|
|
I asked my grandmother, Aldona Cepaviciene, to tell me about
her life during the war in 1941-1945.
She was 12 when the war began. In 1943 her mother and her 5
children moved to the city of Kaunas. That was the year of German
occupation. All 6 people lived in a small, dark basement,
because the house was occupied by German soldiers. But in
spite of that, they were quite kind with the family.
My grandmother knew a lot about Germans being against the
Jews. Her family lived not far from the ghetto and she saw
many things. My granny could see crowds of the Jews being
marched to the 9th fort to the shooting by German soldiers .
The Jews were dressed in black suits with yellow stars on
their backs. One day my granny's brother followed them till
the fort and then he could see the Jews' death from the
hill, which was near the fort. People were allowed to watch
those scenes, because Germans' hate against the Jews was
very public. The Jews weren't allowed to walk on the
pavement, just along the street.
In the summer of 1944 my granny went to live in the country
for a few months. That was the most terrible holidays of
her life. At that time Russians occupation began and the
Germans hid in the forests robbing lonely houses in the
country and one day they came to her.
The Germans took everything they could take: food, clothes,
animals, chickens. But the most terrible thing was, that
the girl couldn't find out anything about her mother in the
town, because all the connections of communication were
broken. She was just 14 years old and very frightened and
so she tried to reach the city, where the German and Russian
armies were fighting.
There she found her mother alive. She was exhausted of the
bombings. Every evening the family had to hide from the
bombs. The city was nearly destroyed above them, the
houses: the jail, the school, the electric power station,
the water supply and all things were destroyed by bombing.
My granny's uncle, Juozas Kaluzevicius, was deported to the
slave camps by the Russians . The family couldn't find out
anything about him for many years, when one day they got the
message, that he died from the hunger and deseases.
Kaunas City was in Russian hands. Russian soldiers wanted
granny's family to leave the house. The Jews as well as
Russians tried to evict my granny's family. Jews and
Russians were very rude, dishonest, trying to get as much
good for themselves as they could. But anyway, they were
humans too and, of course, not everyone was bad, but they
were fierce and the family had to move to another place to
live.
|
|