Astonishing bravery of the Jewish family who escaped the Holocaust by hiding in an underground cave - for a year-and-a-half

A Jewish matriarch was so determined to protect her family from Nazi persecution, she hid herself and them in an underground cave until their country was liberated - eighteen months later.
Esther Stermer lived a peaceful, rural existence in a small Ukrainian village with her six children until the Germans invaded in late 1941.
Hellbent on annihilating the Jewish people, the soldiers rounded up more than a thousand Jews and sent them to their deaths.
Several Jewish families escaped the Holocaust thanks to the courage of Esther Stermer, front row, second from left
Several Jewish families escaped the Holocaust thanks to the courage of Esther Stermer, front row, second from left
Sam Stermer, in green, and his brother Saul Stermer, with yellow kneepads, revisted the cave nearly 70 years later
Sam Stermer, in green, and his brother Saul Stermer, with yellow kneepads, revisted the cave nearly 70 years later
But Mrs Stermer and her husband Zaida were determined that their innocent family would survive, whatever it took.
So, she and five other Jewish families from the area packed up their belongings one cold October night in 1942 and fled, in the dark, to a sinkhole masking the entrance to an underground cave, five miles north of their home in Korolowka.
A new documentary, No Place On Earth, tells the story of Mrs Stermer's courage more than 70 years ago.
 

More...

  • Film-maker, 27, 'freezes to death' as he documents the plight of the homeless in -4C temperatures
  • Get out of North Korea, now! ALL embassies told to evacuate staff from Pyongyang after madman dictator warns he 'cannot guarantee safety of foreigners'
She and her family had already survived one year of German occupation, but knew that the shadow of death was creeping ever closer.
Her son Sam Stermer, now 86, told ABC News that the family's secret was their utter determination never to give in.
The cave they settled in was pitch black, damp, and lay beneath ground that Nazi soldiers would march over, deep in the Ukrainian countryside.
Sam and Saul Stermer said that their underground home was 'paradise' because they were free
Sam and Saul Stermer said that their underground home was 'paradise' because they were free
The six families, with 38 people in total, ended up hiding there for 18 months, until it was safe to go above ground in their own land again.
During that time, the families lived in complete darkness, digging out toilets and showers and more living space as they concentrated on surviving until they could come out again.
At night they foraged for food, and in the day time they hid deep in the darkness.
Mr Stermer's older brother Saul Stermer, now 92, said: 'You went to sleep and you had a pillow and you covered up with good blankets - what else you want?'
Saul Stermer, his nieces Sima and Sonia Dodyk, and his brother Sam Stermer play themselves in the documentary
Saul Stermer, his nieces Sima and Sonia Dodyk, and his brother Sam Stermer play themselves in the documentary
What the family had and prized above anything was their freedom - they had escaped the invading forces, and they would continue to do so for more than 500 days.
During that time, Esther Stermer had to defend her family once, when German SS soldiers raided the first cave.
Coming face-to-face with the men they had lived in fear of for so long, Mrs Stermer held her ground, despite the fact they were pointing guns at her.
Sam Stermer said: 'And she says "What are you afraid of here?  The Fuhrer is gonna lose the war because we live here?"'
Saul and Sam Stermer, seen here in the film, say they would not have survived without their determined mother
Saul and Sam Stermer, seen here in the film, say they would not have survived without their determined mother
The soldiers left, never to return, and finally, in April 1944, the Russians liberated the area and the hidden families were able to climb out of the cave into the light.
Last year the Stermer brothers returned to the cave for the first time, for the film.  They told how after the war, they travelled to Canada and set up a business, which they still run there.
Today the survivors and offspring of those who hid in the Ukrainian caves number more than 125, and the film, which will be on limited release in the U.S. today and will be released in Germany next month, tells the story of their courage.
Their survival is the longest uninterrupted underground survival in recorded human history.

Popular posts from this blog

'I was his Christian Grey fantasy.' Ex-girlfriend Paige Lorenze says Armie Hammer carved an A into her groin area as she warns 'narcissistic' actor could 'seriously injure another woman' with his BDSM obsession

Model Stella Tennant dies 'suddenly' aged 50 as her family pay tribute to 'wonderful woman and an inspiration to us all'

Teenage boy, 15, charged after allegedly having sex with two 12-year-old girls and recording the encounter on his phone - but he's still allowed to go to school with them while on bail