Holocaust survivor Lisa Hurd: Her story, 76 years later - Action News
Home WebMail Tuesday, November 26, 2024, 11:49 AM | Calgary | -13.1°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
NL

Holocaust survivor Lisa Hurd: Her story, 76 years later

Actress and long-time St. John's resident Lisa Hurd is the special guest speaker at the Jewish Community Havura's annual Holocaust memorial service on Sunday night.

The Jewish Community Havura of Newfoundland and Labrador is holding its annualHolocaust memorial service on Sunday night in St. John's.

Sunday's special guest speaker isactress and long-time St. John's residentLisa Hurd, who is a Holocaust survivor.

If I allowed fear to stop me from telling this story, which needed to be toldthen Hitler had won ...and that's what made me do it.- Lisa Hurd, Holocaust survivor

Hurdsaid it's taken heralmost eight decades to speak publiclyand finallytell her family's story.

On Friday,Hurdspoke with AnthonyGermainon theSt. John's Morning Show, about how she and herparents escaped from Vienna, Austriain 1939.

Hurdsaid she had been reluctant to discuss the storyfor a couple of reasons, the main one being fear.

"I am an actress, and for a long time, I have been doing a one-woman play which deals with aging and loss of independence, which is a true story. And my friends have always said to me:'You shouldn't be doing other people's stories, you should do your own,'" Hurd said.

"Because I personally didn't have a bad war, I figured I didn't have a story, so I was reluctant to tell my part of it. But then I realized that even if I didn't have a storymy family did. And as they were no longer living, it was my privilege and my duty to tell their story."

In the fall of 2014, a friend of Hurd's suggested she share her story by speaking to students at Remembrance Day assemblies. Although hesitant at first, Hurd agreed and spoke at seven schools.

"At first, I was a bit reluctant to do it, and part of it was out of fear. Because there is still a lot ofanti-Semitismaround, even in Canadaunfortunately. And then I realized, if I allowed fear to stop me from telling this story, which needed to be toldthen Hitler had won ...and that's what made me do it."

From Vienna to Harwich

It's estimated that before the Second World War began, the Jewish population inEurope stood betweennineand 11million. By May 1945, six million Jewshad been murdered by the German Nazi regime.

Hurd's family made it safelyby train from Vienna to Holland, andthen by boat to Harwich, England.

She said50 other close members of her family were not as lucky.

"My favourite cousin, she was the same age as me, and when she was nine, she was deported to Minsk. And she was gassed as well," said Hurd.

"My grandparents, three living grandparents were taken to Treblinka, which was an extermination camp. Because my grandmother was one of 13 siblings, we had lots of cousins. They all died in the Holocaust. We know where some of them went, but we're still trying to find out the rest.They died horrible deaths."

Kristallnacht was turning point

Hurd said it was shortly after Kristallnacht, often referred to as the "Night of Broken Glass,"that her parents realized they had to take their family and flee from Austria.

"But I think that's what woke them up the breaking of glass atsynagoguesand shoppes and houses.I think it was the turning point for them, making them think how serious it was," she said.

Hurd said her parents wentintodomestic service when they arrived in England,whichwas the only way they were permitted to enter the country. In Vienna, her father had worked asa sales manager for a companythat sold silks and other fabrics,while hermother was a master milliner skills that Hurd said, "weren't needed or wanted in England."

That meant they essentiallyhad no home for Hurd.So for the next four years, she was fostered with aBritishfamily.

"Just before the war, Britainwas pretty open to taking in Jewishpeople, but as soon as the war broke out, the barriers were down and nobody else was allowed to leave," she said.

But then I realized that even if I didn't have a storymy family did. And as they were no longer living, it was my privilege and my duty to tell their story.- Lisa Hurd, Holocaust survivor

"Iwas fostered by aChurch of Englandparson and his wife, and a little girl who was the same age as me, and I grew up with them for the next four years.I was baptized when I was six,and I used to go to church three times on Sunday, bible study twice a week, church choir," said Hurd.

"And it was something which I didn't find out until later how much it did really hurt my parents, because the reason why we had come from Viennawas because we were Jewish."

Until she was nine years old, Hurd would see her mother justonce a week, when she was given half of an afternoon off from her job.

"My mother had a position not far from where I was, so she'd come and see meand my little sister, as I called her.And she'd take us out for tea on High Street. We used to call her 'the nice lady who came to take us out for tea,'" Hurd said.

Living link

Hurd said she is hopeful that she can take her family's story across the island and into schools.

As part of the current Grade 12 curriculum in Newfoundland and Labrador,the Holocaust is covered in-depth in the course World History 3201.

"I think the Holocaustto most young people ... it's history. Perhaps it's no more scary or no more horrible than the SpanishInquisition,or kings of England having their heads chopped offit's history and I understand that," said Hurd.

"And now they have a short window of time, where they might be able to meet somebody whose family has actually been through it and who is a living link to what they're learning in history.We're going to need funding. But Iwould love to take it to Labrador, too,if we can get the funding."

Sunday'smemorial service takes place at theBruneauCentre on the Memorial University campus in St. John's at 7:30 p.m.