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.
David Bayer
Born: September 27, 1922 in
Kozienice, Poland
David was the second of four
children born to religious Jewish parents in Kozienice, a town in southeastern
Poland. His father, Manes, owned a shoe factory that supplied stores throughout
the country. His mother, Sarah, took care of the home and children, and helped
in the factory. Kozienice had a thriving Jewish community that constituted over
half of the town's population.
1933–39: For most of the 1930s,
David spent his days going to school, playing sports, and working in his
father's shoe factory. His life, however, changed dramatically in September
1939, when German troops invaded Poland. During the bombing of Kozienice, the
Bayers escaped to the forest. They returned to find that German soldiers had
looted their home. The Nazis quickly began to implement their antisemitic
policies. Jewish homes were marked with the Star of David, a curfew was
established, and businesses, like the Bayers', were confiscated.
1940–45: In 1940, the Bayers were
forced to move into the Kozienice ghetto, where they were assigned one room.
Like other Jews there, David was conscripted to digging irrigation canals. In
September 1942, the ghetto was liquidated and its inhabitants, including
members of his family, were deported to the Treblinka killing center. David was
transported to Pionki, an industrial complex that produced munitions. In 1944
he was deported to Auschwitz, where he was selected for forced labor and
transferred to the subcamp of Jaworzno to work in the coal mines. As the Soviet
army neared, David and the other prisoners were sent on a death march. SS
guards shot prisoners who were too weak to go on or who fell. After stopping at
the Blechhammer camp, David escaped into the forests, where he was found five
or six days later by Soviet troops. He weighed 70 pounds. He spent two years in
the Foehrenwald displaced persons camp in Germany before immigrating to Panama.
In 1948 he left Panama to fight
in the Israeli War of Independence. He later immigrated to America and worked as a volunteer at the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum.
He died in 2023.
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