Chapter 18
It was June. The weather was perfect. We were ordered to
assemble
at the field by the railroad tracks. The train arrived a few hours
later.
It was a simple cattle train with about 30 boxcars. In the boxcars were
platforms for sleeping or sitting. There was no privacy. There were no
toilet facilities. Each boxcar had a small compartment with a hole in
the
floor, which was used as a toilet. There were no cooking facilities.
Boiling
water was distributed on schedule. Food could be purchased during stops
that had no schedule .The sellers were people from a nearby village.
The
moment they heard the train passing, they came out to meet the train.
Each
one had for sale something; a loaf of bread, a cooked chicken, milk,
cheese,
cooked “pierogi”. I remember that we had enough
food. Our father was the
medical director of the transport, and because of his position we had
better
accommodations. Our car was assigned as an infirmary We had the comfort
of space. While all other cars were filled beyond capacity, a
part
of the car was assigned to patients in need of temporary medical
supervision.
We also served out patients. Ella and the other physician
delivered
a few babies in these very difficult conditions. One couple was left
behind
in a local hospital because the woman in labor needed hospital
facilities.
Travelers who were left behind were in danger of losing their travel
permits.
The permit was limited to the specific transportation train. There were
also incidents of infant death from diarrhea. It is still in my memory
that parents had to give away the recently deceased baby; to be buried
somewhere in a strange and distant village. When we arrived at the Aral
Sea, the landscape became totally different. It was very flat and very
dry. Salt was everywhere. It was being sold in pails on each
train
stop. Salt was a commodity that was not available in other parts of the
country. A young man, who many years later was in New York, bought a
pail
of salt and later was selling it by cups. He made good money on the
way.
Later, in Poland, he married a physician and we met them it N.Y. many
years
later. She was a pediatrician. He was a printer. Both were antiques
collectors.
During the trip Sam was assigned to the car with the family of
the girl
he married, but often enough he would spend a night with me in our car.
Almost every night the guards assigned to our train were
counting
the travelers. It was an order that each person should sleep in the car
where they were listed. After about two weeks of travel we arrived at
the
Polish border. It was a happy moment and an anxious moment. We did not
know what to expect from the Soviet border guards. Guards with rifles
surrounded
the train. The train car doors were locked. We were afraid of a search
of our belongings. Most of the people traveling had some valuables such
as small pieces of jewelry, a diamond, or even old gold rubbles. These
treasures at that time seemed to have tremendous value, when in reality
it would not pay for a week of life in Poland. Our luggage we carried
along
was not worth anything. We were dressed in rags, while in Poland
everyone
was well dressed. Packages were coming to the Jewish Institutions in
Poland
for distribution among the survivors. We were late comers.
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