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Author Topic:   Now THAT'S Destiny...
EighthMoon
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posted July 27, 2008 09:37 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for EighthMoon     Edit/Delete Message
The Girl With the Apple
A True Love Story

Herman Rosenblat
Miami Beach, Florida


August 1942. Piotrkow, Poland. The sky was gloomy that morning as we waited anxiously. All the men, women and children of Piotrkow’s Jewish ghetto had been herded into a square. Word had gotten around that we were being moved. My father had only recently died from typhus, which had run rampant through the crowded ghetto. My greatest fear was that our family would be separated. “Whatever you do,” Isidore, my eldest brother, whispered to me, “don’t tell them your age. Say you’re sixteen”. I was tall for a boy of 11, so I could pull it off.

That way I might be deemed valuable as a worker. An SS man approached me, boots clicking against the cobblestones. He looked me up and down, then asked my age.

“Sixteen,” I said. He directed me to the left, where my three brothers and other healthy young men already stood.

My mother was motioned to the rightˆ”with the other women, children, sick and elderly people. I whispered to Isidore, “Why?” He didn’t answer. I ran to Mama’s side and said I wanted to stay with her. “No,” she said sternly. “Get away. Don’t be a nuisance. Go with your brothers.” She had never spoken so harshly before. But I understood: She was protecting me. She loved me so much that, just this once, she pretended not to. It was the last I ever saw of her.

My brothers and I were transported in a cattle car to Germany. We arrived at the Buchenwald concentration camp one night weeks later and were
led into a crowded barrack. The next day, we were issued uniforms and identification numbers. “Don’tcall me Herman anymore.” I said to my brothers.

“Call me 94983.” I was put to work in the camp’s crematorium, loading the dead into a hand-cranked
elevator. I, too, felt dead. Hardened, I had become a number.

Soon, my brothers and I were sent to Schlieben, one of Buchenwald’s sub-camps near Berlin. One morning I thought I heard my mother’s voice. Son, she said softly but clearly, I am sending you an angel. Then I woke up. Just a dream. A beautiful dream. But in this place there could be no angels. There was only work. And hunger. And fear.

A couple of days later, I was walking around the camp, behind the barracks, near the barbed-wire fence where the guards could not easily see. I was alone. On the other side of the fence, I spotted someone: ˆ”a young girl with light, almostluminous curls. She was half-hidden behind a birch tree. I glanced around to make sure no one saw me.

I called to her softly in German. “Do you have something eat?” She didn’t understand. I inched closer to the fence and repeated question in Polish.

She stepped forward. I was thin and gaunt, with rags wrapped around my feet, but the girl looked unafraid. In her eyes, I saw life. She pulled an apple from her woolen jacket and threw it over the fence. I grabbed the fruit and, as I started to run away, I heard her say faintly, “I’ll see you tomorrow.”

I returned to the same spot by the fence at the same time every day. She was always there with something for me to eat; a hunk of bread or, better
yet, an apple. We didn’t dare speak or linger. To be caught would mean death for us both. I didn’t know anything about herˆ”just a kind farm girlˆ”except
that she understood Polish.

What was her name? Why was she risking her life for me? Hope was in such short supply, and this girl on the other side of he fence gave me some, as nourishing in its way as the bread and apples.

Nearly seven months later, my brothers and I were crammed into a coal car and shipped to Theresienstadt camp in Czechoslovakia. “Don’t
return,” I told the girl that day. “We’re leaving.”


I turned toward the barracks and didn’t look back, didn’t even say good-bye to the girl whose name I’d never learned, the girl with the apples.

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EighthMoon
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posted July 27, 2008 09:38 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for EighthMoon     Edit/Delete Message
We were in Theresienstadt for three months. The war was winding down and Allied forces were closing in, yet my fate seemed sealed. On May 10, 1945, Iwas scheduled to die in the gas chamber at 10:00 A.M. In the quiet of dawn, I tried to prepare myself.


So many times death seemed ready to claim me, but somehow I’d survived. Now, it was over. I thought
of my parents. At least, I thought we will be reunited. At 8 A. M. there was a commotion. I heard shouts, and saw people running every which way through camp. I caught up with my brothers.


Russian troops had liberated the camp! The gates swung open. Everyone was running, so I did too.


Amazingly, all of my brothers had survived; I’m not sure how. But I knew that the girl with the apples had been the key to my survival. In a place where
evil seemed triumphant, one person’s goodness had saved my life, had given me hope in a place where there was none. My mother had promised to send me an angel, and the angel had come.

Eventually I made my way to England where I was sponsored by a Jewish charity, put up in a hostel with other boys who had survived the Holocaust and trained in electronics. Then I came to America, where my brother Sam had already moved. I served in the U. S. Army during the Korean War, and returned to New York City after two years.

By August 1957 I’d opened my own electronics repair shop. I was starting to settle in.

One day, my friend Sid, who I knew from England, called me. “I’ve got a date. She’s got a Polish friend. Let’s double date.”

A blind date? Nah, that wasn’t for me. But Sid kept pestering me, and a few days later we headed up to the Bronx to pick up his date and her friend
Roma. I had to admit, for a blind date this wasn’t so bad. Roma was a nurse at a Bronx hospital. She was kind and smart. Beautiful, too, with swirling
brown curls and green, almond-shaped eyes that sparkled with life.

The four of us drove out to Coney Island. Roma was easy to talk to, easy to be with. Turned out she was wary of blind dates too! We were both just
doing our friends a favor. We took a stroll on the boardwalk, enjoying the salty Atlantic breeze, and
thhen had dinner by the shore. I couldn’t remember having a better time.

