I have been volunteering with Yahad - In Unum for a year, and the organization entrusted me to participate as a scribe in a research trip to Poland. I stayed there from September 17 to 26, 2024. We began our journey in Oświęcim (Auschwitz, in the Silesia region) with the goal of collecting testimonies from Polish witnesses who had seen the massacres that occurred during the "death marches."
Upon arrival, the team leader, Renata Masna, informed me that the planned itinerary would not proceed as expected. Two routes (south and north) were taken by the deportees guarded by SS soldiers as they left Auschwitz starting January 18, 1945. The research trip to gather testimony about the death marches was prepared for these two routes. However, the southern route was completely flooded, and the damage caused by Storm Boris was catastrophic. This was the same route taken by Simone Veil with her mother and sister. The team remains hopeful about completing it next year.
Here, I learned about the adaptability and expertise required to shift focus to other witness searches than those initially planned. While maintaining the original goal, Renata redirected the trip to focus on the marches that headed north of Auschwitz.
Without local knowledge, historical expertise about the period, and a cohesive, experienced team, this change would not have been possible. They had to quickly identify locations where investigators could find witnesses, redefine the research strategy, and map out the progress along these northern routes. The settings were different (shifting from numerous villages in the south to industrial cities where anonymity made meeting witnesses much harder), the distances were different, and the historical documentation changed.
In one evening, the team re-organized everything. I observed them that night and over several mornings before we set out. Focused on their maps, with a deep understanding of the history behind these marches, they determined and built a daily action plan. And every morning, the same approach, the same commitment.
Having extensive experience in team management and work organization, I found it impressive to witness such professionalism paired with constructive good humor. It was almost exhilarating to me.
I saw the investigative team head out in one direction while the interview team went another. Everything was seamless. They found witnesses—people who had seen the prisoners walking, or rather dragging themselves, surrounded by guards without dogs but ready to kill. These witnesses also guided us to sites of Jewish life, mass graves filled with mutilated bodies, cemeteries, remnants of synagogues, and more.
In the car, traveling between interviews, photos, and recordings, I reflected on Yahad's achievements after 20 years of work: nearly 8,000 witnesses documented, over 3,300 mass graves identified with hundreds of thousands of bodies beneath the ground. Each testimony was collected one by one. What a monumen...
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