SOLDIERS OF IDF VS ARAB TERRORISTS

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Showing posts with label Auschwitz. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Auschwitz. Show all posts

Tuesday, November 21, 2017

The Incredible Story of the Hero Who Volunteered for Auschwitz Will Amaze You



What kind of a person would volunteer to go to hell?
Witold Pilecki did just that.
This story is beyond amazing.
What drove this amazing person to risk his life and volunteer to be captured and sent to Auschwitz?
This man sets up a resistance movement inside of the concentration camp.
What he did is unbelievable.
He fights the Nazis and ultimately escapes out of Auschwitz to go and fight against the Nazis more effectively from outside than from inside.
This man did not succumb to the Nazis, but fought and survived World War II.
The most powerful question that arises from this short story is – Why? What drove this man to be so brave?
It seems that some people understand the eternal truth that “there are some things that are more important than life and some things worse than death.”
Menachem Begin, Israel’s Prime Minister, who helped chase the British Army out of pre-State Israel wrote these words in his introduction to his epic book, “The Revolt.”
Witold Pilecki understood this well.

Tuesday, April 25, 2017

Bennett says, ‘One bombing attack’ could have stopped Auschwitz



Education Minister Naftali Bennett, the Israeli government representative at the 29th March of the Living at Auschwitz-Birkenau in Poland on Monday, observed, “There’s only 4 gas chambers, 4. The allies, they knew exactly where they are…One bombing attack could have stopped the killing.”

Wednesday, November 26, 2014

Virtual tour of the Auschwitz-Birkenau Memorial now available

One can't image the size and vastness of Auschwitz-Birkenau without visiting this most horrible place. Many of you have never visited - now you can do the 2nd best thing.
The new virtual tour of the Auschwitz-Birkenau Memorial includes over 200 high-quality panoramic photographs. The 360⁰ images present the authentic sites and buildings of the former German Nazi concentration and extermination camp, complete with historical descriptions, dozens of witness accounts, archival documents and photographs, artworks created by the prisoners, and objects related to the history of the camp.

Link: http://panorama.auschwitz.org

Tuesday, January 28, 2014

'Where was the US During the Holocaust?'



Economics Minister Naftali Bennett (Jewish Home) and Deputy Defense Minister Danny Danon (Likud) spoke to Arutz Sheva Monday about their personal reactions to Auschwitz, as the Knesset made a landmark visitthere for the first time
"This is my first time here," Bennett reflected. "My grandmother and grandfather are buried on Polish land, and many from our nation are buried here." 
Bennett also wondered where the US was during the Holocaust - and why they had not intervened to stop the bloodshed. 
"It always bothers me that the US could have bombed [the SS], could have made it their mission to stop the killing machine," the MK explained. "But out of tens of thousands of missions during the war, they did not make an attempt even once." 
"We will never rely on anyone else but ourselves," he continued, "only the IDF and the Jewish people." 
Danon stated that walking on the "cursed ground" of the death camp led him to deep introspection. 
"It is painful to be here, but we are also proud survivors," he noted. "We are proud to be here with a Knesset delegation but we also understand that without our power [as the State of Israel], it could happen again." 
Monday's Knesset visit to Poland was in honor of International Holocaust Remembrance Day. A special ceremony was held at Auschwitz and attended by Polish MPs and government officials, Israeli MKs and government officials, and survivors. 












Sunday, January 26, 2014

New Dudu Fisher Holocaust film shines spotlight on survivors' silence

"One can be taken out of Auschwitz, but you can never take Auschwitz out of him." This is the premise of a new film called Opening Night, which aims to ensure that the new generation connects to the story of the Holocaust. The 15-minute movie follows the character of Mark, an Auschwitz survivor, played by legendary Israeli cantor and Broadway star Dudu Fisher. Opening Night is set in 1971, and deals with Mark's silence regarding the atrocities he went through during the war, particularly the loss of his relatives. One day his son discovers photos of his past family, which was annihilated in the Holocaust, and confronts him.

Film co-director and co-producer Danny Finkelman says that this moment in the movie triggers a chain reaction, which eventually leads Mark –- who after the Holocaust abandoned his former career as performer -- to once again take the stage. On the opening night of the show, the survivor finally opens up to his family, particularly to his son, about his personal history.

Fisher's own father was a Holocaust survivor, but the actor tells The Jerusalem Post that he did not need his father's help in order to identify with his character. "I know how difficult it is for an entertainer not to be on stage, because if you take myself… I love the stage. I want to die on the stage," he gushes.

Mark decides to audition for a show that he played in back in Poland - the last performance he gave before the Holocaust - when he sees that it has come to America, where he now lives. For Fisher, this is a particularly touching point in the film: "To take this desire and to hide it under the carpet of life, and decide not to do it anymore, after what happened in Poland, and then to see the moment when he sees that the show is coming from Poland to New York, to take this decision to audition for the role again… this is amazing." Finkelman says that while most Holocaust films highlight and capture survivors during the war, not many follow them after the war as they try to battle with this own demons.

Cecelia Margulies, who collaborated with Finkelman in the production and direction of the film, is also the daughter of Holocaust survivors and the storyline, though fictional, is to a great extent based on her own personal story. Margulies tells The Jerusalem Post that whereas her mother spoke about her experiences of the Holocaust all the time, and even wrote books about it, her father didn't say a word about his past. Like the character Mark, Margulies eventually found out that her father had had a wife and a family prior to the war, and they finally started communicating about his past.

As what is called a second generation survivor, Margulies has dedicated much of her life to Holocaust education: "it's in my genetics," she explains. "I was very affected by my parents' experiences." Margulies, who is also a composer, conveys the message of Holocaust remembrance through her music, and that is how she and Finkelman met; the worked together in Krakow on a Holocaust survivor film called Rainbow in the Night, inspired by a song Margulies had written under that title.

