Showing posts with label Northern Ireland. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Northern Ireland. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 16, 2017

LoveMusic! - Garments of Praise - Robin Mark live worship from Northern Ireland


Garments of Praise
Robin Mark
Live worship from Northern Ireland

Robin Mark

Aug. 16, 2017

Dear LoveMusic! listeners,

When we first featured a song by Robin Mark, Revival, it rose to the top of our chart as one of your favorites. Not surprising, for we need revival in our countries. And now is as good a time as any.

What does then follow revival, in our hearts and souls, is the real desire to honor and worship even more the Living God of Israel, Yeshua (Jesus). HE IS REVIVAL, and when His Holy Spirit comes, we do put on the garment of praise.

Our prayer is that revival is working in your life, and you too are putting on the garments of praise to replace discouragement, disappointment, distrust, and disillusionments. We all have had them. We can get His victory through them as overcomers do.

We all need Jesus. Come Lord, bring revival, and we shall indeed put on the garments of praise!

Ahava and shalom,

Steve Martin
Love For His People
Charlotte, North Carolina
USA








Thank you, Robin Mark, for your ministry!



Help Love For His People continue to keep bringing you LoveMusic! We also send monthly funds to pastors and Israel-supporting ministries in international lands - with free teaching materials. Financial support for families in Jerusalem, Belfast, UK and Lahore, Pakistan continue monthly. We count on you. Even a gift of $5 helps!  Thank you.

Please donate online safely here, through our website. Click here: I want to bless others.

A USA tax-receipt will be provided for each online gift and check.

Checks can be sent to:

Love For His People, Inc.
P.O. Box 414
Pineville, NC 28134

Love For His People Editor: We'd love to keep in touch with you. 



Above video: YouTube: ChristianMusicDemand  Published on Jun 25, 2008
Here is one with the lyrics: Garments of Praise with lyrics

Friday, August 11, 2017

LoveMusic! - "Revival" by Robin Mark from Northern Ireland - with lyrics


"Revival" 
Robin Mark 
Northern Ireland
 - with lyrics 

Robin Mark


Aug. 11, 2017

Greetings LoveMusic! listeners,

Beginning in 1983, through the next 20 years, HosannaMusic! (a division of Integrity Music in Mobile, Alabama with Michael Coleman, Executive Director) was putting out great worship CDs. They produced over 200 live recordings during that time. 

Don Moen (one of the best of the very best!), Kent Henry, Randy Rothwell, Billy Funk, Ron KenolyDarlene Zschech, Martin Nystrom, Paul Wilbur, and Lenny LeBlanc were some of the ones we listened to for many years, as their CDs came monthly in the mail through subscription. (I was a subscriber from the very beginning cassette in 1983. Still have them all!) 

I remember from 1987-1990, Glenn Selby (grandson of Bible teacher Derek Prince) and I both worked at Derek Prince Ministries in Fort Lauderdale, Florida. We would be "anxious" to see who got their cassette/CD first in the mail with each live recording. Then one, or the other, would be a bit jealous I still think, if the other got it first!

Robin Mark from Northern Ireland certainly made his "mark" as one of the worship leaders with Integrity. I loved his music! (Still do. Just bought his latest one, entitled "The Great Hurricane".) Remember Days of Elijah, Garments of Praise, Jesus, All For Jesus and When It's All Been Said and Done? Robin Mark. Our All Nations Church worship team sang them often, especially Days of Elijah and this one we feature today, Revival.

Thank you, Robin, for your wonderful years of leading the world in worship. Maybe I'll meet you when I travel to Ireland next May! (Jim Clint, our good friend in Northern Ireland, I am sure knows you!)

Be blessed in your blessing others as you listen in worship to Jesus. 

Revive us, Lord!!!


Steve Martin
Founder
Love For His People
Charlotte, North Carolina
USA






Help Love For His People continue to keep bringing you LoveMusic! We also send monthly funds to pastors and Israel-supporting ministries in international lands - with free teaching materials. Financial support for families in Jerusalem, Belfast, UK and Lahore, Pakistan continue monthly. We count on you. Even a gift of $5 helps!  Thank you.


Please donate online safely here, through our website. Click here: I want to bless others.

