for its sadness.
Grunwald's mother had written the letter to Grunwald's father moments before she, with Grunwald's older, crippled brother and hundreds of other Jews, entered the gas chamber at Auschwitz on July 11, 1944. Ten sentences, scribbled in pencil on cheap paper, yet so extraordinary the letter is now in a museum in Washington, D.C. Vilma Grunwald wrote the note, folded the paper in half and wrote on the outside: "Dr. Grunwald F Lager." Kurt Grunwald, her husband, Frank's father, was also a prisoner at sprawling Auschwitz concentration camp. He was at one of the work camps. A physician, his job was to treat prisoners' injuries so they could return to work. F Lager was the barracks where he was kept. She handed the note to a German guard, and in what seems miraculous, the guard personally delivered it to her husband, Kurt Grunwald told his son later. What kind of Nazi concentration camp guard would do that? "My mother was a great reader of personalities," said Frank Grunwald. "She must have sensed this guard had some compassion. He was older; he was 50 or 60." Auschwitz was liberated 17 months later. Some time after that Kurt Grunwald was reunited with his surviving son, and said: I have a note here from your mother. "I didn't want to see it, I was too upset," said Frank. In 1951 the surviving Grunwalds moved to New York City. The father practiced medicine in Forest Hills. The son went to the Pratt Institute and studied industrial design. He got a job with General Electric in Syracuse and married his wife, Barbara. The couple had two children. Kurt Grunwald died in 1967 at age 67, and it was while going through his father's belongings that Frank came across the letter. "He had it in a desk in his bedroom," Frank said. "The paper had turned yellow. I saw it and knew what it was right away. I recognized my mother's handwriting." The Grunwalds were Czechoslovakian, and Vilma had written in her native language. Frank read it. What struck him was its tone. "There's not a word of anger or hatred or resentment or bitterness against the Nazis," he said. "It's all focused on my father and me, on the future." He took the note home and put it in a desk. For two decades he showed it to no one, not even Barbara. Every few months he retrieved it and re-read it in privacy. In the 1990s he showed it to his family. Four years ago he gave it to the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum in Washington, D.C. "I thought, 'Why not expose it so that others can see it?'" he said. "One of my biggest concerns has always been, 'Once I'm gone, who will remember my mother?' Now I believe that fear is neutralized." More than 40 million people have visited the museum, which celebrates its 25th anniversary this week. Over the years the museum has received donations of thousands of personal artifacts. But Vilma Grunwald's letter stands alone. "I'm always reluctant to say it's the only such document ever created," said Judith Cohen, the museum's chief acquisitions curator, "but to the best of our knowledge it is — it is the only one we have ever seen. Auschwitz, in the moments before gassing. In the extermination camps it was almost impossible to write material that was preserved." The quality of the paper used by Vilma Grunwald was poor, composed mostly of wood pulp, said Jane E. Klinger, the museum's chief conservationist. For preservation purposes, the letter is rotated out of the museum's gallery every six months. It is replaced by a facsimile, which is marked as such. In its off time, the original is stored "unfolded and in inert, archival materials," Klinger said. It is handled only by gloved hands. Intrinsically, it's just a piece of old paper. It's Vilma Grunwald's words that are powerful. But the object itself matters, said Cohen, because "it's authoritative documentation — it seems inconceivable, but people still deny the Holocaust, there are people doubting Auschwitz existed. "But when you see the physical letter, you can't deny it. When you see the actual, physical paper, you say, 'This is proof, this is reality, this is what happened to her, and this is how she responded.'"
Vilma Grunwald's note of July 11, 1944, to her husband:
“You, my only one, dearest, in isolation we are waiting for darkness. We considered the possibility of hiding but decided not to do it since we felt it would be hopeless. The famous trucks are already here and we are waiting for it to begin. I am completely calm. You — my only and dearest one, do not blame yourself for what happened, it was our destiny. We did what we could. Stay healthy and remember my words that time will heal — if not completely — then — at least partially. Take care of the little golden boy and don’t spoil him too much with your love. Both of you — stay healthy, my dear ones. I will be thinking of you and Misa. Have a fabulous life, we must board the trucks. "Into eternity, Vilma.”
^ Here is a letter written by a wife/mother in the Auschwitz Death Camp to her husband and son (also imprisoned at Auschwitz) minutes before she and her 16 year old disabled son are sent to die in the German gas chambers. For those that don't know: The Germans kept a "model ghetto" at Theresienstadt in Czechoslovakia for the sole purpose of showing the International Red Cross how well the Germans were treating the Jews. The façade of Theresienstadt was made to resemble an ordinary European town while behind the fake paint and fake food used for the cameras the residents were starving and dying as with any German-run Ghetto during the war. After the International Red Cross visited Theresienstadt most of the Ghetto was then shipped to Auschwitz where a few were selected for work. The rest were then kept together (whole families) for a few months without having their heads shaved or being tattooed and in their regular clothes while the International Red Cross team that visited Theresienstadt went to Auschwitz in 1944. The IOC were only allowed to see the one set of barracks and after their visit everyone in those barracks were taken immediately to the gas chambers - several hundreds of people in one night. It seems this letter was written by one such woman ^
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