2025 is the 80th Anniversary of the end of World War 2, the end of Nazi Germany and the end of the Holocaust.
Here are some of the Victims of
the Germans (Jews, Non-Jews, Slavs, Homosexuals, Jehovah’s Witnesses, Roma and
Sinti, etc.)
Each Victim was a Person who a
Family and a Story.
Barbara Ledermann
Born: September 4, 1925 in
Berlin, Germany
Barbara was the older of two
daughters born to Jewish parents in Germany's capital, Berlin. Barbara's father
was a successful lawyer. As soon as Barbara was old enough to walk, he would
take her around Berlin to see the sights and tour the city's art museums.
Barbara liked to go horseback riding and dreamed of becoming a dancer.
1933-39: After the Nazis came to
power in January 1933, it was illegal for Barbara's father to have non-Jewish
clients. His law practice quickly folded. Later that year when Barbara was 7,
her family moved to the Netherlands where her mother had relatives. Barbara
continued her schooling in Amsterdam and quickly learned Dutch. Although they
no longer lived in a big house with servants, Barbara enjoyed Amsterdam--it had
a much less formal atmosphere than Berlin. She was Friends with Margot Frank
and her Barbara’s Sister, Sanne, was Friends with Anne Frank.
1940-44: The Germans invaded the
Netherlands in May 1940. Two years later, when they began to deport many Jews,
Barbara's boyfriend, Manfred, told her that these deportations to "labor
camps" really meant death. He got false IDs for Barbara and her family,
and told her, "If you get called up, don't go." She asked, "What
will happen to my parents if I don't go?" "Nothing that wouldn't
happen otherwise," he answered. "What do you mean?" Barbara
asked, and he responded, "Everyone who goes will be killed. They are all
going to die."
Barbara remained in hiding until
May 1945, when Amsterdam was liberated by Canadian troops. Her Sister, Sanne,
was murdered at the Auschwitz Death Camp when she was 14 years old. Barbara
immigrated to the United States in November 1947. She married Biochemist Martin
Rodbell, who would later win the Nobel Prize.
She is 99 years old and lives in North Carolina.
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