Metro AUSCHWITZ REMEMBERED Robyn Gorell Special to the Jewish News E Years After Liberation E >7' - An elderly Jewish women waits for her fate near the transport train to Auschwitz. HMC to display SS soldier's photos revealing Nazi selection process at Auschwitz. ighteen-year old Lili Jacob (now Lili Jacob- Zelmanovic Meier) and her family were among 3,500 deportees in a 1944 trans- port sent from Hungary to Auschwitz in Poland. After arriving at the camp, Jacob was moved 400 miles away to a Nazi Germany slave labor camp called Dora, which was eventually liberated by the Americans. One day in April 1945, while searching for warm clothing inside an abandoned German barracks at Dora, she discovered a photo album contain- ing images of her family and friends from that Auschwitz transport. An SS soldier whose job it was to take ID photos and fingerprints of the concentra- tion camp inmates snapped the pictures. That album is the source of a traveling exhibit, "The Auschwitz Album: The Story of a Transport." The exhibit opens at the Holocaust Memorial Center Zekelman Family Campus on Wednesday, Jan. 27, to coincide with the 65th anniversary of the liberation of Auschwitz. "The Auschwitz Album" exhibit was created by Yad Vashem, the Holocaust Martyrs and Heroes Remembrance Authority in Jerusalem and made available here by the American Society for Yad Vashem. It is the first traveling exhibit to be dis- played at the Holocaust Memorial Center. Lili Jacob kept the album for many years but not hidden. She gave away some photos to survivors who identified relatives in the photographs and even presented testimony about the album at the Auschwitz War Crimes Trials in Frankfurt during the 1960s. It has often been written about. In 1980, encouraged by Nazi hunter Serge Klarsfeld, she donated it to Yad Vashem. The album has 56 pages and 193 photos. The photos document the selection process carried out by SS doctors and wardens. Those fit to work were sent into the camp, deloused and moved into the barracks. The rest went to gas chambers. No killings are shown. Yad Vashem restored the album in 1994. The exhibit was first presented at the United Nations headquarters in New York in January 2005 in obser- vance of the 60th anniversary of the liberation of Auschwitz. West Bloomfield resident Rose Eizikovic Bohm was on that particular transport. Originally from Tacovo in Czechoslovakia, she was 15 years old when taken from a ghetto in Hungary with her par- ents and four siblings. As they arrived at Auschwitz that fateful day, May 27, women and children were sent in one direction and men and older boys in another. One of the SS physicians supervising the selection of prisoners was Dr. Joseph Mengele, the "Angel of Death:' determining who would be killed and who would become a forced laborer. "It was a terrible day:' recalled Bohm. "We'd been cramped together for three days on the train with no food or drink. There was so much heartbreak, as families were separated. Nobody knew what was going on." 65 Years on page 16 January 21 • 2010 15