A USA tax-receipt will be provided for online gifts and checks.
Checks can be sent to:
Love For His People, Inc.
P.O. Box 414
Pineville, NC 28134


We'd love to keep in touch with you. 

Sign up here: Love For His People Contact Form


Laurie and I led the All Nations Church worship team in the late 1990's.

Here is our version of Robin Mark's Revival.


Click here: Revival - Steve & Laurie Martin, All Nations Church worship team



Robin Mark Video above: worship4christ2012  YouTube Published on Oct 1, 2012

From album Revival in Belfast.

Robin Mark

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Robin Mark
Born1957 (age 59–60)
OriginBelfast, Northern Ireland, United Kingdom
GenresContemporary Christian
Occupation(s)Singermusiciansongwritercomposer
InstrumentsVocalspianoacoustic guitar
Years active1990–present
Website
Robin Mark (born 1957) is a Northern Irish Christian singersongwriterworship leader, and recording artist based in Belfast, Northern Ireland. Mark has written several songs sung throughout the world. He is best known for his songs "Days of Elijah", "Revival", "All for Jesus", "The Wonder of The Cross", "Not by Might" and many more. He has released thirteen albums in total with sales of over two million worldwide and has won the GMA's international award.
Though known within the United Kingdom and throughout Canada and Europe from the early 1990s, it was not until his 1999 live album Revival In Belfast that Mark became known in the United States, Australia and the rest of the world. His signature song, "Days of Elijah", has proven popular since 1996. His album Revival In Belfast, released in 1999, remained high in both the Christian retail charts and billboard charts for many years. It was still at number 39 five years later on the Billboard Top Christian Albums chart in 2004.[1]When the follow up album Come Heal This Land was released in 2001, it went straight to number one in the Christian Retail Charts in America. Robin became the first artist from the UK to accomplish this feat.[2]
Robin Mark is also the worship leader in his home church Christian Fellowship Church (CFC) in East Belfast.[citation needed]

Discography[edit]

Studio recordings
  • Not By Might (1993)
  • Days of Elijah (1996)
  • This City, These Streets (1998)
  • Sanctuary (2000)
  • Songs & Hymns (2005)
  • East of the River (2007)
  • John Wesley & Co. (2012)
  • Liberation Praise (2014)
  • The Great Hurricane (2016)
Live recordings
  • Room for Grace (1997)
  • Mandate - All for Jesus (1999)
  • Revival In Belfast (1999)
  • Mandate - Men of Faith (2001)
  • Come Heal This Land (2001)
  • Revival in Belfast 2 (2004)
  • Mandate: Experiencing God (2006)
  • Arise: A Celebration of Worship (2006)
  • Mandate 2007: Living the Adventure (2008)
  • Year of Grace (2009)
  • Fly (2011)

We'd love to keep in touch with you. 


Thursday, August 10, 2017

Supporting the Aliyah of the Jewish people - Jim Clint Family in Northern Ireland - August 2017 Update


Jim CLINT FAMILY UPDATE AUGUST 2017

Northern Ireland

Aug. 10, 2017


Isaiah 11:11-12, " On that day Adonai will raise His hand again, a second time, to reclaim the remnant of His people who remain from Ashur, Egypt, Patros, Ethiopia, Eilam, Shin‘ar, Hamat and the islands in the sea. He will lift a banner for the Gentiles, assemble the dispersed of Isra’el, and gather the scattered of Y’hudah from the four corners of the earth."


Shalom friends. July was been a very busy month for all of us, the LORD has started to use us in
different ways since we returned from Hungary in early June 2017. As Ezra’s representative in
Northern Ireland I’m excited about what the LORD is doing on the island of Ireland, both north and
south. In July I met with pastors from different denominations to tell them about Ezra’s work helping the Jewish people home to Israel. In the coming few months I have arranged to speak at fellowships both in the north and south of Ireland. Please pray that the LORD will use these meeting for His glory.

