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Holocaust Survivor Gilbert Metz MAG
   Were you in a  concentration camp?
My family was sent to Auschwitz - my mother,   father, aunt, and sister. We were herded into cattle cars until there was room for no one else.   Then they closed it up and there was only one small hole for air. There was no bathroom, and we  were not given water during the four-day trip. Many died from dehydration, but that was only the  beginning. My aunt also died on the trip. 
Did you lose your  mother, father and sister?
When we arrived at the camp, we were  given chalk and pencils to write our names on our luggage. We were told we would get it in our new  home, that we could live together as a family. Young men under the age of 15, the sick, the  elderly, and the women with small children were separated. I used my knowledge of upper-class  German to stay with my father, telling them I was 16 rather than 14. I believe that if I had gone  with the other group, I would have been gassed that night. My mother and ten-year-old sister died  in the gas chamber that night. 
What about your father?  
My father and I were in the same camp, Auschwitz, but he was  eventually sent to Block 14, to be gassed.  The people there had to continue working during the  day, knowing they were going to be gassed at any time. Through a miracle I was allowed to visit  him for ten minutes.  I brought him soup and he wanted me to eat it, but I told him I had already  eaten, which was a lie. It was hard to say good-bye under those conditions. Then, the next day,   Block 14 was empty. 
What is one thing that stayed with  you?
   You get used to the hunger, but thirst follows you anywhere  you go.  
One memory that still haunts me is having to drag people to ditches,   douse them with gasoline and set them afire. Some were still alive. There were children, babies . . .   I still hear their screams. Even after I was married, I would wake up screaming in the middle of  the night because I could still see the faces. The death of my father is also an experience  that haunts me. 
Why did you come to speak to us? You said  that you did not speak to middle school students, but you came to our class.   
Your teacher sent me your writings. I was so touched. You experienced  the Holocaust through your words. They were so full of emotion and depth, I knew you were prepared  for my story. Most students do not understand what happened, and you did. Your teacher should be  credited with this. She has prepared you well. I'm doing this for one reason only - for the ones  who didn't survive. 
How did it make you feel, to be treated  that way because you were a Jew?
I didn't understand, it was  unbelievable, so unreal. 
Do you hate those who did this to  the Jews?
No, because you don't hate or dislike the Germans today for  what their grandparents or parents did. That's just like you don't hate whites for what  their great-grandparents did to the slaves. 
How do you think  you survived?
Shoes were vital for survival in the camp because they  kept our feet warm and free of wounds and diseases. Shoes were also beneficial during the hours of  labor we performed daily during my two years in concentration camps. 
   One  night, others thought I was dead and threw me out in the snow. When I woke up I went into the  barracks and said, "Which one of you SOBs stole my shoes?" I went in and got them  back. 
What advice would you give teenagers today?  
Be tolerant of others, polite, and have ambition. Then you can  succeed. Nothing good comes from hatred. 
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