Nesse Godin is a Lithuanian American Holocaustsurvivor. She has dedicated her adult life to teaching and sharing memories of the Holocaust. Nesse is known for the ability to translate the Holocaust into a personal glimpse of this enormous and horrifying history.
Early years
1933-1939
My family was very religious and observed all the Jewish laws. I attended Hebrew school and was raised in a loving household, where the values of community and caring always were stressed. After the Germans invaded Poland in 1939, we heard from relatives in Łódź that Jews there were being treated horribly. We could not believe it; how could your neighbors denounce you and not stand up to help you?
When asked why she didn't just pretend to be German, she said she could have, but her neighbor had essentially pointed at her and said:
Get her, she's a Jew!
When asked about life before the war, she responded with something along the lines of:
Life was normal! We skated, went swimming, and played sports!
1940-1944
These were the years of German occupation in Lithuania, as well as numerous other places and regions throughout Europe.
1945-1950
From Stutthof, Nesse was transported to several camps, and was sent on a death march in January 1945. In the cold winter weather and with little food, many of the prisoners died, freezing to death. On March 10, 1945, she was liberated by Soviet troops. As she was still a young child then, she was given a random minder, but soon afterwards she got re-united with her mother. When they were reunited, her mother did not recognize her, as it had been three years, and she had little hair due to a shaving from lice. In 1950, after spending five years in the displaced persons camp in Feldafing, Germany, she and her husband Jack, along with their two children, Pnina and Edward, moved to the United States and settled down in the Washington, D.C. metropolitan area.
Later years
In 1954, Nesse and Jack saw the birth of their third and final child, Rochelle. Holding blue-collar jobs, Nesse and Jack worked hard and diligently to support their family, which included Nesse's mother, Sara. She has seven grandchildren and two great-grandchildren. Jack has passed on.
As you know I was a prisoner from the age of 13 to 17. I lived through a ghetto, concentration camp, four labor camps and a death march. I was not strong, I was not smart, I was a little girl. I think that I survived the Holocaust by the grace of the Lord above and by the kindness of Jewish women that gave me a bite of bread, wrapped my body in straw to keep me warm, held me up when I was hurt by the guards, gave me hope, but also asked me to promise them that if I survived I would not let them be forgotten. Remember and tell the world what hatred can do. I feel that the USHMM is fulfilling my promise that I made to those women that did not survive. I am proud to be a devoted volunteer in our most wonderful institution of education as I call our USHMM.