The War Years in Berlin (4) Letters of Hermann Samter from Berlin Source: Yad Vashem Archive 0.2/30 Reproduced by the kind permission of the Wiener Library. [Hermann Samter was born in 1909 in Berlin. He wrote the following letters to his relatives abroad.] 12 September 1940 …A lot has changed since we last saw each other. How long has it been? You must have heard from your parents that while they were preparing for emigration I tried very hard to get to South America. It seemed to be quite promising a year ago, but meanwhile everything has been shattered. I was at least lucky to have been employed for almost the entire time. In November 1938 the Berlin Community Bulletin, as well as all other Jewish papers, ceased to exist. But as early as January 1939 I got a position at the newly founded Juedisches Nachrichtenblatt (Jewish Information Bulletin). The work is much the same as before. We sit in the former offices of the Juedische Rundschau and the paper is being printed at the Aryanized printer of the Israelitisches Familienblatt …. There is little variety in our life. I go to the Kulturbund cinema once a week.… Every two months they produce a new play, everything of course with much more primitive means as even two years ago. Finally, I strangely still have a lot of friends. Strangely – since the majority of the sensible people have emigrated…. 5 August 1941 …Last Thursday between 9 p.m. and 11:30 p.m. house searches were conducted at the homes of over 1,000 Jewish families in Berlin. They searched for gold, money, tomatoes, fruit, red wine and everything else a Jew is not allowed to have nowadays. Whoever was not home was registered. Whoever was found in someone else's apartment was taken away on the spot. This, because Jews have to be in their own homes after 9 p.m. (but no one was informed of this before). They also took those people who are able to work but are not yet employed by the labour service. On the whole there were 70 arrests that evening. Now the riddle remains: May we go to the forests or not? Etc. As we found out, this is not a ridiculous question. You can see, we have great worries. Maybe soon the British air pirates will prove to us that there are much bigger worries… 10 September 1941 …Unfortunately I had to postpone my vacation, and now travelling is out of the question. As of the 19 [of this month] we may not leave our residence without written authorisation of the police. That means that we will not be able to go even to Potsdam or Bernau. As of the same date Jews will have to wear a Star of David, the size of the palm of a hand, well sewn to the clothes with the inscription " Jude" (Jew). Now I will be able to buy a newspaper only within the [permitted] hours 4 – 5 p.m.. I will not be able to eat in a restaurant or visit Aryan friends. And there are yet even more unpleasant results as you can well imagine…. 21 October 1941 …That evening…over 1,000 people were taken from their apartments. They had to quickly pack their suitcases and then they went to the assembly camp in the Levetzow street synagogue. Their apartments were sealed off – everything was confiscated. At Levetzow street they first took all the money from the people, then all metal belongings (including razors if they were metal), all documents with the exception of the identity card which was stamped "evacuated from Litzmannstadt" [should be "evacuated to Litzmannstadt" – Lodz in territory annexed to Germany from Poland]. No one had anticipated such swift action, and you can imagine the many tragedies: parents who could not say goodbye to their children, etc. No one except the community workers were permitted to enter the camp. Two days later, the train departed. All age groups, from 1 – 90, were represented, but the large majority were elderly people. It also happened that people were taken directly from the factories to their homes to pack their suitcases. No one knows at what pace it will continue. If only one train leaves every week, it will take over a year. It has gone that far that people now say: I hope we will manage to get to Litzmannstadt and not to Russia.'. You can see, we are becoming modest… [The German Jews deported to Lodz (Litzmannstadt in German) between October 15-21, 1941 were brought into the existing ghetto, where they shared the fate of the Polish Jews there] 30 November 1941 Up till now seven transports of around one thousand people have left Berlin: to Litzmannstadt, Minsk, Kovno, Riga. People who are above their mid sixties or who have children under the age of 1 are now normally not taken. One can take along baggage of 50 Kilo, one mattress, work tools and in some cases a sewing machine. Usually one gets notification several days in advance, but sometimes only one day ahead. Friends of mine were notified on a Tuesday evening to prepare for Wednesday. They managed to postpone it a bit. On Friday evening they got the same notification for Saturday. They waited and were not picked up. They are still here today. Apparently they were claimed by the armaments factory in which they work… The first transport left five weeks ago, and there is still no news what kind of life the people have. Some postcards were smuggled from Litzmannstadt. They all have the same content: "utter destitution, send money!". No one received confirmation that the money that was sent in fact arrived at its destination. A number of single men volunteered to go from Litzmannstadt to labour camps in Posen and Lissa. It seems that there, contrary to Litzmannstadt they don't suffer from hunger. No one knows how they really are, as their letters too are completely uninformative and are probably under censorship of the camp commanders. A short time ago we all had to declare within 48 hours if and what kind of typewriters, bikes, cameras, binoculars we possess…. We may only sell books with permission of the Reich Culture Chamber. We are not allowed to use public telephones any longer… [Between 8-28 November 1941 around 7,000 German and Austrian Jews were deported to Minsk. They were put in a special ghetto created for them. In order to create the space for them, over 6,000 local Jews from the Minsk ghetto were shot between 7-11 November. The fate of the Jews deported to Kovno and Riga at the end of November was different. The late November 1941 transports to Kovno were led from the trains to the execution site and were shot. The Jews deported to Riga were shot there on November 30.] 28 December 1941 We are still in our apartment. Miss Tuerk will probable go with the next transport. Aunt Nelly will have to move to a new residence for the second time.… The protection [from deportation] for [workers'] family members has been annulled.