Share This Episode
Our American Stories Lee Habeeb Logo

I Grew Up Detached from My Jewish History. Then I Went to Buchenwald

Our American Stories / Lee Habeeb
The Truth Network Radio
April 23, 2026 3:03 am

I Grew Up Detached from My Jewish History. Then I Went to Buchenwald

Our American Stories / Lee Habeeb

00:00 / 00:00
On-Demand Podcasts NEW!

This broadcaster has 4386 podcast archives available on-demand.

Broadcaster's Links

Keep up-to-date with this broadcaster on social media and their website.


April 23, 2026 3:03 am

A writer shares her family's story of survival during the Holocaust, visiting the concentration camp Buchenwald where her grandfather was imprisoned, and reflecting on the importance of remembrance and hope in continuing their lineage and honoring their ancestors' sacrifices.

YOU MIGHT ALSO LIKE:
The Verdict Podcast Logo
The Verdict
John Munro
The Christian Car Guy Podcast Logo
The Christian Car Guy
Robby Dilmore
Break Point Podcast Logo
Break Point
John Stonestreet
Sekulow Radio Show Podcast Logo
Sekulow Radio Show
Jay Sekulow & Jordan Sekulow
CBS Sunday Morning Podcast Logo
CBS Sunday Morning
Jane Pauley

This is an iHeart podcast. Guaranteed human. The countdown is on for the 2026 NFL Draft presented by Bud Light. Catch all seven rounds three days live from Pittsburgh, April 23rd through 25th. Watch every pick live on NFL Network, ESPN, and ABC.

NFL Network is also streaming with NFL Plus. It all starts tonight at 8 p.m. Eastern. Visit nfl.com slash draft for more information. Subscription required for NFL Plus.

Visit plus.nfl.com for terms. People don't listen to radio ads. While you're driving or making a sandwich, your subconscious pays full attention.

So relax. Let it take over. Sunday makes yard care simple with a custom plan based on your soil, climate, and yard size. No pesticides, no harsh stuff. Custom Sunday Lawn Plan.

Order today and get your Custom Sunday Lawn Plan. Ready for the season ahead. Sunday, a smarter, healthier yard. You know the fastest way to ruin a great adventure? Getting dehydrated?

For real. That's why you always gotta plan ahead with some Liquid IV hydration multiplier. Veteran move. You're basically your own hydration coach at that point. Just one stick and 16 ounces of water hydrates you faster than water alone.

Boom! Back in the game. Hydration multiplier powered by Liquid IV HydroScience, which is fancy talk for a smart science-backed mix of electrolytes and essential vitamins doing the dirty work to keep you going strong. Go to liquidiv.com and use the code NutHouse for 20% off your first purchase. Do you want to find a stress-free way to buy your next car?

Start at CarMax and shop your way. If you want to browse with confidence, get pre-qualified online with no impact on your credit score and shop cars within your budget, from luxury cars to family rides. Mm-hmm. CarMax has options for almost every price range, including more than 25,000 cars priced under $25,000.

So hey, wanna get started? Just head to CarMax.com for details and get pre-qualified today. Wanna drive? CarMax. Yeah.

And we return to our American stories. Up next, A story from writer Dana Mitch. Today she shares a piece of her family's story, a piece that occurred. In Buchenwald. One of the largest concentration camps.

and the largest on German soil. Take it away, Dana. A few months ago, I stood at Buchenwald in a large open field that was covered in an endless expanse of rocky gray gravel. The ground that I gazed at before me was where the barracks once had been. On that unnaturally humid and sunny afternoon, thunder ominously clapped from heavy storm clouds that loomed off in the distance.

The skies certainly echoed my state of mind. As for anyone that visits a concentration camp, it was a particularly sobering and gut-wrenching experience. But for me, it was more than just emotional. It was personal. Why was I there?

To learn about my grandfather, who had stood on that very ground some seventy-eight years prior, and reconnect with his life, his journey. His story. The morning after Kristallnacht, at the age of twenty-five, my grandfather was arrested by the SS and taken to Buchenwald as a part of the special pogrom. the first ever mass deportation and interment of Jews at that camp. He arrived on November 13th, 1938, before the barracks were even built.

and for three or four days and nights he waited among ten thousand other Jews in the freezing winter rain to receive a roof over his head and a twenty centimeter wide wooden sleeping plank. Many who were there with him during that time didn't survive, and I will always remember the tears that came to my grandfather's eyes in the video interview we have of him, as he hesitatingly rehashed the horrors that befell those around him, frequently and at random. He was one of all too few who was miraculously able to flee Germany during the Holocaust. and I owe my life to his luck. But his journey wasn't over when he got to the United States.

Mere weeks after officially becoming an American, he was drafted into the Army. He was shipped off to Europe, back into the Eye of the Storm, just five years after his time at Buchenwald. And, as a soldier in a replacement depot, despite only having gone through basic training no infantry training, he was nevertheless thrown into combat during the Battle of the Bulge. He fought against the Nazis with the ultimate goal of invading his homeland and, yet again, narrowly lived to tell the tale. He ended up living a very full life.

He passed away in 1999 at the age of 85, when I was just eleven years old. But as for my return to Buchenwald, it was actually another more recent death in the family that served as the catalyst. By the time I stood on the same ground that my grandfather had this past September, my father had been gone from us for nine months. He was my grandfather's firstborn, and he had wanted to be able to share his dad's heroic story with the world.

