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World War II History, Captured in a Private’s Letters to His Wife

  

Category:  History & Sociology

Via:  nona62  •  9 years ago  •  5 comments

World War II History, Captured in a Private’s Letters to His Wife

World War II History, Captured in a Privates Letters to His Wife

After her husband's death, Sandy Schulman, 92, had his war letters brought down from their attic. The letters had gone untouched for 70 years. Victor J. Blue for The New York Times After her husband's death, Sandy Schulman, 92, had his war letters brought down from their attic. The letters had gone untouched for 70 years.

For years the letter lay in a box in the attic. It was postmarked in April 1945, just before the Nazis surrender in World War II . It was just one letter among many letters, and the box was just one box among many boxes.

Yesterday we visited something that you might have already read about in the newspaper or heard about over the radio, the letter began. Not very far from here there is a concentration camp. Another letter, dated 13 days later, added a detail: The name of the camp is Buchenwald located near Weimar here in Germany.

The letters were from Pvt. Hyman Schulman, the aide to Rabbi Herschel Schacter, the first Jewish chaplain to enter Buchenwald. Private Schulman wrote to his wife, Sandy, nearly every day, just as he had since his induction in 1942.

Back home in Brooklyn, the letters piled up, and after the war, they put them away. We were busy, Mrs. Schulman, 92, said recently. We raised five children. We always said we were going to read them.

Mr. Schulman died in 2013 at 91. Mrs. Schulman remembered the boxes in the attic they had followed the Schulmans as they moved, most recently to Scotch Plains, N.J., but the letters had gone untouched for 70 years. Mrs. Schulman had them brought down, and soon Private Schulmans 20th-century letters were being given the 21st-century treatment. They were being organized they filled 31 binders and scanned and digitized.

Mrs. Schulmans daughter-in-law Arlene Shulman (she and her husband dropped the c in the last name) knew the founders of POBA , a nonprofit that helps people organize and archive collections they inherit mainly artwork. Soon archivists from the group arrived at Mrs. Schulmans house with their computers and scanners.

Originally this was done to help her with a resource and to look at the lost art of letter writing, said Jennifer Cohen, one of the founders of POBA.

But as she read Private Schulmans letters, she realized there was more to their importance. He became not only a witness to history, but an accidental participant, she said. Theres a perspective that comes from seeing the extraordinary ordinary mans experiences. What we have here is not only a record of a historical event, but what it really meant to have a life, and a love, interrupted by extraordinary events.

Like many soldiers, Private Schulman evaded military censors by writing in a kind of code. Mrs. Schulman said he referred to a skirmish in the Battle of the Bulge, which had begun in December 1944 and continued into January 1945, by writing, You went to the New Years Party I went to a party of our own. He was wounded in the Battle of the Bulge and was awarded a Purple Heart.

Private Schulman's letters are being organized into dozens of binders, scanned and digitized by professional archivists. Victor J. Blue for The New York Times Private Schulman's letters are being organized into dozens of binders, scanned and digitized by professional archivists.

He became Rabbi Schacters assistant when he met a Protestant chaplain who mentioned that there was an opening to work for a Jewish chaplain. Since Ive been in the army Ive always been hoping for a break and I believe I finally got one, he wrote on March 8, 1945, after getting the job. You wont have to worry about your husband being hit by shells, living in muddy foxholes and generally roughing it in the E.T.O. the European Theater of Operations for we are quite a ways back of the front lines.

Oh yes, he added, the chaplains name is Chaplain Schacter and hes from Brooklyn.

And to hear Mrs. Schulman tell it, her husband had done a little fast-talking to clinch the job. The chaplain asked if he drove, she said. He said yes, but he never drove. We were poor kids in the city. She said he had had an hourlong lesson at the wheel of an Army truck, but that was all.

Private Schulman was also responsible for handling Rabbi Schacters correspondence. He knew how to type, Mrs. Schulman said, but he wasnt fast enough for the rabbi.

On arriving at Buchenwald, he wrote: The stench from the many dead bodies was nothing compared to the sight they presented. Old people middle aged and even younger folk were all shot up, bodies lying around. Mrs. Schulman said he made sure to mention the crematories in case people at home dont believe it.

Ms. Cohen said the historical information was at the same tone and frequency as the personal.

I think you have an internal struggle from Hy trying to protect his wife from some of the horrors, she added.

After the war, Mr. Schulman went into the jewelry business and later performed as a singer under the name of Howard Shaw. He and Rabbi Schacter lost touch, but some years later, while the Schulmans were on vacation in Miami, Mr. Schulman passed a man on the street who looked familiar. He turned and said, Rabbi? It was Rabbi Schacter.

I knew about Mr. Schulman without knowing his name, the rabbis son, Rabbi Joseph J. Schacter, a professor at Yeshiva University and senior scholar at its Center for the Jewish Future, said recently. My father really liked him. I remember he spoke very warmly about him.

Mrs. Schulman said her husband had assisted in the services that Rabbi Schacter led.

In the Army, she said, they all believed in God. They had to believe in something.


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Nona62
Professor Silent
link   seeder  Nona62    9 years ago

What a "treasure" for sure!

 
 
 
Dowser
Sophomore Quiet
link   Dowser    9 years ago

What a fascinating story! Thanks so much for posting this!

I love to read the old letters... They are a window into another time!

 
 
 
Nona62
Professor Silent
link   seeder  Nona62    9 years ago

They are a window into another time! History almost first -hand! Thanks for stopping by Dear Dowser!

 
 
 
Kavika
Professor Principal
link   Kavika     9 years ago

Great article Nona. The letters were much more than letters to his wife. They were a window to a horrible time in the history of Jewish people, from a personal view.

 
 
 
Nona62
Professor Silent
link   seeder  Nona62    9 years ago

Thanks Kav! The letters were much more than letters to his wife. Exactly, even though he may not have realized it at the time, he provided MUCH insight to the history of the war and the HATE of the Jewish people.

 
 

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