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Testimonies of Hilda Eisen
In 1939 Hilda Eisen was 22 years old when she and her first husband were taken from their Polish neighborhood which was invaded by Nazi soldiers and imprisoned in the Lublin ghetto. When her and her husband, David, were taken from their neighborhood they were hauled off in cattle tracks and taken to labor camps. Hilda was working on escaping the horrible atrocities of The Holocaust. A Nazi solider helped Hilda to escape and join resistance fighters in The Parczew Forest. Later, Hilda was recaptured by German forces and taken to a police station where she was interrogated. Hilda counteracted and jumped from a second story window, breaking her foot and causes chronic results. Traumatized by her experiences she attempted to get out again. A Nazi soldier shower Hilda compassion by shooting lower than the high fence her and her grandson, Michael Rubsinstein, were scrambling to get over.

Hilda learned after the war was over she lost her parents and all five siblings to The Holocaust era. Her husband, David, was also a loss. Unspecified as to how her husband exactly passed, he passed as a member of the resistance fighters searching for Hilda. Surviving for two winters and various other weathers, and forced to sleep on the ground. Hilda hoped a Russian officer would escort her to visit her late husbands grave. Cursing her the officer said her husband was "lucky" to have someone weep for him. No one would cry for her. "So why was it important to visit graves?" the officer asked. Hilda realized the officer has a point and there was no time for crying. She simply said "You're going to see what the next day will bring." After the war Hilda remarried another survivor, Harry Eisen. They moved to California and become millionaires with a large chicken egg distribution. Hilda was survived up until her death on November 22, 2017 by her daughters Ruth Eisen, Mary Cramer, and Francis Miller; eight grandchildren and seven great grandchildren. A son, Howard, died in 2014.