Today I bring to you a special story & a piece of history.  
Thank you Stephanie for this opportunity to share with everyone.
Thank you to our sweet hostess Miss Beverly @ Pink Saturday.
This is a story from the heart, a pink heart of love.
 
Lilly Friedman doesn’t remember the last name of the woman who  designed and sewed the wedding gown she wore when she walked down the  aisle over 60 years ago.  But the grandmother of seven does recall that  when she first told her fiancé Ludwig that she had always dreamed of  being married in a white gown he realized he had his work cut out for  him. 
  For the tall, lanky 21-year-old who had survived hunger, disease and  torture this was a different kind of challenge.  How was he ever going  to find such a dress in the Bergen Belsen Displaced Person’s camp where  they felt grateful for the clothes on their backs.
Lilly Friedman and her wedding gown on display in the Bergen Belsen Museum.
   For two weeks Miriam the seamstress worked under the curious eyes  of her fellow DPs, carefully fashioning the six parachute panels into a  simple, long sleeved gown with a rolled collar and a fitted waist that  tied in the back with a bow. When the dress was completed she sewed the  leftover material into a matching shirt for the groom.
    A white wedding gown may have seemed like a frivolous request in  the surreal environment of the camps, but for Lilly the dress symbolized  the innocent, normal life she and her family had once led before the  world descended into madness.  Lilly and her siblings were raised in a  Torah observant home in the small town of Zarica, Czechoslovakia where  her father was a melamed, respected and well liked by the young yeshiva  students he taught in nearby Irsheva.
He and his two sons were marked for extermination immediately upon  arriving at Auschwitz.  For Lilly and her sisters it was only their  first stop on their long journey of persecution, which included Plashof,  Neustadt, Gross Rosen and finally Bergen Belsen. 
  Four hundred people marched 15 miles in the snow to the town of  Celle on January 27, 1946 to attend Lilly and Ludwig’s wedding.  The  town synagogue, damaged and desecrated, had been lovingly renovated by  the DPs with the meager materials available to them.  When a Sefer Torah  arrived from England they converted an old kitchen cabinet into a  makeshift Aron Kodesh. 
     “My sisters and I lost everything – our parents, our two  brothers, our homes. The most important thing was to build a new home.”   Six months later, Lilly’s sister Ilona wore the dress when she married  Max Traeger.  After that came Cousin Rosie.  How many brides wore  Lilly’s dress? “I stopped counting after 17.” With the camps  experiencing the highest marriage rate in the world, Lilly’s gown was in  great demand.
     In 1948 when President Harry Truman finally permitted the 100,000  Jews who had been languishing in DP camps since the end of the war to  emigrate, the gown accompanied Lilly across the ocean to America.   Unable to part with her dress, it lay at the bottom of her bedroom  closet for the next 50 years, “not even good enough for a garage sale. I  was happy when it found such a good home.” 
    Home was the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum in Washington, D.C.  When Lily’s niece, a volunteer, told museum officials about her aunt’s  dress, they immediately recognized its historical significance and  displayed the gown in a specially designed showcase, guaranteed to  preserve it for 500 years.
    But Lilly Friedman’s dress had one more journey to make. Bergen  Belsen, the museum, opened its doors on October 28, 2007.  The German  government invited Lilly and her sisters to be their guests for the  grand opening. They initially declined, but finally traveled to Hanover  the following year with their children, their grandchildren and extended  families to view the extraordinary exhibit created for the wedding  dress made from a parachute. 
     Lilly’s family, who were all familiar with the stories about the  wedding in Celle, were eager to visit the synagogue.  They found the  building had been completely renovated and modernized.  But when they  pulled aside the handsome curtain they were astounded to find that the  Aron Kodesh, made from a kitchen cabinet, had remained untouched as a  testament to the profound faith of the survivors.  As Lilly stood on the  bimah once again she beckoned to her granddaughter, Jackie, to stand  beside her where she was once a kallah.  “It was an emotional trip.  We  cried a lot.”
    Two weeks later, the woman who had once stood trembling before the  selective eyes of the infamous Dr. Josef Mengele returned home and  witnessed the marriage of her granddaughter.
   The three Lax sisters – Lilly, Ilona and Eva, who together survived  Auschwitz, a forced labor camp, a death march and Bergen Belsen – have  remained close and today live within walking distance of each other in  Brooklyn.  As mere teenagers, they managed to outwit and outlive a  monstrous killing machine, then went on to marry, have children,  grandchildren and great-grandchildren and were ultimately honored by the  country that had earmarked them for extinction.
    As young brides, they had stood underneath the chuppah and recited  the blessings that their ancestors had been saying for thousands of  years.  In doing so, they chose to honor the legacy of those who had  perished by choosing life.
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