Bangor Worldwide Convention

From the 21st to 25th of August I will have an “Ezra UK” stand at the Bangor Worldwide Convention in the Presbyterian Church at the corner of Hamilton Rd and Prospect Rd. You’ll find me at the “Global Village” section at the large hall at the rear of the main church building from 18.00 to 19.15 each evening. Please come along to encourage and support us.

http://www.worldwidemission.org/year/2017/the-week/2017-08-25/366

Aid to Israel

For this last month we’ve been collecting essential aid to help needy Jewish Olim (new immigrants)
arriving to Israel from Russia. Many of these Olim are poor and arrive with very little belongings. The items we need MUST new, or in very good condition, the list is as follows; “baby to adult clothing, children to adult shoes, duvet covers, pillow and bed sheets, and bathroom towels. Please NOTE that we can’t take heavy winter clothing or boots. Please consider standing with the Jewish people as they return home to their Land of Promise. Listen to Yeshua’s words concerning helping His brothers the Jewish people.


Matthew 25:35-40. "For I was hungry and you gave me food, I was thirsty and you gave me something to drink, I was a stranger and you made me your guest, I needed clothes and you provided them, I was sick and you took care of me, I was in prison and you visited me.’ Then the people who have done what God wants will reply, ‘Lord, when did we see you hungry and feed you, or thirsty and give you something to drink?

When did we see you a stranger and make you our guest, or needing clothes and provide them? When did we see you sick or in prison, and visit you?’ The King will say to them, ‘Yes! I tell you that whenever you did these things for one of the least important of these brothers of mine, you did them for me…."

Ezra Representative from Turkey


An Ezra rep will be visiting Northern Ireland from the 8th to 17th of September 2017. Please come along to support them as they share about the work among the Jewish people in Islamic Turkey. The first meeting with be at 7.30 pm at Shalom Congregation Belfast. The venue will be at Ashfield Girls High School Holywood Rd Belfast BT42LY.


Supporting the Aliyah of the Jewish people

In the UK PLEASE CONTACT

Ezra UK Website… www.ezrauk.org

Ezra UK Facebook… https://www.facebook.com/EzraUk/

Email… kobi-clint@hotmail.com

Mobile… 07561397224


LOVE FOR HIS PEOPLE sends regular monthly financial support to the Jim Clint family, as they are assisting Jews in making aliyah (immigrating to Israel.) Those in the USA can send funds to them through our website contribution. Click here please: DONATE HERE

We'd love to keep in touch with you. 


Monday, July 3, 2017

Helping Jews make aliyah to the homeland. - Report from Jim Clint from the UK, Northern Ireland - July 2017

Johnston and Jean, with Jim Clint

Helping Jews make aliyah to the homeland. 
Report from Jim Clint in the UK, Northern Ireland


CLINT FAMILY JULY UPDATE from Northern Ireland
July 2, 2017

It's now been one month since we returned to Northern Ireland from serving the Lord in Hungary. Before we left we were able to give financial assistance to a very needy elderly Jewish couple from northern Serbia. They have since made Aliyah to the Promised Land. Pray for them as they adapt to their new surroundings. 

On the 9th of June I spoke at Shalom Messianic Congregation "SMC" in Belfast Northern Ireland. It was good to meet the folks there again, my wife and I founded the congregation in mid-2007. Although it's a small congregation SMC have stood faithfully behind us for these last four years. 

As well as raising support for Aliyah we will also seek to collect aid to help needy Israeli families. With the Lord's help, we aim to collect used clothing which will eventually be shipped to Israel from Northern Ireland. 

Recently I met with Johnston and Jean, two dear friends who have a real love for Israel. Jean is a member of a Christian ladies knitting group. The group will donate their work to the Israel Aid project.  

Thankfully our three children have all been granted school places, the new school term begins in September 2017.

We would like to thank all those who continue to pray for us as we endeavor to serve the Lord and His people Israel. Pray for us as we arrange meetings with Church leaders here in Ireland. 

Please pray that the Lord would give them hearts to support Aliyah in these times of rising antisemitism. 

The Clint family

From the UK-Northern Ireland to Hungary to Israel
- helping Hungarian Jews make aliyah to the Land!

Love For His People, Inc. has been assisting Jim and the Clint family for almost a year now, helping them help Jews make it home.

Will you help us help them? (Quite a circle, right?) That is how the Lord God of Israel planned it. Gentiles helping Jews make ti to their Promised Land!

