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Judith Fazekas

J Fazekas thumbnailjpg

Born: Debrecen, Hungary, 1928

Wartime experience: Ghetto and forced labour

Writing partner: Linda Sandler

Judith (Judy) Fazekas was born in Debrecen, Hungary, in 1928. Soon after the Nazi occupation of Hungary in March 1944, she and her family were sent to the Debrecen ghetto, as was her boyfriend, Leslie, and his family.

In June, they were all part of a transport to Strasshof, Austria, luckily avoiding the fate of most Hungarian Jews who were deported to Auschwitz-Birkenau. In Strasshof, Judy was separated from Leslie and sent to the district of Aspern as a farm labourer. She was later transferred to Vienna to clear bomb rubble from the streets. Leslie and Judy were able to correspond and even meet a few times during their captivity. In April 1945, Judy and her family were liberated by the Soviet army. They returned to Debrecen, where she reunited with Leslie. In 1949, they married in Budapest and started a family. In 1957, after the Hungarian Revolution, Judy and her family immigrated to Canada, where she worked in a photography studio. Judy and Leslie celebrated their seventieth wedding anniversary in 2019. Some of Judy’s wartime letters to Leslie were published in his memoir, In Dreams Together: The Diary of Leslie Fazekas (2021).

Forced Labour

There were different transports from Debrecen, Hungary, in June 1944. Some went to Auschwitz and two went to Strasshof, Austria. We just happened to be on one that went to Austria. We could just as easily have been transported to Auschwitz. Instead, by a miracle, we are here today. As we waited at the station to be put into the cattle car, we suddenly saw my uncle Jenö, my mother’s brother. He had been taken out of Debrecen much earlier, as one of the elite (he wasn’t anything special, but he was well off) and had been taken to a concentration camp. But here he was in a group coming toward us. His wife and two small children were with us. Can you imagine this? Not everybody in his group had relatives at the station in Debrecen, but as he said, “I knew that my wife and children must be here, because this is where all the Jews are.” He had been searching the crowds for his wife and children, and then, as we were waiting, we saw him coming toward us. He joined our family group. It was another miracle. (As my husband would later say, you didn’t need any permission to get into the inhumane transport of a cattle car!) My uncle was with me throughout the war, as were my grandmother, my mother and her sister, Anna, as well as Uncle Jenö’s wife, Eva, and their children. Before the war, my father’s sister, Gizi, left the town in the north where their family lived and came to live with us, which meant she was also deported with us from Debrecen. This saved her life. No one else from my father’s family survived the war.

There were different transports from Debrecen, Hungary, in June 1944. Some went to Auschwitz and two went to Strasshof, Austria. We just happened to be on one that went to Austria.

The Photos

The Austrians made us work and took advantage of us, but they did not threaten, harm, torture or kill us. They had a hospital that we could go to, which was unheard of in other places. When the Austrians in the city saw us with our yellow stars walking in the streets, they knew who we were. Sometimes, as they passed by, they even dropped meal tickets and rations for bread that we could pick up. I remember that once a woman passing by whispered in my ear, “If you need any clothes or other help, just follow me.” We went up to her apartment, where she offered clothes to us.

My mother and I were sent to work with a roofer. Every day the bombing was causing destruction and blowing off the roofs; every second day we would repair them. The roofer was a nice man, and we were the only two who worked for him. When he told me to go out onto the roof and that he would hand me tiles, I said, “No, that’s not going to work. I am not going out on the roof. You go out on the roof and I will hand you the tiles.” He agreed. He was just a young man, and we became quite good friends. By then I was speaking German quite fluently, and we got along well.

Leaving Hungary

In December 1956, Leslie and I took our first steps to leave Hungary, which meant leaving our children behind for the time being. My parents left everything in Debrecen and came to Budapest, moving into our apartment to look after our children until we could send for them to join us. Uncle Jenö and Aunt Eva had planned to leave with their children and made arrangements to walk with a guide to the Hungarian-Austrian border. Leslie and I left Budapest with them, and we all walked together to a little peasant house, where we had made arrangements for somebody to meet us there during the night to lead us toward the border. We had paid a lot of money for a guide, and there were two or three other families who had made the same plans to be guided out of Hungary. It was winter and it was difficult. Our guide had a bicycle, which he let my aunt sit on so she didn’t have to walk. My uncle twisted his ankle but continued to keep up. We had to be very quiet. Nobody could show a light, not even of a cigarette, because there were Soviet and Hungarian soldiers or police watching everywhere. It was illegal to be out walking in this area; we could have been arrested, taken back and thrown into jail, as many others had been. The guide accompanied us farther, until he pointed at the lights in the distance and said, “That’s Austria. I’m leaving you now. I have to go back.” We had to cross a small brook. It was very narrow, and as there was no bridge, a dredging machine had been placed so that it reached from one side to the other, allowing us to cross over. Rather than arrest us, some Hungarian soldiers there actually helped us get to the other side, so there were good people everywhere.