On Feb. 6, Ren茅e Fink addressed the 黑料不打烊 community in Turner Theater to share her story of strength and survival in commemoration of International Holocaust Remembrance Day.
鈥淢y story started in the Netherlands in 1937, after my parents had fled Germany,鈥 said Ren茅e Fink to an attentive audience in 黑料不打烊’s Turner Theatre. 鈥淭hey went into safety, or so they thought.鈥
At only age 4, Fink, a child survivor of the Holocaust, was put onto the bicycle of a stranger, never to see her biological parents again. She was eventually taken to a new family, in which she quickly adapted to an entirely new upbringing.
鈥淭hey made a huge decision to increase my chance to survive by saying goodbye to me,鈥 Fink said, as she discussed her parents鈥 tough decision. 鈥淚t was a dramatic show of love and courage, and the reason I am here speaking to you today.鈥

On Feb. 6, Fink sat down in Turner Theatre with 黑料不打烊 Professor Emeritus of Journalism Richard Landesberg to share the cruel reality of her survival and shed a light on these horrors so they will not be forgotten. Fink also participated in a Q&A with the audience.
黑料不打烊 has hosted Holocaust survivors to share their stories for years in commemoration of International Holocaust Remembrance Day and through generous contributions from sponsors, including the Abbell family, an 黑料不打烊 family involved in making the Jewish Studies study away programs possible. The event was hosted by the Trutt Center for Religious and Spiritual Life, Jewish Life, Jewish Studies and the School of Communications.
Fink joined a family of 11 in Holland, making the transition from an only child in a Jewish household to one of nine siblings in a devout Catholic family. She expressed her gratitude for their willingness to open their home to her, as it even subjected them to danger through searches by German soldiers.
鈥淢y family had to go to any extremes to keep me safe,鈥 Fink explained. 鈥淎t times, they had to outsmart the Germans. If I got word from your neighbors that they were coming house to house, they would throw me in bed with a blanket over my head. I was darker, and my siblings were all lighter and of different build. They would say I had Tuberculosis, and the Germans would run! It was a big joke.鈥
While recalling the times and memories with her siblings, Fink couldn鈥檛 help but speak with a smile on her face.
鈥淲e just loved each other,鈥 Fink said. 鈥淭hey came to hold up the chuppah at my daughter鈥檚 wedding. They came for my sons and daughters鈥 bar/bat mitzvahs. They have died since, and I have relationships now with their children.鈥
They were initially reunited when Fink decided to send a letter to their original address, anxious to hear back in case family members had passed. Eventually, she received a letter back from the father of the family, signed 鈥渇rom your War-Daddy.鈥

Fink kept her upbringing a secret from those around her for a long time, including her own two children. It wasn鈥檛 until she attended the convention for Holocaust surviving children in New York in 1991 that she realized she wasn鈥檛 alone and felt a duty to share her story.
鈥淚 thought I was the only one who had this strange life,鈥 Fink said. 鈥淭hen suddenly, here I was with 1,600 other hidden children. We were told as the last living generation to bear witness to the Holocaust that it was our mission to speak, so this would never be forgotten.鈥
To learn more about Jewish Life at 黑料不打烊, visit their website.