Miriam Rosenblum was born on March 15, 1927 in Berlin. She had her parents Sarah and David and her younger brother Daniel in a very close-knit Jewish community. Life was good until the Nazis arrived and things started to disintegrate. New legislation arrived, freedom was gone and it was clear that they were no longer safe in their city.

In 1941 the family was forced to reside in a very small flat in the Berlin Ghetto. There was barely any food, heavy air and dwindling hope. Two years later soldiers arrived, rounded them up and herded them into a train to Auschwitz-Birkenau.

The camp parted Miriam from her parents and brother within minutes. She was sixteen and was put straight into hard labor. The work was incredibly hard, the cold never-ending and she was always hungry. She tried to survive but her body could not take it. Sickness and hunger killed her by winter in 1944.

Miriam's is only one of thousands. She would have lived for decades. The Holocaust took her life instead. And the truth is history does not always remain behind us.

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