Irene Butter, a Holocaust survivor who now lives in Ann Arbor, Michigan, recently shared her story with about 600 people.
By ROSALIE CURRIER/STURGIS JOURNAL/TNS
Irene Butter of Ann Arbor is a tiny woman, bent a little forward by 89 years of living.On Thursday, Butter, a Holocaust survivor, shared her story with about 600 guests at the Sturges-Young Center for the Arts.Invited by the Sturgis District Library, the audience heard about Butter's idyllic, privileged childhood. Of being the center of love and attention from grandparents and parents in Berlin, Germany. She had photographs to prove it.But when Butter was about 12 years old all that changed as Hitler rose in power and took away all that Jewish people held dear — family, businesses and, for many, life.Butter's father was able to pull strings that saved them from the death camps, but her grandparents weren't so fortunate and died after being transported to a prison camp.Upon fleeing Germany, Butter, her parents and older brother, lived first in the Netherlands, then were taken to Camp Westerbork in the Netherlands and finally shipped to Camp Bergen-Belsen in Germany.Before Germany invaded the Netherlands, life was good, Butter said.When they were moved to the first camp, life was bleak and boring but nothing as bad as the second camp of slave labor, starvation and brutality.Every Saturday a train rumbled into camp pulling a line of cattle cars. It sat in the middle of all activity, a grim reminder that on Monday it would be taking away many to the death camps.The names of those to depart was read on Monday. After being relieved over not hearing their own names, the prisoners located family members who where leaving. They spent the last few hours together before they were loaded and taken away. Forever.