Ursula passed away this month, August, 2019. She was a thoughtful and graceful woman who was an inspiration to so many. I hope she has found that glorious ballroom.
What a wonderful woman came out of this little precious girl which had to face so much tragical moments we cannot imagine... rest in peace and all the best for her children and family ❤
What a wonderful lady and a wonderful What a lovely lady and such a kindly interviewer. So many who have taken testimony are less than that . This survivors world view is something we can all learn from . The forest and stream beauty she saw amongst horror.
I'm not a Jew and in fact I'm not part of any sect of Christianity like Catholicism, Non Denominationalism, Fundamentalism, etc, but I'm proud of this women because most people would hold onto hate forever and keep it as a scar but she instead has let it grow into a strong branch of her existence.
I love her take on religion. We could all focus more on similarities instead of just differences. I'm not so sure the ultra-orthodox would have the same opinion.
I think Steven Speilberg had something to do with encouraging the collecting of these stories after his movie, Schindler’s List, came out. Also, it seems a lot of people didn’t feel comfortable/safe talking about their experiences until 40-50 years had passed.
@@RD-0101 I agree with the comment above. So many of these testimonies talk about how they did not even share everything with their own families, because it was too painful. Towards the end of their lives, they realized that they should share the history, that the history would not be forgotten, that the children and grandchildren might have long last understand why their parents behaved as they did. But it took so many years of healing, and like this lady, a lot of counseling, before they could talk about it. It is difficult for those of us who have never been through something like that, to imagine something so traumatic that it would take 50 years before you could even talk about it to your closest family members.
Ursula passed away this month, August, 2019. She was a thoughtful and graceful woman who was an inspiration to so many. I hope she has found that glorious ballroom.
Amen rip
BDE
What a wonderful woman came out of this little precious girl which had to face so much tragical moments we cannot imagine... rest in peace and all the best for her children and family ❤
🕊
Just listening to this Beautiful woman and reading she has passed two years ago. Rest in peace dear Ursulan
What a sweet humble lady..she has such a pure heart.
She must hv.had wonderful parents. And the nuns and priest also did a great job raising her. Obviously she experienced love. She exudes love!
What a wonderful lady and a wonderful
What a lovely lady and such a kindly interviewer. So many who have taken testimony are less than that . This survivors world view is something we can all learn from . The forest and stream beauty she saw amongst horror.
I'm not a Jew and in fact I'm not part of any sect of Christianity like Catholicism, Non Denominationalism, Fundamentalism, etc, but I'm proud of this women because most people would hold onto hate forever and keep it as a scar but she instead has let it grow into a strong branch of her existence.
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What does your faith or lack thereof have to do with in being proud of her 😭
Thank you for sharing your story.
Thank you for sharing this moving testimony
my father was in that first camp you were taken to.
Hello, I hope your father survived. Maybe one day u can tell us his story. I would love to know. I'm sure others would too
Many thanks for this wonderful testimony.
Such a lovely women, with such an amazing story!
when does this get interesting? i need to talk abt the interesting things soo can u tell me when it gets good? what time?\
Naomie Kim what
Powerfull! Thank you!
Thanks for your testimony and praise God you survived the Holocaust 🙏🙏🙏
Pure class, a woman to be proud of! So well told, her story, though much remained unsaid, no doubt.
She’s very pleasant and sweet;God bless this woman🙏
an extraordinary woman
i read a bookabout her and her brother george
Can you mention the name of the book, please? I'm really inspired by her story.
@@starrynight335 survivor's true stories of children in the holocaust by Alan Zullo and Mara bovsun
What a life, so much courage at such early age! Happy that you are alright now.
Thank you for this testimony!
Watched this for English class but it was still good
Besides all the suffering and loses this lovely woman had to endure, now my Germany and Europe is an empty vessel without these German elites.
I love her take on religion. We could all focus more on similarities instead of just differences. I'm not so sure the ultra-orthodox would have the same opinion.
What happened to her brother, George?
George Levy Mueller was still alive in Jan 2022. He also wrote a book. He has several children and is a retired pharmacist.
beautiful
Why were all these done late 1990s
Because suddenly everyone had the realisation that we need to rush these stories as to never forget them and do this before the victims die
I think Steven Speilberg had something to do with encouraging the collecting of these stories after his movie, Schindler’s List, came out. Also, it seems a lot of people didn’t feel comfortable/safe talking about their experiences until 40-50 years had passed.
Pitty that no one thought to do this since the 70s. It all began only in the 90s.
@@RD-0101 I agree with the comment above. So many of these testimonies talk about how they did not even share everything with their own families, because it was too painful. Towards the end of their lives, they realized that they should share the history, that the history would not be forgotten, that the children and grandchildren might have long last understand why their parents behaved as they did. But it took so many years of healing, and like this lady, a lot of counseling, before they could talk about it. It is difficult for those of us who have never been through something like that, to imagine something so traumatic that it would take 50 years before you could even talk about it to your closest family members.
the interviewer is asking bad questions and not asking good ones. the interview is still good, but it could have been better.
...where was god...?...any god ?