Shlomo Samson was born in 1923, in Leipzig, Germany. A short time after
"Kristallnacht", he left for Holland and was there until October, 1942. In
Holland, he was in Gouda and Elden at Pioneer Training Camps ("Hachshara"),
preparing for "Aliyah" to Israel (then Palestine).
The members of the "Hachshara" program in Elden were transported to Camp
Westerbork in Holland and from there to Bergen-Belsen. Close to the time of
the liberation of Bergen-Belsen by the British Army, the "Hachshara" members
were loaded onto a train that crossed Germany from the west to the east. On
April 23, 1945, they were liberated by the Red Army near the village of
Troebitz, not far from Leipzig. After a short time, they returned to a free
Holland. There, Shlomo Samson registered for "Aliyah Bet". After waiting in
a Hachshara farm in the south of France, he arrived in Israel (Palestine) on
the illegal immigrant ship "Tel-Hai" in March, 1946.
After a short internment in the Atlit camp for "illegal" immigrants, he
joined Kvutzat Shluchot, which at that time was near Pardes Hanna, preparing
for its settlement in the Beit- Shean Valley. The memories and eye-witness
reports up to this period in his life are the events in this personal
account of the Holocaust.
A fascinating study, both informative and inspiring, shedding a new light
on the darkest period of history.
Elie Wiesel
Jerusalem, 498 p., 1998, ISBN 965-09-0090-X