Zoltan Spiegel

Name at birth
Zoltan Spiegel
Date of birth
12/25/1912
Where did you grow up?
Nagyberezna
Name of father, occupation
Gyula, Wholesale liquor business
Maiden name of mother, occupation
Taube Moskovics , Homemaker
Immediate family (names, birth order)
Parents, five children - Lajos (Louis), Katalin (Katherine), Oliver (Albert), Lili (Sarah) and Zoltan
How many in entire extended family?
Approximately 50-60 people in extended family
Who survived the Holocaust?
Zoltan, one brother and one sister who were in the United States before the war.
Spiegel was born in 1912 in Nagyberezna, then part of the Austro-Hungarian Empire. Following World War I, it became Velky Berezny, a part of Czechoslovakia. Spiegel was one of five children of an Orthodox Jewish family engaged in the beer and liquor business. After attending technical schools, he opened a radio and electrical supply shop in 1936. Following the occupation of Czechoslovakia by Germany in 1939, his hometown of about 2,400 Jews, among a population of 10,000, was ceded to Hungary, which imposed restrictive laws on the Jews. He and his father lost their licenses to operate a business and were required to live on savings and from support of relatives.

In 1940 Spiegel was taken into the Hungarian labor service and served on various assignments until he was assigned to the Hungarian army in 1942. There the labor battalion supported the army on the battle front against the Russian army. During the retreat of the Hungarian army he was placed in various labor camps, ending up in Windischminihof in the Austrian province of Styria, where he worked on tank fortifications. Unlike other camps this one was operated by the SA (Sturm Abteilung), and the inmates lived in the houses of an abandoned village. The camp was liberated by two Russian army scouts, who preceded the army, in April 1945.

Spiegel describes details of camp conditions, relations with local citizens, and the liberation. His experiences differ from those of others under similar circumstances in that they were less severe.

Spiegel’s parents and older sister were taken to Auschwitz in 1944 and perished there. His oldest brother managed to leave for the United States shortly after the German occupation, and his younger brother, a medical student, became a member of the Czech army in exile fighting with the Russian army, following his service and escape from the French Foreign Legion. From his family of about sixty people, i. e. grandparents, uncles, aunts, cousins, etc., he believes only five or six survived the Holocaust.

Spiegel says he is still suffering from the effects of his experiences during the Holocaust, the after effects of tuberculosis, physical weakness, and nightmares. As it pertains to the history of the Holocaust, he believes insufficient emphasis is placed on those who participated in volunteer armies fighting the Germans. Furthermore, he believes more needs to be done in exposing the non-German labor camps, i.e., Hungarian, etc.
Where did you go after being liberated?
Zoltan went back to his home town and found no one there, he went to Prague and found his younger brother and then he spent three years in a sanitarium in Prague for tuberculosis.
When did you come to the United States?
August 9, 1949
Where did you settle?
New York, New York
How is it that you came to Michigan?
Brother and sister lived in New York, had three uncles also in New York
Occupation after the war
Electrician and then Zoltan started his own building business
When and where were you married?
Married in 1951 in Queens, New York
Spouse
Vera Farkas
Children
Two children - one son and one daughter
Interviewer:
Zekelman Holocaust Center, Hans Weinmann
Interview date:
10/03/1994
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