Upon arriving at Auschwitz on July 1,1944, Noémi was separated from the rest of her family, and they were killed. Noémi and the other women in her assigned barrack endured starvation, filth and standing in three-hour roll calls. After suffering for months, Noémi and 1000 other women were shipped to a sub-camp of Buchenwald in Germany called Allendorf. There, they worked as slave laborers at a munitions factory.
As the Allies approached, in spring 1945, the Nazis forced the women on a death march. Noémi was one of 12 women who escaped into a nearby forest, where an American soldier serving under General Patton liberated them. After regaining her health, Noémi returned to Debrecen and reunited with her father.
Noémi married in 1945 and became a teacher. She, her husband and two sons came to the United States in 1957. Noémi lived in Bellingham and was an active member of the Speakers Bureau. She co-authored the book Sharing is Healing, which documents her first of several return trips to Auschwitz. Noemi passed away at the age of 96 on June 7, 2019.
- Transcripts for Video Clips — Noémi Ban
- Traduccion al Espanol — Noémi Ban
- Oral History Audio and Transcript – Washington State Jewish Historical Society/University of Washington Libraries Special Collections
- Sharing is Healing: A Holocaust Survivor’s Story – Memoir by Noémi Ban
- Remarkable Resilience: The Life and Legacy of Noemi Ban Beyond the Holocaust – Biography by Diane M. Sue, Ph.D.














