urvivors
such as Miriam
Borenstein say it’s a struggle to tell their stories.
Miriam lives with the memories everyday, and holds back
tears when she talks about her three and a half months
in the Auschwitz concentration camp. She first spoke
of the experience 25 years ago when she was 54-years-old.
She
decided to open up when her children and grandchildren
asked her to talk about her experiences at their schools.
Later, Borenstein shared her story with the Steven Spielberg
Jewish Film Archive to further the cause of remembrance.
The
journey to remembering was anything but easy.
“There
are no benefits [to remembering]; it is very painful
to this day. All of us have open wounds that have never
healed, and probably never will,” she says.
A
native Czech, she was 21 when she arrived at Auschwitz,
the concentration camp in Poland, with her mother. They
were separated and she later found out that her mother
was killed the very same day. She recalls the scant
meals, the friends she lost, and the terror of not knowing
whether she would come out dead or alive. She says she
still lives with the guilt of survival.
“I’m not better than someone else, maybe
I’m worse, who knows,” she says holding
back tears. “There are some wonderful people that
perished.”
owever,
it was at Auschwitz that she found her
husband, an American GI. They met in June 1945, a month
after she was liberated, and married on January 10,
1946. She came to the U.S. as a war bride, speaking
only Yiddish. The couple settled in Brooklyn, had three
sons, and will celebrate their 59th wedding anniversary
next year.
The Borensteins
want to pass their memories to their three children
and four grandchildren.
“As
we’re getting closer to the end we just realize
that these wounds will not heal, but we also have to
tell the world what we went on…anti-Semitism is
spreading so we survivors who are still alive have to
let the world know that we witnessed this, and that
we survived,” she says.

Holocaust Remembrance Day Amy Wu |