Page 7

OverviewVersionsHelp

Here you can see all page revisions and compare the changes have been made in each revision. Left column shows the page title and transcription in the selected revision, right column shows what have been changed. Unchanged text is highlighted in white, deleted text is highlighted in red, and inserted text is highlighted in green color.

3 revisions
RCH in KZ at Aug 05, 2022 04:40 PM

Page 7

[fol. vii.]

7

the names of which I cannot recall now, but those of you who
have come from there know what they are & where they are,
of Rabbis hanged to telegraph poles, men & women shot down,
the wives & mothers & daughters of men in the army ravished,
women running to the synagogues, take hold of the horns of
the altar for safety & not being protected; synagogues
shot through & burned down, the scrolls of the Torah desecrated.
Every possible indignity, every possible brutality practiced,
not upon 1 family, but upon a whole people, upon thousands
upon millions of your brothers & mine." I could go through
this book & read from paragraph after paragraph & page after page
of this harrowing tale. It is not as through one men & women
were suffering merely because they are in the battle zone or
in the line of fire. They need relief because they are Jews.
I will read you one more thing more -- a letter also read
at the Carnegie Hall by a Russian Jew. "More"

The magnitude of the tragedy cannot possibly be
imagined by mortal men. You must read the horrors
You must be told in order to get but a faint conception

Page 7

the names of which I cannot recall now, but those of you who
have come from there know what they are & where they are,
of Rabbis hanged to telegraph poles, men & women shot down,
the wives & mothers & daughters of men in the army ravished,
women running to the synagogue, take hold of the horns of
the altar for safety & not being protected; synagogues
shot through & burned down, the _____ of the Torah desecrated.
Every possible(?) _____, every possible brutality practiced,
not upon 1 family, but upon a whole people, upon thousands
upon millions of your brothers & mine." I could go through
this book & read from paragraph after paragraph & page after page
of this harrowing tale. It is not as through one(?) man & women
were suffering ______ because they are in the battle zone or
in the line of fire. They need relief because they are Jews.
I will read you one (stricken: ____) more-a letter also read
at the Carnegie Hall by a Russian Jew. "Move" (underlined twice).

The magnitude of the tragedy cannot possibly be
imagined by mortal men. You must read the horrors
You must be told in order to get but a ______ conception