Concordia University MIGS

Back to Holocaust Memoirs | Back to MIGS

Emery Gregus

Occupation and Liberation 1944-1945
Aftermath: The Postwar Years
Remembrances

 

Introduction

In the spring of l944 the German army occupied Hungary. As soon as the Nazis arrived, they rounded up the Jewish population from the countryside, concentrated them into the nearest brick factory and from there, within a matter of weeks, they were shipped to the concentration camps.

I titled this document, "Occupation and Liberation 1944-1945, Remembrances", meaning the occupation of Hungary by the Germans in March l944 and the Liberation of Hungary by the Russian army in February l945.

The fate of the Jews is well known and well documented. Even when the war was nearing its end, the Germans, together with their Hungarian collaborators were very successful in their fervent endeavour to execute "The Final Solution."

Certainly among the younger population, escape was foremost on everyone’s mind. Budapest was the most obvious goal. In Budapest, one was not recognized as they might be in their hometown and the blending in with the general population was more of a possibility.

By sheer luck and mostly with the help from well meaning Christians, some of us who tried to escape our intended fate, managed to endure the 11 months including the Arrow Cross terror and survived the battle for Budapest by the Russian army.

Strictly speaking, this is not a Holocaust story, since I was in hiding to avoid deportation during those 11 months. When I reread my memoirs, only then did I realize to what extent I was unable to conceal my grief over the loss of my family, and a way of life, which was so much a part of my past and even my present.

I was born in Kosice, Czechoslovakia on August 7, 1922. My parents were both deported to Auschwitz from Kassa (Hungary, at the time) and were immediately taken to the gas chambers. I had two brothers and two sisters. My older brother Julius, who I describe as Gyuri in my testimony, perished in Auschwitz, after being deported from Budapest in the summer of 1944. Charles who was nicknamed Karcsi perished in Russia in 1943 while in a labour camp battalion. My sister Valeria(Vali) was married to Kendi, Bandi and was deported with her children Julika (age 9) and Janoska (age 5) from Kassa in May 1944 and were taken directly to the gas chambers. Her husband, Kendi Bandi never returned. Only my eldest sister Kornelia (Nelly) survived in Budapest, but her husband, Holzer, Simon perished. She immigrated with her daughter to Israel. My sister died in Israel in l985.

In 1948 I changed my family name from Guttmann to Gregus.

These memoirs have not been written fearing that people would forget, but because it was I who could not forget. I was one of the survivors and I feel I have to tell my story, while I am able to.


 

Back to Key Words and Abstract

To Chapter 1

© Concordia University