Since starting the Holocaust Survivor Band nearly 10 years ago, Saul Dreier who learned to play the percussion instrument in a concentration camp and his fellow musicians have performed nearly 100 concerts, including in countries like Israel, Germany, Brazil and Poland. In addition to providing entertainment, the band promotes unity: “My goal is peace all over the world, and no antisemitism,” Dreier said.
Saul Dreier learned to play the drums in perhaps the most unlikely of places: a concentration camp during the Holocaust. Dreier, who grew up in a Jewish family in Krakow, was sent to the Krakow-Plaszow concentration camp in German-occupied Poland when he was 16, then was moved to a subcamp, where he toiled in a factory called NKF, repairing automobile radiators.Subscribe to The Post Most newsletter for the most important and interesting stories from The Washington Post. One of the men in Dreier'
Saul Dreier learned to play the drums in perhaps the most unlikely of places: a concentration camp during the Holocaust. Dreier, who grew up in a Jewish family in Krakow, was sent to the Krakow-Plaszow concentration camp in German-occupied Poland when he was 16, then was moved to a subcamp, where he toiled in a factory called NKF, repairing automobile radiators.Subscribe to The Post Most newsletter for the most important and interesting stories from The Washington Post. One of the men in Dreier'
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