… If now parents and children are [on the list] and the children for example work for Siemens, the parents will have to go and the children stay behind. And they may not volunteer [for the deportation]. The age limit that existed for some time has been discontinued. Now the decisive factor is the fitness for transport [people who were too frail or too sick were exempted from deportation]… No one really knows what the political and military situation really is. 26 January 1942 Three transports have again left since the beginning of January. (All of them to Riga). This means that by now 10,000 people have gone from Berlin. There will be quiet in February, but in return it will probably go on with more strength in March. But then at least it will not be as cold as it is now. Recently, the evacuees – or as they are to be called from now on – the emigrants, under the age of 60 have to walk from the Levetzow street [assembly camp] to the Grunewald railway station. Can you imagine what that means in this cold weather? The people who left yesterday went in cattle cars. There were many old people among them, some taken from the old age home (up to 75 years old!) How many of these old people will not even survive the trip! And what happens after that – no one really knows. There has been no news from Litzmannstadt since the beginning of the new year. Mail sent there is rewith the notice that no mail is being delivered to that. The presumed reason is spotted typhus. So we don't know. Money sent is not being returned, but there is no confirmation that it reaches its destination. A transport left for Minsk on 12 November. They say that some people managed to smuggle letters home with the military mail. I have not seen such a letter. The same is being said about the people who left on 27 November and in January to Riga. I know a lady who actually read such a letter [from a person on these transports]. Not a single person of the 1,000 people who were on the transport that went on 17 November to Kovno has written anything. This is how the widely spread rumour originated that all the people were shot on the way or murdered in some other way. All this of course does not reinforce the courage of the people affected by the evacuation. Thus the suicides have increased incredibly. By the way, Miss Tuerk and the Deutsches were on the last transport. The Deutsch family had everything ready for emigration when the war with the US broke out. They were totally unprepared for the possibility of an evacuation. The surprise was even worse than for others. Mrs. Deutsch was aware that her 73 year old husband would not survive it. Miss Tuerk was more composed, but of course, for her too, it was hard to leave. The Gestapo officials who appeared in our apartment were quite pleasant. They sealed only one cabinet, into which we had put Miss Tuerk's belongings. I accompanied Miss Tuerk to the police and then to the assembly point at Lewetzow street… There were many sad scenes of goodbyes there. 14 Days ago we all received a letter ordering us to submit all fur and wool articles… [For the transports in November see footnote for letter of 30 November 1941. The three transports in January 1942 leaving for Riga were brought into the ghetto created for the German Jews in Riga. Miss Tuerk and Mrs. Deutsch apparently went to Riga.] 11 May 1942 …As you can see, we are still here, in spite of Lisa's morbid premonition. How long, is of course a different question. Two transports have left Berlin since January – one in late March, another on Easter Friday. In total, 12,000 have left Berlin. Only 43,000 with a star and 13,000 without a star remain. About the same number are still living elsewhere in Germany. Apparently the fate of the people [deported] varies very much. There is no word from Kovno, Riga and Minsk. The general belief is that the treatment in Riga is decent. The only mail from Litzmannstadt are hand-signed, printed postcards confirming receipt of money that has been sent. Recently, a woman here learned of the death of her father only because her mother who is in Litzmannstadt added the sign "We" [short for widow] to her name on the signed receipt. There is no other mail from there… Berlin: The use of public transportation has been prohibited since 1 May…. The results are grave. Apart from the fact that now many have to walk for over an hour to work, most private circulation is prevented as well. Parents often cannot visit their children any longer. Trips are out of the question. Visits to the hospital are impossible for most people…. And who can walk to the cemetery at Weissensee? Entry to the Tiergarten [a large park in the centre of Berlin] and other parks is forbidden, and one is not allowed to walk along the following streets (one may cross them)…. The Tiergarten interdiction makes all the routes much longer. This, of course, causes people to go out without the star. The result is that they are put on the next transport if they are caught… 9 July 1942 …Words cannot express. Of course you know about our fate, or rather you believe that you know it. But the truth is that people living far away cannot feel it in the same way as the people here, who are living through the end of Jewry in Germany. I was happy to learn from your letter what a full life you have over there. It would be nice if you could tell me about your work. I am still with the paper – "paper" is a somewhat exaggerated term to use for this bulletin…. It consists of two pages: 1¼ pages of text and ¾ of a page for ads – mostly death and rooms for rent. It is rather a miracle that I am still employed there, after all the cutbacks in recent years… Our circle of friends is constantly shrinking. People are parting all the time. Everyone says that they hope for a reunion, but at the same time they doubt it will occur. Sunday trips are long over. We visit each other and hold the same conversations we already had many times before. There is nothing to challenge the mind. It would be unjust to expect a person up to his neck in water to have spiritual interests. Of course, many books are still being read, but for many people this is a way to escape from reality. Work is a good diversion…. Aunt Nelly has also been working in a factory for the last months. She, who could not get out of bed in the mornings, now leaves home every morning at 6 a.m… [On 12 March 1943, Samter was deported from Berlin to Auschwitz. It was the 36th transport out of the 64 transports that left Berlin to the east and to the ghetto of Theresienstadt. A total of 50,535 Berlin Jews were deported with these transports between the fall of 1941 and the end of the war in 1945. There is no information about how or when Hermann Samter died in Auschwitz.]