Told from the eyes of Lucie as a child, “Unconquered” traces her three-year journey from when Nazis took over her home in Vienna to her arrival at Ellis Island and assimilation in New York. Tested again and again, Lucie watched as her grandfather died after being brutally beaten and her cousins shot before her very eyes. But, it was a traumatic incident with two Nazi soldiers that has left the deepest scar.
More than a “Holocaust story,” “Unconquered” demonstrates the resiliency of the human spirit and the fire of a girl who refuses to let anyone crush her soul.
One of the diminishing few Jewish Holocaust refugees still living, Lucie Burian Liebman, mother of five and married for 52 years, devoted her career to nursing. Interviewed by Steven Spielberg’s USC Shoah
Foundation, she is the former curator of El Paso Holocaust Museum and currently resides in New York City.
More than a “Holocaust story,” “Unconquered” demonstrates the resiliency of the human spirit and the fire of a girl who refuses to let anyone crush her soul.
One of the diminishing few Jewish Holocaust refugees still living, Lucie Burian Liebman, mother of five and married for 52 years, devoted her career to nursing. Interviewed by Steven Spielberg’s USC Shoah
Foundation, she is the former curator of El Paso Holocaust Museum and currently resides in New York City.