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My Voice: Jackie Young
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29 April 2025

Jackie Young was born in 1941 in Austria. He was a child survivor of Theresienstadt concentration camp where he spent two years and eight months before liberation by the Soviet Army in May 1945. He came to England at nearly four years old and was adopted by a loving couple, the Janofskys, who told him nothing about his background.
Jackie learned he was adopted at age nine when a boy at school told him and he started to understand why he always felt different from everyone else. Jackie’s life since has been a 70 year-long quest to find out the truth.
Bit by bit, Jackie has uncovered the missing pieces of his background. He learned his mother was killed at 32 at Maly Trostenets near Minsk, most likely shot by the Nazis along with a further estimated 200,000 Jews. He also feared his father was a Nazi as his mother was unmarried, he went on the TV show ‘DNA Family Secrets’ in 2022 to discover the truth.
Now a retired London taxi driver, Jackie has been married to the love of his life Lita for 60 years and has many treasures now – their two daughters and three grandchildren.
Jackie's book is part of the My Voice book collection, a stand-alone project of The Fed, the leading Jewish social care charity in Manchester, dedicated to preserving the life stories of Holocaust survivors and refugees from Nazi persecution who settled in the UK. The oral history, which is recorded and transcribed, captures their entire lives from before, during and after the war years. The books are written in the words of the survivor so that future generations can always hear their voice. The My Voice book collection is a valuable resource for Holocaust awareness and education.
HISTORY / Jewish, The Holocaust, Autobiography: historical, political and military
1 A complicated beginning
2 Meeting the couple who became my parents
3 Memories in dreams
4 My new extended family
5 From fostering to adoption
6 The secret comes out
7 Card games and classical music
8 Grandma Polly drops a bombshell
9 Love and tension with my parents
10 Entering the world of work
11 Meeting the love of my life
12 Discovering I was a Holocaust survivor
13 The house from my dreams
14 Getting married and starting our family
15 Visiting Vienna, land of my birth
16 Two figures from my past
17 A face I knew from childhood
18 The door to my past opens wider
19 Discovery, despair, destruction
20 Two passengers in my cab
21 Mourning in Minsk
22 My pain as a child survivor
23 The Red Cross comes up trumps
24 Remembering with stones
25 Wounds that wouldn’t heal
26 An impossible dream comes true
27 My treasure, my family
Glossary
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