Friday, May 24, 2013
By TOM ATWELL / Special to the Maine Sunday Telegram
Edith Herz was 12 years old in Worms, Germany, when her father told her she did not have to go to school that day. Their synagogue had burned in an infamous event that later was called Kristallnacht ("Night of Broken Glass)" -- the beginning of the Holocaust.


In the new book "Against All Odds: A Miracle of Holocaust Survival," Edith, now Edith Lucas Pagelson, tells about life as a Jewish girl in Germany, how her 8-year-old sister Suse was sent to England for safety but passage could not be found for Edith, and how her family moved to Duisburg when things got too bad in Worms.
She was transported to the Theresienstadt concentration camp in 1942, where her father died. She was then taken to Birkenau, Auschwitz and Stuthoff, surviving many times when most others died -- including one time when she and her mother were in a gas chamber when it malfunctioned.
"Against All Odds" (Custom Museum Printing, $17.95) details not only the horrors of the Nazi camps of Europe, but of Edith's survival. It tells how she met Henry Lucas, another survivor of the camps, and how they moved to New York, married and started a family.
In America, however, all did not go well. In 1973, Henry died in a ski chairlift accident in Warwick, N.Y., very similar to an accident at Sugarloaf in 2011. In 1977, her family business was destroyed during a blackout in New York.
She moved to San Diego with her new husband, and when he died, she moved to Maine to be closer to her family. She now lives at Ocean View in Falmouth.
Pagelson has spoken often about the Holocaust, and at the urging of her family, got together with Ronnie Weston, a ghost writer from Harpswell. After two years of interviews, this book was produced.
Q: Combined question: Why did you write the book, and why did you wait so long?
A: A book didn't really come up. I had done interviews and DVDs and tapes, and I thought maybe that should be enough. I had donated things to the Holocaust Museum and spoken to schools.
My children prompted me to write the book. I have now arrived at the age where I am matriarch of the family, and I wanted to write it for future generations.
Q: You mention Henry's nightmares in the closing of the book. Did you have -- in the current term -- post-traumatic stress syndrome? Did many other survivors of the Holocaust?
A: Yes, some of them did, but amazingly I didn't, and my mother didn't either.
Q: As one of the few who survived, did you feel any guilt, any need to make a difference because of all those who couldn't?
A: Not really, no. "Against All Odds" is the name of the book, and that is really it. It was just fate. Now, the people who survived who did not even go to concentration camps, they had terrible guilt feelings. They didn't even want to hear our story at that time, and that bothered me and my mother.
Q: The profits are going to the Holocaust & Human Rights Center of Maine. Tell me about that group.
A: They have a museum and center at the University of Maine at Augusta and a speakers bureau, and that is how I got to know them, speaking there a few times.
Q: And after all these years, there is still interest?
A: Very much so. When I speak at schools, they tend to have wonderful questions. I still have kids calling me and coming to visit me here.
(Continued on page 2)
Tweet
Further Discussion
Here at PressHerald.com we value our readers and are committed to growing our community by encouraging you to add to the discussion. To ensure conscientious dialogue we have implemented a strict no-bullying policy. To participate, you must follow our Terms of Use.Questions about the article? Add them below and we’ll try to answer them or do a follow-up post as soon as we can. Technical problems? Email them to us with an exact description of the problem. Make sure to include: