Jerry Elman Miracles Through Hell

Miracles Through Hell

A true story of Holocaust survival and intergenerational healing

Book Cover: Miracles Through Hell
Editions:Paperback
ISBN: 9780578382487
Pages: 235
Hardcover
ISBN: 9780578348711
Pages: 236
Kindle
Pages: 235

Miracles Through Hell is a deeply moving account of bravery, luck, and redemption, in which Elman uncovers the details of his parents' lives before the Nazis took control of Poland, leads us through the miracles and hell his parents experienced as the war raged on, and finally reveals the trauma of second-generation survivors. Through the telling of his family history, Elman's own story is told.

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Excerpt:

PREFACE

On November 1, 1942, my mother, Rochal Gritczak, was fourteen years old, living with her family in Sokoly, a small village in Poland. The Germans had just announced the liquidation (the large-scale transport of Jews to death camps) of the Jews of Sokoly. Her father planned the family’s escape as the liquidation of the ghetto began.

They had no idea of the absolute hell they would face. The betrayals. The miracles that would keep them alive. And they learned that even when surrounded by masses who embraced evil, the good of just a few is enough to make the difference for many.

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On the night of January 31, 1943, a group of young people escaped from the ghetto in Pruzhany, Poland. Two people in this group were my father, Shmeryl Elman, age twenty-two, and my uncle, Yossel Elman, nineteen. Temperatures were below zero. Dressed in white linen to camouflage their appearance against the snow on the ground, they made a run for the ghetto fence in complete darkness. They quickly slid under the cut wires and ran for freedom to nearby forests.

There were fifteen men and three women in this group. They had made plans, dug bunkers within the ghetto, and stored a cache of supplies and weapons. A partially completed tunnel was not ready for the escape. Time had not allowed for the tunnel’s completion or finishing other preparations.

The liquidation of the Pruzhany ghetto was underway. It would take four days to liquidate the ghetto of ten thousand Jews. It was now or never to escape for this group approaching the fence. German guards shot at them as they breached the ghetto fence. They had already decided they would get through or die trying.

None of these people had a clue of what miracles and hell they would face after this attempt to escape. All they knew was that if they were to die, it would be on their terms, not Hitler’s.

They sought revenge, not survival. They had no idea of the collective impact of their efforts. They changed the course of a war, the course of history. One by one, they showed the world that the human spirit is a powerful force, no matter the odds.

I have captured the true stories of my parents’ Holocaust survival as accurately as possible.

Without hearing each individual account, one cannot understand the miracles and hell of hiding or being a partisan (a member of an armed resistance group fighting the Germans in World War II).

Every survivor’s story has two key themes: the absolute hell they faced and the countless miracles that kept them alive.

The children of Holocaust survivors are known as “second-generation survivors.” Most survivors lived by a “code of silence.” This silence was meant to shield their children from the horrors of their survival, but it did the opposite.

Their silence kept us always wondering about their past. The family members lost—our roots. We could see their emotional pain as much as they tried to hide it. We could not understand it. We suffered from our own scars, even nightmares. We did not understand why. We would always hear the slogan “Never forget” when the Holocaust was mentioned in the synagogue or public remembrance. But we always asked ourselves, “Never forget what?”

In the 1970s, the emotional and psychological struggles of children of Holocaust survivors had been formally discovered. While not born during the Holocaust, the second generation inherited a legacy of trauma through the behavioral patterns of their parents and their parents’ silence about their trauma.

My father passed away in 1989, my mother in 2004. All my survivor grandparents, aunts, uncles, and cousins have passed away—all with their stories untold. If I did not tell their stories, they would be lost forever. And I would never free myself from always wondering. And even worse, my children and their children would never know our family history and their
connection to the Holocaust.

Most survivors are no longer alive today. Holocaust denial is becoming mainstream. Fascism, even in America, is on the rise. For these reasons, these stories of survival must be understood and preserved.

Writing this book has been a personal journey for me, in ways I never imagined. Because the silent survivors of the Holocaust unknowingly passed on emotional scars to their children, those of us in the next generation have scars and demons in our heads that we have never understood, nightmares when we sleep that we cannot explain.

This personal journey has helped me understand my trauma and my battle with depression. Through the telling of my family history, my story is also told.

COLLAPSE
Reviews:Yasmin Gruss wrote:

The detail and history Elman weaves into his descriptive story-telling brings the history of the Holocaust in Poland and his parents' experiences to life.

To be honest, I have never had such an emotional reaction to reading about the Holocaust and the experience of the Jews in Europe during this time.

Emma Megan on Readers Favorite wrote:

Miracles Through Hell: A True Story of Holocaust Survival and Intergenerational Healing by Jerry M. Elman is a well-researched historical nonfiction book. It contains the true stories of the Holocaust survivors, their traumas, the absolute hell they faced, and the countless miracles that kept them alive. Jerry M. Elman is the child of two Holocaust survivors. He has lived most of his life not knowing his parents' stories as they (like most Holocaust survivors) lived by a "code of silence."

His parents never talked about their past because they couldn't let their children know about the horrors of their survival. Thus, most children did not understand their parents' emotional baggage, but they inherited a legacy of trauma transmitted through silence and guilt. In this book, Jerry presents the horrors of the Holocaust and its traumatic consequences.

I've read many books about the Holocaust, but none about the emotional and psychological struggles of the children of Holocaust survivors. Jerry M. Elman's story deeply moved me, and I'm grateful that I had the chance to read his first book, Miracles Through Hell. It's unique and remarkable as it contains details of the emotional scars of Holocaust survivors that were unknowingly passed on to their children.

Elman is one of the few who exposes his battle with depression triggered by not knowing the atrocities his parents experienced during the Holocaust. He reminds us that history can repeat itself as the rise of antisemitism, racism, and hatred of immigrants are now becoming new norms, and there are people who still deny the Holocaust.

Miracles Through Hell by Jerry M. Elman is an important must-read for us all.


3 thoughts on “Miracles Through Hell”

  1. My name is Debby Elman. Grew up in boro park Brooklyn.

    Any relation. Both parents were survivors from Poland

    1. Hi Debby, thanks for reaching out. I don’t think we are related, but I can look into it. What was your father’s name, and what town in Poland was he from? There were a lot of Elmans in Poland and Eastern Europe at that time. My father was from Pruzhany and only his brother and him survived from the Elman family there. He had an uncle and 3 aunts that came to the US in the 1890’s who were all Elmans.

  2. My name is Debby Elman. Grew up in boro park Brooklyn.

    Any relation. Both parents were survivors from Poland

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