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Des Lee was born Levi Dezső in the village of
Vertes in the district of Hajdu Bihar Megy in
Hungary. His parents and uncles were important and
influential landowners and also owned the local
butcher shop and tavern. They all worked very
hard. War saw them taken from the Debrecen Ghetto
to the Strasshof camp, then as slave labourers on
an aristocrat's estate in Austria and finally to
Theresienstadt. Though still a child, Des proved
himself a courageous, often foolhardy, risktaker
to help ensure the family's survival through the
horrors of the
Holocaust.
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Back in Vertes they learned that 180 members of
their family, including Dezső's father and
grandfather, had been murdered. Des was the only
Jewish child in the whole district to have
survived.
Des, his mother and uncles lost all their former
possessions when communism came to Hungary, but
their combined guile, initiative and hard work
helped them survive. Des tells of life under
communism and in the army with a unique honesty
and sense of humour. By 1956 they'd had enough,
escaped illegally and migrated to Australia, where
more hard work brought
them great success. Throughout, one senses the
strength of the family's loyalty and love for one
another and their joy in all that remained true of
Hungarian life and culture.
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