You can give now. Please use our safe, secure DONATE button.

DONATE TO BLESS FAMILIES IN ISRAEL, PAKISTAN AND NORTHERN IRELAND, WITH YOUR LOVE.

Donate to Bless families in Israel, Pakistan and Northern Ireland, with your love. 
Love For His People, Inc. is a 501(c)3 ministry in the USA.


Monday, June 12, 2017

Another BIG Announcement from Love For His People...Northern Ireland - The James Clint Family Update

Jim Clint family in Northern Ireland

Another BIG Announcement from Love For His People!

Northern Ireland - The James Clint Family Update!

Last week we had the nice excitement about our readers/supporters getting a weekly message from Hadassah in Jerusalem (Hadassah's Message).

This week we received our first report, in this format, from Jim Clint, now back to their home base in Northern Ireland, after a few years helping Jews in Hungary make aliyah (immigrate) to Israel. Love For His People has been sending monthly support for a year now.

We are committed to continuing our $50 monthly support for them, and want to help even more. Jim will keep us all posted on a monthly basis.

We love you Lord and what Your people are doing to help the Chosen Ones get back to their Promised Land! Thanks Jim and family.

With our ongoing and committed love,

Steve Martin
Founder/President
Love For His People, Inc.

P.S. You can help us help them help Hungarian Jews. Please see below, after you read this first update. Thanks!




JAMES CLINT FAMILY UPDATE

On June 2nd 2017 we returned to Northern Ireland after four years serving the Lord in Hungary. Our service in Hungary was focused in helping needy Hungarian Jews make Aliyah to Israel. 

Here in Northern Ireland we'll continue raising support for needy Jewish people from Eastern Europe. 

Sadly antisemitism is rising again in Europe and across the world. As never before we feel the urgency to highlight the need for western Churches to support Jewish Aliyah. 

Keep us in prayer as we endeavor to encourage believers to stand with Israel and the Jewish people. 

As believers face difficulties for standing on God's word we can be sure of one thing, He will never leave or forsake us. 

Blessings in Yeshua. 

The James Clint family
Northern Ireland


Love For His People note: Please help us support this family as they minister to Jews seeking aliyah (immigration) to Israel. You can send your love gifts to:

Love For His People, Inc.
P.O. Box 414
Pineville, NC 21834

Or use our Love For His People - PayPal account (all major credit cards accepted even if you don't have a PayPal account) with the "Donate" button on the right hand column of our blog Love For His People.


History of the Jews in Hungary


From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Hungarian Jews
יהדות הונגריה
Magyar zsidók
Total population
( Hungary  Israel 152,023 (total estimated)
48,600 (core population, estimation) (2010)[1]
120,000 (estimated population) (2012)[2][3]
 Israel 32,023 (immigrants to Israel) (2010)[4]
10,965 (2011 census)[5])
Regions with significant populations
Budapest
Languages
HungarianHebrewYiddish
Part of a series on the
History of Hungary
Coat of arms of Hungary
Flag of Hungary.svg Hungary portal
Jews have a long history in the country now known as Hungary, with some records even predating the 895 AD Hungarian conquest of the Carpathian Basin by over 600 years. Written sources prove that Jewish communities lived in the medieval Kingdom of Hungary and it is even assumed that several sections of the heterogeneous Hungarian tribes practiced Jewish religion. Jewish officials served the king during the reign of Andrew II. From the second part of the 13th century the general religious tolerance decreased and Hungary's policies became similar to the treatment of the Jewish population in Western Europe.
The Jews of Hungary were fairly well integrated into Hungarian society by the time of the First World War. By the early 20th century, the community had grown to constitute 5% of Hungary's total population and 23% of the population of the capital, Budapest. Jews became prominent in science, the arts and business.
Anti-Jewish policies grew more repressive in the interwar period as Hungary's leaders, who remained committed to regaining the lost territories of "Greater Hungary", chose to align themselves (albeit warily) with the governments of Nazi Germany and Fascist Italy – the international actors most likely to stand behind Hungary's claims.[6]Starting in 1938, Hungary under Miklós Horthy passed a series of anti-Jewish measures in emulation of Germany's Nürnberg Laws. The vast majority of Jews who were deported were massacred in Kameniec-Podolsk (Kamianets-Podilskyi). In the massacres of Újvidék (Novi Sad) and villages nearby, 2,550–2,850 Serbs, 700–1,250 Jews and 60–130 others were murdered by the Hungarian Army and "Csendőrség" (Gendarmerie) in January 1942. A Jew living in the Hungarian countryside in March 1944 had a less than 10% chance of surviving the following 12 months.[citation needed] In Budapest, a Jew's chance of survival of the same 12 months was about 50%. Jews from the Hungarian provinces outside Budapest and its suburbs were rounded up. The first transports to Auschwitz began in early May 1944 and continued even as Soviet troops approached. During the last years of World War II, they suffered severely, with over 600,000 being killed (within Hungary's 1943 borders) between 1941 and 1945, mainly through deportation to Nazi German-run extermination camps.
The 2011 Hungary census data had 10,965 people (0.11%) who self-identified religious Jews, of whom 10,553 (96.2%) declared themselves as ethnic Hungarian.[5] Other media sources estimate an Hungarian population with Jewish ethnicity of around 48,200 (no methodology or data collection method is given for the estimate) [7] mostly concentrated in Budapest,.[8] The intermarriage rates for Hungarian Jews is around 60%.[citation needed] There are many active synagogues in Hungary, including the Dohány Street Synagogue, the largest synagogue in Europe and the second largest synagogue in the world after the Temple Emanu-El in New York City.[9

