Courtesy of Harris family
Sammy Harris as a child
Seven-year-old Sammy Harris clutched his father’s hand. They were packed tightly into a crowd of people. It was 1942, in Sammy’s village of Deblin, Poland.
Sammy, his family, and nearly everyone they knew were being herded onto a train by German soldiers called Nazis. No one knew where they were going. But they knew why they were being sent away: because they were Jewish.
As the crush of people edged forward, Sammy’s father pushed him out of the crowd. “Go!” his father cried, pointing to a pile of bricks nearby. “Run!”
Sammy ran and crouched behind the bricks. His sister Sara, age 9, was already hiding there.
It was the last Sammy would see of his parents and three of his siblings. They were among the 6 million Jewish people who were killed in a terrible chapter of history known as the Holocaust.
But Sammy survived.
Seven-year-old Sammy Harris clutched his father’s hand. They were packed tightly into a crowd of people. It was 1942, in Sammy’s village of Deblin, Poland.
Sammy, his family, and nearly everyone they knew were being herded onto a train by German soldiers called Nazis. No one knew where they were going. But they knew why they were being sent away: because they were Jewish.
The crush of people edged forward. Sammy’s father pushed him out of the crowd. “Go!” his father cried, pointing to a pile of bricks nearby. “Run!”
Sammy ran and crouched behind the bricks. His sister Sara, age 9, was already hiding there.
It was the last Sammy would see of his parents and three of his siblings. They were among the 6 million Jewish people who were killed in a terrible chapter of history known as the Holocaust.
But Sammy survived.