Hance, Eva Bruder 2006-05-31

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Eva Hance relates her experiences growing up in Hungary as a Jew during World War II. She discusses her life and family before the war and during the war. Eva, her mother, and her brother were taken to Dachau Concentration camp for 7 months. They were returned to Hungary at the end of the war and Eva discusses the difficulties they had after returning home. In 2006, Eva made public speeches about her experiences and she talks about letting go of hatred and living in peace.


General Interview Information

Interviewee Name: Eva Bruder Hance

Additional Parties Recorded:

Date: May 31, 2006

Location: Lubbock, Texas

Interviewer: David Marshall

Length: 02:26:19


Abstract

Background Information; Born in Budapest, Hungary; Born September 10, 1933; Moved to Budapest from small town when 2 years old; Lived in apartment with 2 rooms until 1949; Parents born and raised as Jews; Mother's side mixed ethnicity; Eva grew up with Jewish faith; Parents’ varying toleration of different religions; Grandfather (Mother's Father) was a lawyer; Grandmother (Mother's Mother) was a teacher; Both mothers’ parents held doctoral degrees; Grandparents earning degrees; Grandparents met in Austria; Eva brought up speaking 3 languages; Had a good life until 1944; Father designed their clothes; Mother died in 1978 in the United States; Father died in 1987 in the United States; They were a middle class family; Her mother stayed home, did not work; Being of Jewish descent before and after the war; Personality and friends before the war; Exposure to hatred during the war; Parents’ knowledge of the impending war; Grandfather hired refugees in his factory; Comparison of war to September 11, 2001; Did not realize the war could happen to them; Treatment of Jews in the concentration camps; Good and bad people in any religion or race; Hitler coming to power in Germany 1933; Helping Germany at the beginning of his power; Jewish people not farmers, wanting better life; Suffering to obtain a better life; Resentment of prosperous Jews; Discusses possibility of similar hatred directed toward anyone; Eva's speeches call for peace; Hatred is a poison; Becoming a Christian and the power of prayer; Effects of hatred; Forgiveness and forgetting; Events leading to placement in concentration camp; Placement in Ghetto; Arrival of German paratroopers; Finally beginning to believe the refugees stories; Too late to leave the country; Announcement that Jews must wear the yellow star; Increasing restrictions on Jews; Informants on Jews; Father went to Romanian front, 1939-1945; Family finances were becoming difficult; Increasing discrimination against the Jews; Former family friends showing hatred; Former playmates’ ill treatment of Eva; Example of Christ and Bible scripture; Developing her own hatred, way of coping when younger; Placement in Ghetto; Numbness leaving home and being placed in Ghetto; Grandparents lived in a home inside the Ghetto already; Seeing dead people on trip to Ghetto; Curfews; Description of Grandparents' apartment; Grandparents’ housing people in apartment and factory; Conditions in Ghetto growing worse; Electricity for one hour a day; Cooking; Starvation of people in Dachau; Eva and her brother's age and weight at Dachau; Available food while in the Ghetto; No meat available; People sleeping in shifts in Ghetto apartment; Surviving conditions mentally; Humiliation; Nazis summoning Jews in Ghetto in middle of night; Roll calls in Dachau and treatment; Treatment of Jews for entertainment; Abuse of children and babies; Coping with the trauma later in life; Giving back to society; Leaving the Ghetto; Transported by cattle car; Conditions during transport; Effects on her brother who was 7 years old at the time; Effects on others; Holocaust survivors in Israel in mental institution; Steven Spielberg's interview (1997) of Eva Bruder in Holocaust Museum; Difference in living with hate and letting it go; Finding peace; Self preservation after traumatic experience; Survival Mentality; Power of human mind; Finding positive outlook on situations in life; Gaining perspective after liberation; Growing up and letting go of hatred; Hated everyone who was not a Jew; Reasoning and logic; Compassion and love from other people; Events after arriving at Dachau; Packages issued to Jews; Tattooing numbers on Jews; Living in barracks; Receiving water every few days; Cruelty towards Jews, especially the sick; Her mother worked making soap from dead people; Her mother also made lamp shades from Jews' skin; Children left in the barracks during the day; Lice used for entertainment; Health issues Eva had after leaving Dachau; Frostbite and pain for many years; Difficulty bearing children; Returning home from Dachau; Germans disappeared from the camp before Americans came; Jews did not know what was happening; American arrival after 3 or 4 days of abandonment; Kindness of Americans; Receiving medicine and food; Jews were given food, money and shoes to return home; Train ride home on flat bed cars; Arrival Home; People living in their apartment; Family items were still there in the apartment; Mother got sick; Eva went to work at 11 years old; Workers and boss gave her food and various things; Eva and brother were taken from their sick mother; Taken outside of Budapest to a small town; Eva was separated from brother; How Eva was treated at the foster home; Introduced to a Christian church; Her brother, Peter, found Eva; Peter brought meat to Eva everyday; Peter and Eva decide to walk home, but they are picked up; Arrival of their mother to pick them up; Foster families upset by their departure; News of their father's death; Eva did not believe he was dead; Last day of August (1945), her grandmother and father arrive; Father got their family household items back; After the war; Grandfather would walk the street everyday; Only one of his five sons returned; Father saw one of his brother's family in Auschwitz; Grandfather waited for his sons until his death in 1947; Eva's mother never forgot some of the trauma; Developing survival attitude; A few acts of kindness by German soldiers and others; Gathering of Jews by the Nazis at the Danube River; Shooting the Jews row by row; German soldier saved Eva and a few others’ lives; Eva's ability to speak German helped her and her family; Many of the German soldiers had no choice; Kindness of Hungarian priest; Nuns saved her father's life; Among all the tragedy, still acts of kindness; Eva's father wrote his accounts from the war in Hungarian; Eva plans to have it translated; Eva graduated from 7 years of study in Bible school in 2006.


Access Information

Original Recording Format:

Recording Format Notes:

Transcript: No transcript available



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