Holocaust Remembrance Day, observed in May, prompts solemn reflection on one of humanity’s darkest chapters. Among the countless tales of survival and liberation, Leah Graham, canteen service chief at Alvin C. York VA in Murfreesboro, Tennessee, shares a deeply personal story that links the horrors of the holocaust with the bravery of the American military.
Jan Reno was one of eight siblings, including her twin sister. Her family became prisoners at the Dachau concentration camp in Munich, the first Nazi concentration camp in Germany.
It operated from 1933 to 1945, subjecting prisoners to forced labor and brutality based on ethnicity, religion and other factors. Over 200,000 people from across Europe were imprisoned in Dachau with tens of thousands perishing due to starvation, disease and violence.
“My grandmother was the only one out of our whole family who survived,” Graham said.
It was on April 29, 1945, that Dachau was liberated by American soldiers, one of whom would become Jan’s future husband.
“I remember the day the Americans came.”
“My grandfather, Raymond Reno, was part of the 45th Infantry Division, one of the two divisions that liberated Dachau. He and 47 other soldiers discovered the camp and was part of the team put together for the sole purpose of liberating the camp survivors,” she said.
Amongst the survivors was Jan, who endured unimaginable suffering, including losing her twin sister to cruel medical experiments. For most of her life, she remained steadfast in her silence about her experiences, a silence that spoke volumes about the horrors she witnessed.
“My grandmother would never talk about anything that she had been through,” Graham said. “The only thing I ever remember her saying was, ‘I remember the day the Americans came.’”
Following the war, Jan and Raymond wed and embarked on a union grounded in love and perseverance, sharing a passion for patriotism and a commitment to education. Jan went on to earn her master’s degree from the College of New Rochelle to become a linguist, becoming proficient in many languages and eventually working with the FBI.
Raymond used his G.I. Bill to pursue a Ph.D. in literary history and went on to teach at Georgetown University, serving as the head of the English department for 30 years. His photo adorns the wall at the Raymond H. Reno Theatrical Hall at Georgetown University.
Pride and gratitude
The liberation brought not only freedom but also a sense of pride and gratitude. Jan Reno, later becoming an American citizen, held a deep admiration for the American military recognizing the role they played in her liberation.
“My grandmother was always extremely proud of the American military,” Graham added. “Becoming an American citizen was the proudest day of her life.”
Graham (pictured above) is the Veterans Canteen Service chief for the Alvin C. York VA in Murfreesboro, Tennessee. Every day, she carries a tangible reminder of her family’s legacy—her grandmother’s pendant that survived the horrors of the Holocaust. It serves as a poignant symbol of resilience and endurance.
“This pendant was the only thing she had that made it out of the war. Several times the chain has broken and I [would] think the pendant is surely gone. But I will find it later in the folds of my clothes or miraculously in a pocket,” she said.
Graham remains deeply connected to her family’s history, a source of empathy and understanding in her interactions with Veterans.
“One of the things it helps me keep in mind is that everyone has a story. Everyone has a life and you never know what anybody is going through.”
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After my father died, I learned from my mother that along with rescuing Americans and allied forces at the conclusion of the Battle of the Bulge in WWII, my father, an Army Infantryman, was among the very first wave of liberating soldiers in the holocaust. He witnessed its atrocities, too upsetting to mention here. I was never able to learn particular camp(s) he entered as his military records were burnt in the St. Louis fire where they were stored.
I lived under that shadow all my growing up years, however, as he was a broken man in many ways for what he had been through.
It was prior to his death that I joined the Army as a WAC during the Vietnam war. Later on, I began the process of converting to Judaism, then successfully applying for immigration to Israel. All this through years of repetitive nightmares that would awaken me at night. In these dreams, I was a young woman running from Nazis up stairs off a big blue kitchen. In the dream, I was always captured. Waking up at that point, I knew this woman didn’t survive.
It’s been an interesting life.
And no doubt, it goes without saying that my dad–my hero, along with all veterans, has all my respect.
My mom said the same thing when she became an American citizen after being married to a sailor. I wish the youth of today understood what this meant.
Our American youth need to be educated about the atrocities perpetrated, by the evil nazis, on the Jewish people.
Discovering personal stories like this is a significant part of what makes life worth living. Thank you for sharing this!
It is at once an extremely disturbing and a very hallowed story, every story that is told about this evil and dark time in our history. For those that survived I can only be in awe of the collective and individual resilience that brought them through such a soul rending experience. On my worst day of all my days thus far, none of that even remotely begins to approach such an atrocity. There is no set of reasoning that can be offered to excuse such baseless and hellish behaviour from one human towards another. Let this be the lesson for all time how not to be towards a fellow human.
I wonder if your grandfather is related to me. My grandparents lived in Cumberland, Ky most of their lives. They were both born in Tennessee. My grandfather’s name was James Elbert Reno.
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I felt a since of pride and pray your family feel pride in what both Grand Parents when thur in WW II, US COAST GUARD CHEIF Retired
Heartfelt. Patriotic. Emotional. Beautiful. Thank you so much for sharing that powerful story. May we never forget the sacrifices of those who came before us.
This story is in a sense a part of my family who served and fought in WII my mother, father, uncles and more. Again after all these passing years I am moved to tears and a pounding of my heart. And so proud of our veterans and those serving and volunteering in our Armed Forces. Please get this story out to lots of publications. Thank you.