So my visit, both to Buchenwald and also afterward to my grandfather's home town, was to remember the two of them. my grandfather's persistence, and my own father's admiration. It was to pay homage to the sacrifices they made and the pride they held in raising a family. in continuing our lineage. The reasons behind my journey ebbed and flowed in my mind as I read a passage that was embedded in stone amongst the gray gravel I stood on at the camp.

It read so that the generations to come might know, the children yet to be born, that they too may rise and declare to their children. As a member of the third generation of Holocaust survivors in the US, this struck a chord with me. Living now at a distance, both across generations and oceans, from the horrible tragedy that resulted from Hitler's Nazi regime, I had always felt somewhat detached from it. In fact, few of my friends knew the extent of my grandfather's story. that is, until I recently chose to rise and declare it.

And now, as my own father's first born, carrying forward his lineage, it's something that I too am committed to rising and declaring for future generations as well. There's something sacred about the kind of cycle created by generations. Which is really just to say people that share a heritage over time. And in Judaism, we observe these sacred cycles that connect us with our earliest ancestors in one way the most. through the high holidays of Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur.

In that light, it should come as no surprise that the name of the book that we use on these holidays, the Machzor. shares the same root with the Hebrew word for return. Hazara. We reliably return to these traditions, thus completing a sacred cycle, to remind us of all that we have inherited and all that we will carry forward. When distilled down to their roots, that's what Yom Kippur and Rosh Hasana are all about, respectively.

Remembering and thinking back on our past and looking into the future. As I stood at Buchenwald several months ago on the ground that held all that it did, my present moment joined together the history that came before me and my future yet to come. Through that return I made into a difficult past, one that altered destinies and set my own life into motion so many years ago. I began a kind of intergenerational remembering. But I also felt that I began a kind of healing.

Because in that moment I realized that even though my grandfather and father were both gone, I still carried parts of them within me that I would perpetuate into the future. This year, my hope is that we can all make our own important returns. whether they're on foot or in our minds. Because when we seek out the source of who we are, we end up moving forward into the New Year with the two things that have always kept us firmly rooted. Remembrance.

and hope. And a terrific job on the production, editing, and storytelling. by our own Monty Montgomery. And a special thanks to Edana Mitch. was sharing her journey to Buchenwald.

And what got her to do that? What prompted her? to do that. She ended with two words remembrance, and hope. And it's hard to have one without the other.

Memory is so important in our lives story. Narrative.

So important. As Reagan had said in his farewell speech, President Reagan. If we forget what we did, We'll forget who we are. And that wasn't a Republican statement or a Democrat statement. It was a human statement.

And Dana found herself at Buchenwald 'cause her grandfather had been there. And she wanted to honor his journey. And he got out of there miraculously and found himself back at the Battle of the Bulge not many years later, going after Hitler. And what did she learn from that? In the end, she learned her own story.

She was learning more about her father's story. firstborn to the grandfather. and connecting it all. It's what we do here on How American Stories. As best as we can each and every day.

Stories of remembrance. Stories of hope and we want your stories. Your stories of remembrance and hope send them. to ouramericanstories.com. That's ouramericanstories.com.

Sad ones, Happy ones, everything in between. But boy, if there isn't a struggle. through some pain and suffering.

Well, you're leaving some things out. Dana Mitch's story, the story of her family. The story of Jewish families around the world. and in the end the story of all of our families. Here.

on our American stories. The countdown is on for the 2026 NFL Draft presented by Bud Light. Catch all seven rounds three days live from Pittsburgh, April 23rd through 25th. Watch every pick live on NFL Network, ESPN, and ABC. NFL Network is also streaming with NFL Plus.

It all starts tonight at 8 p.m. Eastern. Visit NFL.com slash draft for more information. Subscription required for NFL Plus. Visit plus.nfL.com for terms.

People don't listen to radio ads. While you're driving or making a sandwich, your subconscious pays full attention.

So relax. Let it take over. Sunday makes yard care simple with a custom plan based on your soil, climate, and yard size. No pesticides, no harsh stuff. Custom Sunday Lawn Plan.

Order today and get your Custom Sunday Lawn Plan. Ready for the season ahead. Sunday, a smarter, healthier yard. In football, you've got guys from everywhere. Different backgrounds, different beliefs, all of it.

You don't agree on everything. but you got each other's backs. That's how it works. And right now, off the field, hate's going up everywhere. Different communities, different ways.

And Jewish communities are getting hit hard. That's not how a team operates. The Blue Square is just one way of showing you've got people's backs. Go to bluesquarealliance.org, grab one, share it, be a good teammate. This is Sarah Spain with a huge congratulations to WNBA top draft pick and amazing iHeart podcaster AZ Fudd.

From all of us here and your friends at Geico, we know your life is about to change. New city, new locker room, new home, it's a lot. But you're not doing it alone. You've got friends, family, and teammates. You've got all of us at iHeartWomen's Sports, and you've got Geico with you every step of the way.

Congrats again, AZ. Listen to AZ's podcast. Fud around and find out wherever you listen to podcasts.

Get The Truth Mobile App and Listen to your Favorite Station Anytime