The Deportation of the Hungarian Jews




Hungarian Jews arriving at Auschwitz-Birkenau, May 26,1944


It was not until May 1944, when the Hungarian Jews were deported, that Auschwitz-Birkenau became the site of the largest mass murder in modern history and the epicenter of the Final Solution. In 1942, there were 2.7 million Jews murdered by the Nazis, including 1.6 million at the Operation Reinhard camps, but only 200,000 Jews were gassed at Auschwitz that year in two old converted farm houses. This information is from the book "Auschwitz, a New History" by Laurence Rees, published in 2005.

Almost one half of all the Jews that were killed at Auschwitz were Hungarian Jews who were gassed within a period of 10 weeks in 1944. Up until the Spring of 1944, it had been the three Operation Reinhard camps at Treblinka, Belzec and Sobibor, that were the main Nazi killing centers for the Jews, not Auschwitz.

The order to round up the Hungarian Jews and confine them in ghettos was signed by Lazlo Baky of the Royal Hungarian government on April 7, 1944. Jews in Hungary had been persecuted since 1092 when Jews were forbidden to marry Christians.

The deportation of the Hungarian Jews began on April 29, 1944 when a train load of Jews were sent to Birkenau on the orders of Adolf Eichmann, according to the book by Laurence Rees. According to The Holocaust Chronicle, a huge book published in 2002 by Louis Weber, the CEO of Publications International, Ltd., another train filled with Hungarian Jews left for Birkeanu on April 30, 1944; the two trains with a total of 3,800 Jews reached Birkenau on May 2, 1944. There were 486 men and 616 women selected to work; the remaining 2698 Jews were gassed upon arrival.

On May 8, 1944, former Commandant Rudolf Höss (Hoess) was brought back to Auschwitz-Birkenau to supervise the further deportation of the Hungarian Jews. The next day, Höss ordered the train tracks to be extended inside the Birkenau camp so that the Hungarian Jews could be brought as close as possible to the gas chambers.

According to Laurence Rees, in his book "Auschwitz, a New History," the first mass transport of Hungarian Jews left on May 15, 1944 and arrived at Birkenau on May 16, 1944. The mass transports consisted of 3,000 or more prisoners on each train.

In October 1940, Hungary had become allies with the Axis powers by joining the Tripartite Pact. Part of the deal was that Hungary would be allowed to take back northern Transylvania, a province that had been given to Romania after World War I. Hungarian soldiers participated in the German invasion of the Soviet Union in June 1941.

