Soixante dizième anniversaire de la libération d'Auchswitz. Un témoignage poignant trouvé sur le net. Vilma Grunwald
Knowing she was about to be killed in the gas chambers by the Nazis, Vilma Grunwald passed a letter to a guard to give to her husband and family who were also in Auschwitz. Today, the letter is on display at the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum in Washington – and her son Frank, who survived, writes about how visitors will now know “how positive and how calm she was.” That there were people in the camps like Vilma who didn’t die with anger or hatred, but only love for their families. Read on...
Knowing she was about to be killed in the gas chambers by the Nazis, Vilma Grunwald passed a letter to a guard to give to her husband and family who were also in Auschwitz. Today, the letter is on display at the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum in Washington – and her son Frank, who survived, writes about how visitors will now know “how positive and how calm she was.” That there were people in the camps like Vilma who didn’t die with anger or hatred, but only love for their families. Read on...