You see that smoke? That‘s where your mother is
Stáhnout obrázek
Mindu Hornick was born on 4 May 1929 in the village of Ruské Pole in Czechoslovakia. After the beginning of World War II, the Germans took her father to forced labour. She was taken with her mother, sister and brothers to the Berehovo ghetto in the spring of 1944 and from there to the Auschwitz extermination camp. Her mother and brothers died, but she and her sister Bila survived and, with the help of relatives, were selected for the Lübberstedt-Bilohe labour camp in August 1944. At the end of the war, they survived two Allied air raids on the trains used by the guards to move them. The surviving women had to continue on foot. After three days, they were liberated by the British army in the town of Plön. After the war, she and her relatives made it to Prague, where they were cared for by her mother‘s sister Ida. In 1948, they had to look for a new refuge. Mindu Hornick found it thanks to Solomon Schonfeld and her uncle Zolly Slyomovics in Birmigham, UK. There she married in 1950, and later had two daughters with her husband Alan Hornick. Mindu Hornick was widowed in 1974, and for the next 15 years she ran the electronics shop she and her husband owned. After years of silence, she began to bear witness to the suffering endured by the victims of the Holocaust and has continued to do so tirelessly to the present day. In 2025 she was living in Birmingham, where she celebrated her 96th birthday in May.