On April 17, 1943, after Bulgaria, another ally of Germany, had refused to permit their Jews to be deported, Hitler met with Admiral Miklos Horthy, the Hungarian leader, in Salzburg and tried to persuade him to allow the Hungarian Jews to be "resettled" in Poland, according to Martin Gilbert in his book entitled "Never Again." Admiral Horthy rejected Hitler's plea and refused to deport the Hungarian Jews.

From the beginning of the persecution of the Jews by the Nazis in 1933, until March 1944, Hungary was a relatively safe haven for the Jews and many Jews from Germany, Austria, Slovakia and Poland sought refuge within its borders. However, in 1938, Hungary had enacted laws similar to the laws in Nazi Germany, which discriminated against the Jews.

On September 3, 1943, Italy signed an armistice with the Allies and turned against Germany, their former ally. Horthy hoped to negotiate a similar deal with the Western allies to stop a Soviet invasion of Hungary.

"Sonderkommando Eichmann," a special group of SS soldiers under the command of Adolf Eichmann, was activated on March 10, 1944 for the purpose of deporting the Hungarian Jews to Auschwitz; the personnel in this Special Action Commando was assembled at the Mauthausen concentration camp in Austria and then sent to Hungary on March 19, 1944 during the celebration of Purim, a Jewish holiday.




Famous photo of Hungarian Jews walking to the gas chamber


On March 18, 1944, Hitler had a second meeting with Horthy at Schloss Klessheim, a castle near Salzburg in Austria. An agreement was reached in which Horthy promised to allow 100,000 Jews to be sent to the Greater German Reich to construct underground factories for the manufacture of fighter aircraft. These factories were to be located at Mauthausen, and at the eleven Kaufering subcamps of Dachau. The Jews were to be sent to Auschwitz, and then transferred to the camps in Germany and Austria.

When Horthy returned to Hungary, he found that Edmund Veesenmayer, an SS Brigadeführer, had been installed as the effective ruler of Hungary, responsible directly to the German Foreign Office and Hitler.

On March 19, 1944, the same day that Eichmann's Sonderkommando arrived, German troops occupied Hungary. The invasion of Hungary by the Soviet Union was imminent and Hitler suspected that Horthy was planning to change sides. As it became more and more likely that Germany would lose the war, its allies began to defect to the winning side. Romania switched to the Allied side on August 23, 1944.

After the formation of the Reich Central Security Office (RSHA) in 1939, Adolf Eichmann had been put in charge of section IV B4, the RSHA department that handled the deportation of the Jews. One of his first assignments was to work on the Nazi plan to send the European Jews to the island of Madagascar off the coast of Africa. This plan was abandoned in 1940.

According to Rudolf Höss, the Commandant of Auschwitz, "Eichmann had concerned himself with the Jewish question since his youth and had an extensive knowledge of the literature on the subject. He lived for a long time in Palestine in order to learn more about the Zionists and the growing Jewish state."

In 1937, Eichmann had gone to the Middle East to research the possibility of mass Jewish emigration to Palestine. He had met with Feival Polkes, an agent of the Haganah, with whom he discussed the Zionist plan to create a Jewish state. According to testimony at his trial in 1961 in Jerusalem, Eichmann was denied entry into Palestine by the British, who were opposed to a Jewish state in Palestine, so the idea of deporting all the European Jews to Palestine was abandoned.

At the Wannsee Conference on January 20, 1942, at which the Final Solution to the Jewish Question was planned, Eichmann had been assigned to organize the "transportation to the East" which was a euphemism for sending the European Jews to be killed at Treblinka, Sobibor, Belzec, Majdanek and Auschwitz-Birkenau.




Hungarian Jewish children walk to the gas chambers at Auschwitz-Birkenau


The next day after German forces took over Hungary, Adolf Eichmann arrived to oversee the process of deporting the Hungarian Jews. There were 725,000 Jews living in Hungary in 1944, including many who were previously residents of Romania, according to Laurence Rees, who wrote "Auschwitz, a New History."

The Jews in the villages and small towns were immediately rounded up and concentrated in ghettos. One of the ghettos was located in a brick factory in the city of Miskolc, Hungary, where 14,000 Jews were imprisoned while they waited to be transported to Birkeanu.