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EighthMoon
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posted July 27, 2008 09:39 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for EighthMoon     Edit/Delete Message
We piled back into Sid’s car, Roma and I sharing the backseat. As European Jews who had survived the war, we were aware that much had been left unsaid between us. She broached the subject, “Where were you,” she asked softly, “during the war?”


“The camps,” I said, the terrible memories still vivid, the irreparable loss. I had tried to forget. But you can never forget.

She nodded. “My family was hiding on a farm in Germany, not far from Berlin,” she told me. “My father knew a priest, and he got us Aryan papers.”

I imagined how she must have suffered too, fear, a constant companion. And yet here we were, both survivors, in a new world. “There was a camp next
to the farm.” Roma continued. “I saw a boy there and I would throw him apples every day.”

What an amazing coincidence that she had helped some other boy. “What did he look like? I asked.

“He was tall. Skinny. Hungry. I must have seen him every day for six months.”
My heart was racing. I couldn’t believe it! This couldn’t be.

“Did he tell you one day not to come back because he was leaving Schlieben?”

Roma looked at me in amazement. “Yes.”

“That was me! ” I was ready to burst with joy and awe, flooded with emotions. I couldn’t believe it. My angel.

“I’m not letting you go.” I said to Roma. And in the back of the car on that blind date, I proposed to her. I didn’t want to wait.

“You’re crazy!” she said. But she nvited me to meet her parents for Shabbat dinner the following week. There was so much I looked
forward to learning about Roma, but the most important things I always knew: her steadfastness, her goodness. For many months, in the worst of
circumstances, she had come to the fence and given me hope. Now that I’d found her again, I could never let her go. That day, she said yes. And I
kept my word.” After nearly 50 years of marriage, two children and three grandchildren I have never let her go.


This story was published in the August 2006 issue of Guideposts. There was more to this story, including pictures.
http://www.americangathering.com/2006/10/05/1790/the-girl-with-the-apple-by-herman-rosenblat-in-florida/

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Azalaksh
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From: New Brighton, MN, USA
Registered: Nov 2004

posted July 27, 2008 10:24 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for Azalaksh     Edit/Delete Message
What a wonderful story!!

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Aphrodite
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posted July 27, 2008 10:34 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for Aphrodite     Edit/Delete Message
Thank you for sharing this, EighthMoon! I looked up this story on the web and learned that there is a movie being made in the process!

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CoralFrequency
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posted July 28, 2008 10:57 AM     Click Here to See the Profile for CoralFrequency     Edit/Delete Message
That is an amazing story I got teary eyed reading it, how beautiful and they look just perfect together: http://www.guidepostsmag.com/personal-change/positive-people-archive/?i=699

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CoralFrequency
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posted July 28, 2008 11:08 AM     Click Here to See the Profile for CoralFrequency     Edit/Delete Message
I found this about the movie -

quote:
Richard Dreyfuss has decided to give the movies yet another chance. Variety announced that Dreyfuss would star in the Hungarian production Flower of the Fence. The film will be the story of Herman Rosenblat; a man who meets a woman through the fences of a concentration camp and eventually falls in love -- also starring is Maia Morgenstern and Thomas Sangster. The film is set to go into production in 2007, and is being financed through a joint effort between the Hungarian government and private investors from Hollywood. This is hardly the big budget flick that Dreyfuss used to rail against, so maybe he has managed to find a film that is more his cup of tea.

http://www.cinematical.com/2006/12/20/so-much-for-richard-dreyfuss-retirement
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0924135/

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blue moon
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From: U.K
Registered: Dec 2007

posted July 28, 2008 02:35 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for blue moon     Edit/Delete Message
Thanks sharing this, I have passed it on to friends.

Have you read Martin Gilbert's "the Righteous"? There are some great stories in there, but if I repeat one there is a risk there I am confusing it with something else I have read. I can't wrap my head around this topic. How could it happen? It blows my mind when I read survival memoirs and I've read a fair few. But I work on the principle people share their personal histories because they want us to know.

p.s

My grandfather was one of the soldiers who liberated Berger-Belsen. He said you could smell it 5 miles on the wind. (That's all I'm going to put on a public forum about what he said.)

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deuxantares
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Posts: 321
From: Female, Dubai
Registered: Nov 2006

posted July 28, 2008 04:46 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for deuxantares     Edit/Delete Message
nice story!

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BlueTopaz124
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Posts: 1438
From: Portland, OR
Registered: Jan 2004

posted July 28, 2008 09:39 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for BlueTopaz124     Edit/Delete Message
What a touching, beautiful story...now I'm teary-eyed

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GemGemGem
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posted July 28, 2008 11:15 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for GemGemGem     Edit/Delete Message
That story made me cry.

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koiflower
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Posts: 132
From: Australia
Registered: Jun 2008

posted July 29, 2008 09:15 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for koiflower     Edit/Delete Message

a beautiful miracle...

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EighthMoon
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posted July 29, 2008 11:30 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for EighthMoon     Edit/Delete Message
Sounds like the movie will be one to see!

I haven't read that BM. I think I first read this story in "Small Miracles" a few years back, but I could have it confused with another book as well!

I'll have to post a personal story on here some time dealing with a Japanese diplomat during WWII named Sugihara. Amazing man.

8th

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Lara
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From: London
Registered: Mar 2006

posted August 04, 2008 04:01 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for Lara     Edit/Delete Message
I LOVE it! wow!!!

Thanks for sharing such a beautiful story... what actainbow ending!

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