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Ernest Lion
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"Lion of The Holocaust
By Tim Bullard
There's a signpost up ahead, next
stop. Meet one Ernest Lion , a German Jew.
"Do you know what that is?" Lion asks,
pulling up his sleeve, revealing a blue tattoo of numbers. When asked
about his life experiences, he replied, "Read my book." He doesn't talk
about his past.
You have it made, and you don't know it - you are pampered, aggravated
by botched fast food orders and slow traffic. Lion's story makes one
feel lowly, ashamed to complain about the travails of life. Think you
have it bad?
Lion donated his manuscript "The Fountain at the Crossroad" to Coastal
Carolina University where two copies are listed in the 800s. One has
been checked out only eight times since April 2001, which is a shame
because his story of courage, stamina and triumph over tribulation is
spell-binding.
A CCU English professor, Randall Wells, and Suzanne Thompson, a CCU
lecturer, assisted him with the 101-page book and its unsettling
introduction of his dream of a dwarf. "We don't control our lives. We
think we do. It's only a deception," says the dwarf, disappearing
in a foggy shadow.
Lion was born Dec. 15, 1915 in Brambauer to Leo Lion, born Sept. 9,
1877 and wounded in the shoulder in World War I, and opera-trained
soprano Berta Lion, 42. His parents operated A. Steinweg & Co., a
dry goods store.
1933 - "Jews are our misfortune. Don't
buy from a Jew!" read placards Nazis put in front of Jewish businesses,
he wrote.
"That disturbed my father," Lion wrote. His dad asked a soldier to
leave; the Nazi replied with "ugly remarks," asking him what he was
going to do about it.
"If you are not gone within 15 minutes, I'll take a bat and beat the
living crap out of you!" his father replied. "How could you do that?""
....
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