Photos (1) Add Images
Places mentioned on this page
Connected Pages Add Page
There are no related pages for Erich Schon.
Links Add Link
-
Survivors Registry | Research Tools
added by USHolocaustMemorialMuseum 07 Oct 2009
Share Erich's Memorial page on Facebook
About this page
Anyone can contribute to this page. Please sign in or sign up—it's free.
Timeline
Facts
There are no facts. Add Fact
Stories
Erich Schon
February 18, 1911 | Vsetin, Czechoslovakia
Erich was one of five children born to observant Jewish parents. They lived in Vsetin, a town in Czechoslovakia's Moravia region that straddled the border with Slovakia. Some 70 Jewish families lived in the town of 12,500 persons. There, Erich's family owned a grocery store and operated a sawmill. Erich attended a trade school where he became an expert in lumber and forestry.
1933-39: The Germans kept our sawmill operating after they occupied our region in March 1939. Since I had a permit to work in the forests, I helped Czech soldiers flee Moravia through the woods into unoccupied Slovakia. Once, when a group of escapees was seized, the Gestapo arrested me. At their prison in Brno-Spielberg I was tortured: I was forced to hold up buckets of water while they burned my chest with cigarettes.

Europe 1933, Czechoslovakia indicated
See maps
1940-44: Then I was sent to Nazi camps--Dachau in 1940, Hamburger-Neuengamme in 1941, and Auschwitz in 1942. In Auschwitz I was in a maintenance squad fixing wheel bearings, locks, pipes--anything metal. We were even made to repair leaky pipes in the crematorium. One day, while fixing a broken wagon, I watched as prisoners dug up thousands of corpses buried in mass graves--gassing victims. The decayed bodies were moved on small wagons to a pile some distance away and doused with gasoline. The pyre of bodies was torched.
Erich later escaped with his 11-year-old son from a transport to Mauthausen. He returned to Czechoslovakia and was a witness in the trial of Auschwitz commandant Rudolf Hoess.
Copyright © United States Holocaust Memorial Museum, Washington, D.C. Citations
There are no comments. Add Comment