The thousands of Latino refugees seeking asylum in the United 
States reminded me of the story of an earlier generation of 
refugees who also experienced family separation and extreme 
hardship after being denied entry into the United States.
hardship after being denied entry into the United States.
They were children, 10 and 9, from Zamosc, Poland when the 
Germans invaded. Adele and Miriam hoped to escape Nazi 
persecution and reunite with their parents who had immigrated to
the United States earlier, But they, and their three older siblings
, were denied entry by strict immigration rules.
The Germans immediately began rounding up all the Jewish men
including Adele and Miriam’s teenage brothers. They were 
stripped naked, ordered to dig their own graves, shot and 
dumped in those graves.
Every few weeks there was another roundup. Trucks were 
waiting, Jews were loaded and driven to the nearest forest. 
Graves were ready and the killing commenced. Miriam recalled,
” It is impossible to describe our lives….”.
Adele, Miriam, Anna, their sister, and Anna’s child were 
rounded-up along with hundreds of others. They were ordered 
to take off their clothes. Hoping to avoid certain death, they ran, 
eventually  seeking refuge in a deserted building. Adele and 
Miriam climbed a ladder to safety. 
It was very quiet. Suddenly, the stillness was broken by Anna’s 
voice pleading for her baby. Two shots rang out. They would 
never see Anna or her child again.
Adele and Miriam waited. It was silent again.  Thinking it was safe 
they climbed down. But a collaborator must have heard them. He 
entered the building. Aiming his rifle at the two frightened girls, he 
ordered them out of the building where German soldiers were 
Waiting. One of the soldiers looked at his watch, and said, “Let 
them go. "Enough for today.”  
A Christian family the girls had befriended hid them. Providing 
them with one set of false identification papers, they urged them 
to flee to Russia.“ Tomorrow is Sunday. Lots of people will be on 
the road. Start walking and don’t look back.” 
In the Ukraine Adele and Miriam found safety living and
working under assumed Christian identities even after the
Germans invaded.
In the Ukraine Adele and Miriam found safety living and
working under assumed Christian identities even after the
Germans invaded.
Following  the German defeat at Stalingrad In the winter 1943, 
Adele and Miriam were separated and shipped out of Russia as 
slave laborers.Miriam was sent to Italy where she worked as a 
cleaning woman and later
in a hospital helping comfort the gravely wounded. The irony of a 
Jewish girl comforting Nazi soldiers was not lost on her. Before 
she was deported she had given  Adele her address.
Adele was eventually sent to Germany were she worked as a slave 
Laborer in factories, offices and shops. The sisters wrote to each 
other weekley. But only one of Adele’s postcards with a  return 
address in Stuttgart got through. By then Miriam was working in a 
hospital in Germany near Kaufbeuren. 
Despite the Germans defeat, Miriam and the Russian women she 
was with were treated like a slave by the German doctors and 
nurses. They were given little food and three were forced to sleep 
in a five by ten foot room. Miriam Complained. With the assistance 
of a Jewish survivor working for the Americans was moved to a 
better room in a convent.
Desperate to reunite with her sister, Miriam walked and hitched 
hiked the 110 miles to Stuttgart joining tens of thousands of 
refugees who crowded the roads much like the thousands of 
Latin American refugees seeking refuge in  the US.
Once in Stuttgard Miriam walked the streets searching for her 
Sister. When she noticed a handwritten menu with Adele’s 
distinctive handwriting on a tavern door,. Miriam asked for 
her”cousin” by her Christian name. The barmaid yelled 
upstairs and in a few minutes the two sisters were hugging 
in a tearful reunion. A few days later they returned to Miram’s 
room in Kaufbeuren
Needing work, Adele went to the U.S. base where she met an 
American GI, Robert Hillibrand. He recalled the meeting.” She 
appeared...fearful as a mouse, tentatively looking in, wondering 
whether she could advance another inch without being swatted 
or crushed. She was like a line drawing of a person, an 
amorphous being… She stood silently. She had learned that 
you don’t speak without first being spoken to….That was a 
ardinal principle of survival…””
Hilliard helped Adele secure a job on the base. Eventually Adele 
introduced Hilliard to Miriam, “a slim young woman with 
sparking dark eyes and a small round mouth, her face framed 
by shining brown hair.” They told Hilliard that they were Jewish 
and asked his help in reuniting with their parents in the United 
States. It wasn’t easy, but eventually Hilliard reunited the two 
girls with their parents in New York.
Adele married another survivor, Bernard Green. They settled in 
Brooklyn and had one son, Howie. Miriam married my mother’s 
youngest brother, Arnold. They had two daughters, Sylvia and 
Karen. Adele and Miriam became Americans and lived quiet, 
productive, lives of dignity. They rarely spoke of the terror they 
had experienced.Nor did they harbor any resentment against 
the country that had rejected them. But they never forgot.
Miriam died of cancer in 2004. Adele,92, died, two weeks ago 
surrounded by her son and Miriam’s children. Their legacy 
lives in every refugee who seeks safety and a better life; in 
those who walked thousands of miles through Latin America 
seeking safety and a better life in the United States; in the 
children at the border who are have been cruelly separated 
from their parents.Never forget. No Retreat. No Surrender.   

