An Englishman in Auschwitz
Greenman was born in 1910 in London to a Jewish family; in 1913 he and his widowed father settled in Rotterdam. Greenman failed to escape to England when the war began, and in 1940 was caught by the German occupation. He lost his British identity papers and, because of bureaucratic procrastination on the part of Dutch officials and of the Swiss consulate that represented British interests, could not prove his British nationality. He was deported to Westerbork in October 1942, with his wife and son. In January 1943 the family was sent to Birkenau, where Greenman's wife and child were killed immediately, and he was used for slave labor. He was also a victim of "medical experiments" in the camp. In September 1943 he was transferred to the Monowitz camp, and in January 1945, after a death march to Gleiwitz, he was transported to Buchenwald, where he was liberated. After the war he settled in Britain. His father survived, since he was married to a non-Jew. x, 132 pages : illustrations ; 23 cm
- Greenman, Leon.
- NIOD Bibliotheek
- Text
- ocm46713216
- Greenman, Leon.
- Jews--England--London--Biography.
- Jews, British--Netherlands--Biography.
- London (England)--Biography.
- Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945)--Netherlands--Personal narratives.
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