If you ask Suzy Snyder about one of the most significant artifacts in the United States Holocaust MemorialMuseum’s collection, she won’t lead you to arailcar used to deport Jews or into the museum’s heap of shoes taken from Jews before they were murdered in death camps. Instead, she’ll point to an artifact that isn’t even on display in the Washington museum: a sweater.
The sweater is a delicate green, only faded with the passage of time. It was worn by a little girl named Kristine Keren as she cowered in the sewers of Lvov, Poland to avoid being rounded up by Nazis. And for Snyder, a curator at the museum’s National Institute for Holocaust Documentation, it’s a uniquely touching example of the human cost of the Holocaust.
In 1943, Kristine Chiger (she changed her name to Keren after the war) was a seven-year-old living in a ghetto in Lvov, Poland. The green sweater, which her paternal grandmother knit before the German invasion of Poland, was a treasured object. Two years before, Kristine had watched that beloved grandmother being loaded onto a truck and deported, likely to the nearbyBelzec death camp. When her grandmother had waved goodbye, a Nazi guard had bashed her head with the butt of a rifle.
Now, Kristine lived a hunted life. During the daytime, her parents worked in a nearby labor camp, and Kristine and her little brother hid in their cramped apartment to avoid being deported. When Nazis conducted random roundups, she’d shove her brother into a suitcase and hide in a corner behind her mother’s bathrobe.