United States Holocaust Memorial Museum The Power of Truth: 20 Years
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Meet our Survivor Volunteers

Eve Kristine Vetulani

“During the war he asked my mother, ‘Can you take a Jewish woman into your house?’ and, no, he asked me, if my mother would take this Jewish woman, and I said no, never tell her that she is Jewish. This grandmother did not want to go with her Jewish children to Italy, she said I’m too old I am going to die here, I’m not going any place, I love this city, okay. And the cook was left with her, but then when she came to live with us the cook would always come to deliver food so that my mother really didn’t have to do anything except make the toilet paper. But everything else was delivered. And so he was also the one who, she stayed. And I was already in Germany and she died peacefully in our house and nobody knew. Except that I had to teach her, my uncle said, you have to teach her prayers, Catholic prayers, the first thing they do they ask you about the Christian Catholic holidays, and the years of this and that.”
(postwar testimony)

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Ruth Cohen
Ruth Cohen
Ruth Cohen

Born April 26, 1930, in Mukachevo, Czechoslovakia

Ruth Cohen was born on April 26, 1930 to Herman and Bertha Friedman in Mukachevo, Czechoslovakia. Herman and his brother were wholesale wine and beer manufacturers. Ruth, her older sister, Teresa, and younger brother, Aharon, often helped to fill bottles on Friday evenings before the Sabbath. The Friedmans were Orthodox Jews as well as Zionists and Ruth and her siblings were sent to the Hebrew Gymnasium, a school where the curriculum was taught entirely in Hebrew.

In 1938, Nazi Germany annexed Prague and forced the division of Czechoslovakia. Mukachevo and other surrounding towns became part of neighboring Hungary, an ally of Germany. Laws were soon imposed that put restrictions on the country’s Jewish citizens. Ruth’s father could no longer run his own business, but was able to continue to work for the company. Despite growing restrictions, the Friedmans were able to adopt two of Ruth’s cousins who had been sent to live with them from a less stable part of Czechoslovakia. In 1942, Ruth’s mother learned that some of her family in other parts of the country had been taken to Majdanek.

By March 1944, Ruth and her family had been forced from their home and were living in a designated ghetto. The following month, Ruth, her family, and others living in the ghetto were marched by German soldiers to a local brick factory and told to board the cattle cars waiting there. As Ruth was getting on, she watched as a favorite school teacher was shot and killed for refusing to follow orders. The cattle cars arrived at Auschwitz four days later. Ruth and her sister Teresa were able to stay together, but they were separated from the rest of their family. Although she did not know it at the time, Ruth's mother, brother, and cousins were sent to the crematorium, while her father was selected for labor. Ruth and her sister arrived at their assigned barracks where they were approached by a woman named Miriam Leitner who remembered Teresa from summer camp. Miriam was the director of the barracks and was able to secure jobs for the sisters; Teresa as her assistant and Ruth to deliver messages throughout the camp.

In late October 1944, after a failed uprising and the destruction of an Auschwitz crematorium, Ruth and her sister were sent in a transport to a concentration camp in Nuremberg, Germany. Although Ruth was very sick by this time, she was still able to do the work assigned to her. By February 1945, the camp was destroyed from constant bombing. Ruth and Teresa were sent to another camp in Holysov, Czechoslovakia and worked in a factory that manufactured airplane parts. Conditions here were better than in the other camps. Three months later, Ruth and Teresa were liberated by the United States Army.

Ruth and Teresa made their way back to Mukachevo where they reunited with their father. After she spent a year recovering in a hospital, Ruth and Herman immigrated to the United States on April 24, 1948 and Teresa followed six months later. The family settled in New York City where Ruth found a job as a cashier for the Education Alliance. She met Benjamin Cohen there and married him in 1952. They have three children and eight grandchildren. Today Ruth lives in the Washington, DC area and is a volunteer at the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum.