Susan Warsinger, a volunteer at the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum, reads an essay about the memories of her grandparents and great grandmother before the Holocaust. It was recorded in September 2022.
Thank you so much Mrs Warsinger, so lovely. I can just imagine the pain you must have felt when writing it but also the joy you felt as a child when you were with them. Blessings to you and your family. No words can express our feelings 🙏🙏🙏👵🇦🇺
All I can say is thank you, thank you for sharing, for keeping this story alive and let not the world forget this horror or that the people killed aren't merely a number but each one was a person with a a family and a history brutally and senselessly murdered, I know I'm preaching to the choir but again thank you.
Thank you, Mrs. Warsinger, for such a moving and eloquent testimony to your family. I'm sorry for your loss. That said, your parents and grandparents are all remembered in the new generations since the Holocaust. A fitting tribute to those lost in the evil of the time. Thank you.
My maiden name is Warsager. May just be a coincidence but it struck me. Thank you for your very moving and poignantly told story. As long as your story is told, each generation of your descendants will keep their memory alive.
I would assume that you are German or German Jewish. In German, the word Wahrsager (with an H, which was probably later dropped in your name) means a person who predicts the future.