Luckily the girl did get out. She was Jewish, and she knew the importance of the message. As soon as she reached her home, she forwarded the message to Chrzanow. Jacob promptly addressed himself to Kleinecke's office. Kleinecke intervened, and the cousins were immediately freed from prison. Vrumek subsequently asked Kleinecke not to send them out of town anymore.
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The German raids went on day and night. Without warning, the town was encircled by Gestapo and SS in their green, black, and gold uniforms, stomping their shiny boots through the streets of the town. Swinging their rubber truncheons, beating on doors with them, they terrorized the Jewish community.
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" Raus, Du Judenschwein! " they would yell: Out, you Jewish swine! Pushing and shoving their captives out of doorways, down staircases, kicking and beating them, they would lead us all to the marketplace, treating us as though we were criminals. The once pleasant marketplace, which had offered wonderful sights, tastes, and smells, had been turned into an arena of terror. Multitudes of people stood there distraught, women clutching the little hands of their painfully apprehensive children. Families huddled together, clinging to each other in a vain attempt to stay together. What did the Germans want this time? Was it the young for labor in their concentration camps? Was it the old, the sick, and the feeble? People milled about, searching for family and friends, taking stock of who was present and who was missing. The Germans spread chaos with the barbaric beating of those deemed less human than themselves.
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I stood next to Mama, tightly squeezing her hand. Blimcia and Jacob cuddled together, shielding tiny baby Aiziu between them. Vrumek and Sholek were next to Papa, frantically looking around like trapped animals. Mama scanned the multitude, searching for Aunt Esther and her family. Suddenly she caught sight of her mother, Grandma Chaya, standing there shivering, her gaze blank and empty. Like a lost, terrified child, this elderly woman who had fought life's battles and deserved to spend her final days in tranquillity stood there
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