Magda Brown, who was born in Miskolc on June 11, 1927, said in a speech at a Synagogue in Morgan Hill, CA that her family was marched though the city to the Miskolc ghetto on her 17th birthday in 1944. From there, Magda was transported on a train to Birkenau, where she was immediately separated from her family.

After two months at Birkeanu, Magda was sent, along with 1,000 Hungrian women, to work in a munitions factory at Allendorf, a sub-camp of Buchenwald. In March 1945, the prisoners at Allendorf were evacuated and marched to the Buchenwald main camp; Magda escaped from the march and hid on a farm until she was rescued by American soldiers.

Vera Frank Federman is another Hungarian survivor who was sent to Auschwitz and then transferred a few weeks later to the Allendorf sub-camp of Buchenwald.

The following quote is from an article published on April 29, 2003 in The Daily, the newspaper of the University of Washington. Vera Frank is a graduate of UW.

On Federman's 20th birthday, June 27, 1944, she and her parents were herded onto one of the transports and spent the next three days traveling to Auschwitz.

"We arrived [at] Auschwitz, and they separated the men from the women, and my father went with the men, and my mother and I arrived in front of an S.S. officer," Federman said.

The officer ordered Federman and her mother in different directions, despite Federman's claim that she was only 13 years old. She never saw either of her parents again.

Federman stayed in Auschwitz for six or seven weeks, and saw her health and that of others rapidly deteriorate.

"Girls came down with scarlet fever, and my cousin, with whom I came, became ill with scarlet fever, but she was so lucky, because up to that time, [the Nazis] took [sick people] immediately, and took them to the gas chamber," she said.

After several weeks, Federman and her two friends, Vera and Zsuzsi, were marched in front of Dr. Josef Mengele, the camp's human-genetics researcher, so he could decide which women would be sent to other labor camps, and which would be killed. Federman and Vera were rejected, while Zsuzsi was chosen to go to a labor camp.

Zsuzsi insisted that her sister come with her, and after some questioning by Mengele about whether they were twins, he approved Vera. Federman tried to convince Mengele to approve her as well, but he rejected her again.

"I said, 'Oh, but I am very strong, I can work.' And a German officer standing next to him whispered, kind of a loud whisper, 'Lassen sie das kleine gehen' - 'Let the little one go,' and he let me go," she said.

The photo below shows Hungarian women who have been selected to work.




Hungarian women who have just arrived on a transport train


According to a book which she wrote, Holocaust survivor Eva Fahidi was 18 years old when, together with her family in the town of Debrecen, Hungary, she was herded into a cattle car headed to the Birkenau death camp. Her Mother and 11-year-old sister, Gilike, were instantly murdered. Her father bore the hard labour for a few weeks only.

Eva spent six weeks in Auschwitz-Birkenau. Then she was shipped with one thousand other women to Allendorf, a slave-labour sub-camp of BuchenwaldHere, the women had to work with harmful chemical agents, "without protective gloves or masks; we inhaled all the dangerous vapour and walked in saltpeter up to our knees," twelve hours a day, incredibly hard work, "but in comparison with a death camp it was a better option." Here, being able "to maintain a reasonable hygienic standard; in times of great need being able to help each other," dignified their lives and contributed to survival.




Hungarian women who have been selected to work at Auschwitz-Birkenau


The photo above shows Hungarian women walking into the women's section on the south side of the Birkenau camp after they have had a shower and a change of clothes. Behind them is a transport train and in the background on the left is one of the camp guards. The woman with dark hair in the center of the photo is Ella Hart Gutmann who is in the outside row facing inward. Next to her is Lida Hausler Leibovics; both women were from Uzhgorod. Their heads have been shaved in an attempt to control the lice that spreads typhus.

One of the Hungarian Jews who survived was Alice Lok Cahana, whose story was recounted by Laurence Rees in his book entitled "Auschwitz, a New History." Alice was 15 when she was registered in the Auschwitz-Birkenau camp, but months later she was sent to the gas chamber in Krema V and told that she would be given new clothes after taking a shower. The purpose of the red brick Krema V building was deceptively disguised by red geraniums in window boxes, according to Alice. She was inside the gas chamber in Krema V when the revolt by the 
Sonderkommando unit in Krema IV began on October 7, 1944. This was the occasion when the Sonderkommando blew up the Krema IV gas chamber building with dynamite that had been sneaked into Birkenau by some of the women prisoners who worked in factories outside the camp.
Laurence Rees wrote:

But the revolt did save some lives. It must have been because of the chaos caused by the Sonderkommando in crematorium 4 that the SS guards emptied the gas chamber of crematorium 5 next door without killing Alice Lok Cahana and her group.

