"Tell me what you remember most about home," Dick asked me one evening."A lilac tree," I said. "It bloomed every May, around the time of Mama'sbirthday. The memory is so vivid in mind, I can almost smell the lilacsnow." In 1942 Hannelore Wolff's life changed forever. Her father had beenarrested and sent to a concentration camp. Six weeks later he was dead,and Hannelore and the rest of her family were deported to the camps and alife of unbearable suffering. Yet despite the horrors she faced in variouslabour and concentration camps, including Auschwitz, Hannelore met and fellin love with Polish POW, Dick Hillman. After a few months they wereseparated, but Dick promised Hannelore that he would find her again,wherever she was. He kept his promise, and when both their names appearedon Oskar Schindler's list, Dick and Hannelore were reunited and married.This is their incredible story of courage, love and hope during one of themost horrific times in history.