Survivors of the Holocaust and Nazi Persecution
Zvi Cohen (Part 1): The Jewish Boy Who Played for the SS
11m
In 1939, after years of anti-Jewish legislation, fewer than 214,000 Jews remained in Nazi Germany. Among them was Horst Cohn, a Jewish boy born in Berlin in 1931 — the child who would later become Zvi Cohen.
As Hitler consolidated power, the Nuremberg Laws stripped Jews of citizenship and basic rights. Jewish children were expelled from schools, families were driven from their professions, and violence intensified after Kristallnacht in November 1938.
Horst was beaten by members of the Hitler Youth and forced into isolation. On 7 May 1943, SS soldiers came to deport him. Alone at home, twelve-year-old Horst picked up his harmonica and played for the SS men sent to take him away. For two hours, music transformed a moment of arrest into hesitation. The soldiers allowed him to wait for his parents — a small mercy that may have saved his life.
Soon after, Horst and his family were deported to Theresienstadt.
This is the first chapter in the life of Zvi Cohen — and the beginning of a story in which a harmonica became an unexpected tool of survival.
Up Next in Season 1
-
Zvi Cohen (Part 2): Playing to Surviv...
Deported to Theresienstadt in May 1943, just before his twelfth birthday, Horst Cohn — who would later become Zvi Cohen — entered a world of hunger, disease, and daily death.
Presented by the Nazis as a “model Jewish settlement,” Theresienstadt was in reality a transit camp. Nearly 90,000 Jews w...
-
Chaim Engel & the Sobibor Revolt: Esc...
On 1 September 1939, Nazi Germany invades Poland, unleashing a war that will devastate Europe. Within weeks, Poland is crushed between German and Soviet forces, and a brutal occupation begins—marked by terror, mass executions, forced labour, and the systematic destruction of an entire society.
A...
-
Filip Müller: Eyewitness to Auschwitz...
Filip Müller, a Slovak Jew deported to Auschwitz in 1942, became one of the most important eyewitnesses of the Holocaust.
At just 20 years old, he was forced into the Sonderkommando—prisoners compelled by the SS to work in the crematoria and gas chambers of Auschwitz-Birkenau. There, Müller witn...