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Reflection

As a young teenager in Oradea, Romania, Hedy Bohm leads a sheltered life, oblivious to the events of World War II and the Holocaust. When Nazi Germany occupies Hungary in 1944, Hedy still feels relatively safe, even when she and her parents are forced into an overcrowded ghetto and then taken away in cattle cars. It is only when Hedy arrives in Auschwitz-Birkenau that she comes face-to-face with the bewildering and devastating reality of the Holocaust. But Hedy is determined to survive and reunite with her mother. Now totally alone, she finds within herself a resourcefulness and strength she didn’t know she had.

At a Glance
Hungary/Romania
Oradea ghetto
Auschwitz-Birkenau death camp
Concentration camps
Postwar Germany, Hungary
Escape from Communist Hungary
Arrived in Canada in 1948
Adjusting to life in Canada
Trials of Nazi war criminals

192 pages, including index

Recommended Ages
14+
Language
English

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Photo of Hedy Bohm

About the author

Hedy Bohm was born in Oradea, Romania, in 1928. After the war, she married and escaped Communist Hungary with her husband, Imre, immigrating to Toronto, Canada, in 1948. Hedy had two children, and she and her husband owned and ran several shoe stores in downtown Toronto. Hedy is a yoga and tai chi instructor and an active speaker and Holocaust educator.

Photo by Justine Apple Photography, courtesy of Friends of Simon Wiesenthal Center.

That’s when I shouted after my mother. I was being ripped apart inside. She heard my scream and turned around, and we looked at each other…. We just looked at each other, my mother and me, and then, without a word, she turned and kept walking away, and I was left standing there.