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Discipline tightened in the camp, and they put us all together in one camp, in the main section. They simply wanted the Jews to be within reach just in case. Before that we had been free, as it were. We'd had our own barrack, but we weren't watched very closely. When a transport came in, we went to work. But after we were grouped in that camp, we did practically nothing, just marched in columns and we had to sing. Yes. Singing and marching around the camp pointlessly. Jews separately and Poles separately. We sang what we could, in Polish. I remember that 'O moj Rozmarynie' ['O my rosemary,' a song of the Legionnaires, Pilsudski's soldiers].
My brother was sent to the camp in Pustkow too. At first he was in the ghetto with my parents, but when I visited them there, he was already no longer there, because he had been taken to the camp in Pustkow. I found that out from my parents. He was working physically somewhere or other, in another group, I don't know exactly where, but on some earthworks.
My brother was sent to the camp in Pustkow too. At first he was in the ghetto with my parents, but when I visited them there, he was already no longer there, because he had been taken to the camp in Pustkow. I found that out from my parents. He was working physically somewhere or other, in another group, I don't know exactly where, but on some earthworks.
Period
Location
Pustkow
Poland
Interview
Leon Glazer