Two days after
Germany invaded the Soviet Union, when Weksler was eight years old, Germans occupied Vilnius and her father, Isak Weksler was arrested as a Jew and was eventually murdered in the
Ponary massacre. In early September 1941, Weksler and her extended family were incarcerated in the
Vilnius Ghetto. Upon liquidation of the ghetto beginning on September 24, 1943, Suzanne and Raja survived a brutal selection in the Christian
Rasos Cemetery. Raja passed the selection of those fit for work with Suzanne hidden in a canvas bag she carried on her back. They were sent for forced labor to the
Kaiserwald concentration camp near
Riga, Latvia. By standing on her toes at roll call and later wearing a turban and high heels, the 11-year-old appeared tall enough to pass as an adult. During one selection of the weak for executions, the
Wehrmacht sergeant in charge of the work detail grabbed Weksler's arm and forced her into a
coal bin, which stood next to the stove in his room, thus saving her life. Upon liquidation of Kaiserwald, Weksler and her mother were transported to the
Stutthof concentration camp on October 1, 1944. Conditions at Stutthof were brutal and sick and weak prisoners were routinely gassed or given lethal injections. Upon the approach of the
Red Army, Stutthof was evacuated and Suzanne and Raja barely survived the eleven-day
death march, in snow and freezing temperatures to the Tauentzien Camp (present-day
Tawęcino), near Lauenburg (
Lębork). Suzanne became ill and was too sick to join the evacuation march from Tauentzien on March 7, 1945. When the camp was liberated by the
Red Army, Suzanne was in a coma. It was a full week before she recovered consciousness. == After liberation ==