Tarleton welcomes Holocaust survivor to give public talk on campus

Holocaust Survivor to Speak at Tarleton

Holocaust Survivor to Speak at Tarleton

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Friday, January 26, 2018

STEPHENVILLE, Texas—Hear Holocaust survivor Max Glauben share his story of courage and survival during a public talk at 5:30 p.m. Monday, Feb. 26, on Tarleton State University’s Stephenville campus.

Hosted by Tarleton’s Department of Psychological Sciences, the event takes place in the ballrooms of the Barry B. Thompson Student. Tickets are $20 and available for purchase online. Proceeds benefiting the Holocaust Study Abroad Scholarship.

Seating is limited to 300. The event begins with a light reception at 5 p.m. and guests having a chance to win one of several raffle items before the speaking engagement.

The 88-year-old Dallas resident will provide a first-hand account of his survival through the Holocaust, witnessing the early fighting and the Warsaw Ghetto uprising that occurred in his native Poland.

Max Glauben, born in 1928 as Moniek Glauben to Isaak and Fela Glauben, was reared in a family of newspaper publishers. In 1939, the livelihood of his parents and grandparents was eliminated by the Nazi invasion. A year later, the Warsaw Ghetto was established.

Because the Glauben family already resided within the area designated by the Nazis as the ghetto, they were allowed to stay in place and keep their personal possessions. Outside of the ghetto, Max was able to pass as a non-Jew because of his blond hair and blue eyes. He exchanged family possessions for food, which he smuggled back into the ghetto to help his family and neighbors survive.

In 1943, during the Warsaw Ghetto uprising, the Glauben family hid in an underground shelter, but an informant reported them to the Nazis who later discovered them in hiding. They were then deported to the Majdanek Extermination Camp in Lublin, Poland, and Max was separated from his mother, younger brother and other family members after they were selected for extermination in the gas chambers.

Max and his father were selected for work and sent with a contingent of Jewish prisoners to the Budzin labor camp, a satellite camp of Majdanek, where they labored in an airplane factory. His father, Isaak, was murdered in reprisal for three prisoners who had escaped and, at age 13, Max was on his own.

In 1944, Max was transferred to the Mielec Slave Labor Camp where he worked in the Heinkel airplane factory. It was here that he was tattooed with “KL” on his right forearm—a mark that still exists today. Later, he was taken to the Wieliczka salt mines where the Nazis had established deep underground factories impervious to the allied bombing raids. Due to a lack of work for Max’s unit there, he was sent to the Flossenburg Concentration Camp and, from there, put on a death march to Dachau, Germany.

During the march, Max was liberated by American troops on April 23, 1945. A U.S. lieutenant took young Max under his wing, and he stayed with the soldier’s unit until 1947.

Later that year, he immigrated to the United States and put in the care of the Jewish Children’s Service under the Orphan Law. In 1951, Max was drafted into the U.S. Army, serving until 1953, and spending three years in the reserves.

Today, Max and his wife, Frieda, have three children: Barry, Philip and Shari, along with seven grandchildren. He often claims that it is his story of surviving the Holocaust that gives him energy, and it’s as if his youth, stripped away by the Nazi soldiers, has been tacked to his post-retirement years.

For additional information about the talk, contact Dr. Jamie Borchardt at 254-968-1970 or email [email protected].

Tarleton, founding member of The Texas A&M University System, provides a student-focused, value-driven educational experience, marked by academic innovation and a dedication to transform today’s scholars into tomorrow’s leaders. Offering degree programs in Stephenville, Fort Worth, Waco, Midlothian and online to more than 13,000 students, Tarleton engages with communities through real-world learning experiences to address societal needs while maintaining its core values of integrity, leadership, tradition, civility, excellence and service.

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Contact: Kurt Mogonye, Senior Communications Specialist
254-968-9460
[email protected]

A founding member of The Texas A&M System, Tarleton State is breaking records — in enrollment, research, scholarship, athletics, philanthropy and engagement — while transforming the lives of nearly 17,000 students in Stephenville, Fort Worth, Waco, Bryan and online. True to Tarleton’s values of excellence, integrity and respect, academic programs emphasize real world learning and address regional, state and national needs.
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