Once inside they recounted the day's events and the prospects for escape. They came to the conclusion that Chrzanow was now Judenrein , leaving them like two survivors of a shipwreck in a shark-infested sea. They had to flee Chrzanow. They prayed and thanked the Almighty that at least they had each other.
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"This might be the last time we will be able to pray," Vrumek said, "so let us pray with all our might. We will get some rest here and leave before dawn."
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"You sleep, Vrumek, and I will watch," Sholek offered, scared that they might be caught in their own house by the Germans or the neighbors.
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Vrumek reassured Sholek that the action was hardly over. "This is the first night, and the Germans are still busy with people at the railroad station. And Madeia will probably want to be sure that the Germans are not coming back before he comes looting. So it is safe for us here tonight, safer than elsewhere."
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Unbelievably tense and tired, they slept fitfully, rising before dawn. They picked out some warm clothes, took whatever money was left in the house, and stole out. Wearing their caps low over their eyes, they took to the fields and began walking away from town.
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"There is only one place we can go," Vrumek said. "To Sosnowiec. There are still Jews there." In the predawn darkness, Sholek and Vrumek said good-bye to Chrzanow, the town where they had been born and raised. The brothers felt the history of the moment, the finality of this departure and the additional sorrow of giving up young Iziek, who was nowhere to be found.
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They fled without looking back, like Lot leaving Sodom and Gomorrah; they were afraid they would see the German beasts following them, like Pharaoh's soldiers pursuing the Hebrews into the Red Sea. Walking through the fields and back roads, they hid in ditches when they spotted Germans. They carried no documents; they would try to pass as Gentiles if caught.
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Two little passport photos of Mama and Papa were hidden in Vrumek's shoe. He did not tell Sholek about the pictures,
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