Eva Olsson is a Hungarian Jew who arrived at Birkenau on May 19, 1944; she was 18 years old. In a speech at St. Patrick's High School and St. Christopher Secondary School, as reported by Tara Hagan in The Observer, a Canadian newspaper, Olsson told about a Nazi official who came to her neighborhood in Hungary and began rounding up the Jews, telling them that they were going to be sent to Germany to work in a brick factory. Instead, they were sent to Birkenau. Out of 89 members of her family, Eva and her sister Fredel were the only survivors.

Olsson has spoken to over a million people since she started giving lectures about the Holocaust in 1995. In her talks, she tells about the gas chamber at Bergen-Belsen and about children being burned alive, five at a time, in the crematory ovens at Bergen-Belsen.

According to the article by Tara Hagan, Eva Olsson told the students that when the Jews arrived at Birkenau "People who didn't do what they were told were shot on the spot. If a mother was holding a baby, they shot the baby and the bullet would go through to the mother. You save a bullet that way."

Tara Hagan also wrote that, at the Birkenau camp, Olssen "recalled living on bread and black, watery soup that had tufts of human hair in it, bones and mice."

Eventually, Olsson was sent to work in a factory in Essen, Germany, then to the Bergen Belsen concentration camp. At Bergen-Belsen, Olsson was starving, covered in lice and sores and had a fever. She told the students that she "dampened a cloth with her own urine" in order to cool down. Others, she recalled, drank their urine.

Iby Knill was 18 and working as a resistance fighter in Hungary when she was arrested and eventually transported to the Birkenau death camp in June 1944, according to this news article by Virginia Mason, published on January 26, 2010.


Iby's story begins when she was a young girl growing up in her native Czechoslovakia; when the Germans invaded Czechoslovakia in 1938, she escaped over the border into Hungary but was arrested as an illegal immigrant.


"There were five of us, all girls and we made a pact to stay together as we walked through those gates and were greeted by the man we later learned was Dr Josef Mengele," she says of her arrival at Birkenau. "From that day on it became a test of survival." Miraculously, she adds, all five of them lived to witness the liberation from the Nazis in 1945. 


By 2010, Iby had started writing her story and was seeking a publisher for her manuscript, which is chillingly brutal in its frankness, according to Virginia Mason's article.


According to Iby Knill, "The shower unit and the gas chamber looked the same. They had been built that way, so we never knew if we were to be gassed or just showered."

In her lectures on the Holocaust, Iby describes the infamous Dr Mengele, whose experiments in the name of medical science earned him the nick name, Angel of Death. "We lined up and he would walk in front of us, picking out the weakest. Their fate was the gas chambers."

She talks of the cramped, inhuman conditions at Birkenau, the incredible hunger and thirst, and worst of all, the scraps of gray, latherless soap made from human ashes, and the constant fear of extermination in the gas chamber.

According to her story, Iby was able to leave the Birkenau death camp only by volunteering to go to the Lippstadt labour camp, a sub-camp of the Buchenwald concentration camp, where she worked in the hospital unit. On Easter Sunday, 1945, while on a death march to the main Buchenwald camp, she was freed by Allied Forces.

The following information about Holocaust survivor Lily Ebert is from an article by Ross Lydallin the London Evening Standard on January 26, 2010:
At the age of 14, Lily Ebert was taken from the Hungarian town of Bonybad to Birkenau in a packed cattle car, along with her mother, brother and three sisters. Lily was registered upon arrival in July 1944 and tattooed with the number A-10572, even though she was below the age of 15 and could have been sent directly to the gas chamber.

After about four months at Birkenau, Lily and her three sisters were transferred to an ammunition factory near Leipzig, Germany, which was a sub-camp of the Buchenwald concentration camp.

Source: Scrapbook Pages