them, to be with them, but we were beaten for getting out of our column. Soon we were marched away and ordered to return to our homes or be shot on the spot. We went home brokenhearted, but still Blimcia was eager to repeat her tremendous effort and pluck her parents from the jaws of death.
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Another shock awaited us when we reached home: we opened the door and were suddenly faced with Goldzia's empty bed. We mutely stood in front of the bed that had never been empty before, trying to grasp the unbelievable fact that Goldzia was gone. We had heard about sick people being cruelly carried away; now we experienced the horror firsthand. It had still been dark in the house when we were chased out. How frightened she must have been. After hearing the shrill yelling of the Germans, she was left in deadly silence. How had she felt when the thumping boots came up for her? She could not run or hide. They must have hovered over her, roughly grabbing her by an arm or ankle, almost too disgusted to touch her, as if she were contaminated by a plague. The added pain of her loss made us break down and weep uncontrollably. But all the tears could not ease our anguish. We were so helpless.
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We felt that maybe the world was coming to an end. We remembered Papa's words, "It is the end of days, the kingdom of God, the time of the Messiah." But we had not died and gone to heaven. We were alive and dangling over the pit of hell.
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There was the urgent task of trying to release Mama and Papa. Baby Aiziu needed care, and Jacob and Vrumek were still due to report to work. Blimcia rushed frantically to see the German authorities, to plead with them, to bribe them with the promise of money we could only wish to obtain.
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But Blimcia's luck ran out on a fast, efficient German train. Mama and Papa had already been shipped away: Symche and Surcia Stapler, decent, quiet, deeply religious people who had worked hard and raised a loving family. My precious parents, who had never asked much from their Creator, were taken away on that summer day in 1942, taken from all that was dear to them. Grandma Chaya, Great-aunt Channa, Great-
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