David Faber (author)

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David Faber in May 2006

David Faber (born 1926) is a Polish Jew who survived nine concentration camps in Nazi Germany occupied Poland and Germany. He is also an award-winning educator and lecturer on the Holocaust.[1][2][3]

Contents

[edit] Life

He witnessed the murders of friends and family, the people they were staying with, and some of his extended family at a dinner table by the Gestapo. He was sent to nine concentration camps in Germany and occupied Poland. Amazingly, he survived. At age 14, he was a fighter with Soviet partisans. Faber recalls seeing many horrible actions in the concentration camps, ranging from seeing a baby thrown into an oven to losing every friend he made in camp.

He remembers how an Italian friend named Finci, ran into his father's arms and his father was shot right then, (in front of him). When he was liberated from Bergen-Belsen in 1945, he was 18 years old and weighed 72 pounds. Faber says "I was a living skeleton". He said he could not resist anymore, and as soon as he was liberated he gave up on living. He was found at the side of a road and taken to a hospital. His book, Because of Romek, is written in memory of his older brother, Romek.[4] Faber's book is required reading in some schools.

He currently resides in San Diego, California.

[edit] Works

  • David Faber, James D. Kitchen (1997). Because of Romek: a Holocaust survivor's memoir. Granite Hills Press. ISBN 9780963888624. 

[edit] References

[edit] External links


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