![]() In 1943, they were taken to the Majdanek concentration camp in Poland, where the men and women were separated. He was moved to the Warsaw Ghetto when he was 11 years old with his sister and mother. The chatting of the veterans, their wives and children turned to complete silence as Frajman took the podium to tell his story. The veterans organization, numbering more than 200 members, gathered at the hotel to reconnect and share memories of the Second World War and, in particular, the Battle of the Bulge, in which 19,000 American troops were killed. When he was an inmate there, there wasn’t any because the inmates ate it.įrajman, who moved to Boynton Beach from New York in 1999, came to the biannual meeting of the Veterans of the Battle of the Bulge at the Hilton Hotel Sunday to speak about his experiences as a Jewish teenager during the Holocaust. When he returned to the Nazi concentration camp he was held in in 1943, Norman Frajman, 83, was surprised to see all the grass.
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