Ernest Michel was
born to a Jewish family in Mannheim, Germany. After the Nazis came to
power, he was not able to attend school and in 1939 he was forced to
separate from his family, whom he never again saw. During the war years
he was also forced to serve in a variety of Nazi labor camps. After
almost six years as a slave laborer, he escaped in 1945 from the camp
of Berga in Germany.
Seven months after his escape, he
arrived at Nuremberg as a 22-year-old correspondent for the German news
agency Dana. As a journalist, he was to report the trials in an
objective fashion despite the emotions that surged in him when he
recognized leading Nazis such as Hermann Goering. Sixty years after the
trials, recalling his arrival at Nuremberg, he still thinks of how
incongruous it was for him to be a reporter for German news after five
and a half years of suffering Nazi persecution in labor camps. The
byline on his articles read "Auschwitz survivor #104995."
Links:
[1] http://www.facinghistory.org/video/nuremberg-remembered
[2] http://www.facinghistory.org/resources/lessons/nuremberg-remembered-the-road-nu