The artist sees film and music as a learning tool. "I see a world today that has growing anti-Semitism, I saw a lot of Holocaust denial going on and this is at a time when survivors are dwindling," she says, in remarks that are particularly poignant ahead of International Holocaust Remembrance Day on Monday. "Once the survivors are gone, I'm worried - where will the proof come from?" "Each survivor is a reminder and a message of the truth, each story is a gateway to the future for the Jewish people and the world at large and we need to ensure that the story is told for prosperity," she adds. 

"Knowledge and education is a source of prevention." Even during the making of the film the directors noticed the educational impact the story was having on the multicultural and multi-faith cast and crew. Indeed, Finkelman says that most of the actors had no idea about the Holocaust. One of the crew members was Palestinian and he says she hadn't previously known about the scale of the Holocaust; being involved in the film motivated her to do some research into the history of it, and she was shocked by her findings. It was a similar story with Chilean cinematographer Maurizio Arenas, Finkelman relates, who couldn't sleep for nights after being exposed to the history of the Holocaust: "it opened up a whole new world to him about our nation and out history." "It was a microcosm of the world," Margulies adds. "You could see the learning experience within the crew itself - if that's any indication in terms of what a film can do in terms of education." The film is currently being pitched to various festivals, before being shown at theaters.

'I'm off to Auschwitz, kisses,' Himmler writes in a letter to his wife." Private letters of SS chief found in Tel Aviv; Hundreds of letters written by Heinrich Himmler to his wife are found, shedding light on the life of Hitler's second in command.

Hundreds of previously unpublished personal letters, notes and photographs from SS chief and Nazi Interior Minister Heinrich Himmler have surfaced in Israel, the German newspaper Die Welt reported.
The documents, shedding light on one of the most notorious members of Hitler's inner circle, include letters Himmler wrote his wife Marga from 1927 until five weeks before his suicide in 1945, as well as many photographs and even recipe books.
Some of the documents, stored in a bank vault in Tel Aviv, will be revealed in a series of articles by Die Welt in the coming weeks, starting on Sunday.
The documents were kept at the private home of an Israeli Jew until they made their way into the hands of a collector, the father of Israeli movie director Vanessa Lafa, who prepared a film based on them which will be screened at the Berlin Film Festival in February.
The second most important official of the Third Reich, Himmler was a key figure in the preparation of the Final Solution for the Jewish Problem in Europe, according to the Encyclopedia of the Holocaust. When Germany surrendered to the Allied Forces, Himmler attempted to flee under an assumed name but was apprehended by the British. On May 23, 1945, before being put to trial, Himmler swallowed a poison capsule concealed in his mouth and died.
The German Federal Archive (Bundesarchiv) has authenticated the documents. According to Die Welt, many of the letters are signed "Dein Heini" ("Your Heini") or "Euer Pappi" ("Your Daddy") and the handwriting matches other verified letters by Himmler. The newly discovered letters also correspond with Himmler's wife's letters, kept by the German Federal Archives for years.
The wealth of documents found is exceptional compared to the personal written legacy by others in the Nazi top brass, historian Michael Wildt told Die Welt. "Adolf Hitler and his official deputy Hermann Göring left virtually no personal records. Propaganda Minister Joseph Goebbels, the fourth leading Nazi, left a huge inventory of handwritten diaries and daily dictations. But they are almost, without exception, material for future propaganda and not really private documents," he said.
The private correspondence adds many details previously unknown about Himmler's life, and offer a rare glimpse into his personality, day-to-day conduct and acquaintances, Die Welt reported. The letters paint a fuller picture regarding Himmler's rise in the Nazi ranks, as well as his developing relationship with Marga.
Keeping his wife out of the public eye, the two drifted apart due to his ongoing affair with his secretary, starting on 1938. However, the letters reveal that the two remained in good relations to Himmler's last day.

 

Heinrich Himmler's private letters found in Tel Aviv bank vault

'I'm off to Auschwitz, kisses,' Himmler writes in a letter to his wife. No less incredible than the letters' discovery is how they reached Israel.

By  | Jan. 25, 2014 | 9:09 PM
So how did Heinrich Himmler’s personal letters end up in a Tel Aviv bank vault, and why have they only come to light 69 years after the SS chief committed suicide at the end of World War II?
German newspaper Die Welt has reported that 700 letters written by Himmler ended up in a Tel Aviv bank vault. The paper plans to publish some of them in the coming weeks.
According to Die Welt, many of the letters are signed “Dein Heini” (“Your Heini”) or “Euer Pappi” (“Your Daddy”) and the handwriting matches other verified letters by Himmler.
"I'm off to Auschwitz, kisses, your Heini," Himmler wrote in one of them.
After the war, two American soldiers collected hundreds of letters and documents from Himmler’s home in Bavaria. According to Die Welt, these papers found their way into the possession of Chaim Rosenthal of Tel Aviv. Rosenthal kept the letters for 40 years under his bed.
In the 1980s, Rosenthal tried to sell the letters after the German Federal Archives had authenticated them. But in 1983 German magazine Stern published excerpts from an alleged Hitler diary that turned out to be fake. In that atmosphere, the world wasn’t interested in more documents from Nazi leaders that could turn out to be forgeries.
When Rosenthal was 90, his son finally persuaded him to hand over the material for publication and, in 2007, Belgian diamond dealer David Lapa bought them for a symbolic fee, Die Welt reported. Lapa gave the documents to his daughter Vanessa, a film director, to make a documentary about them.
In 2011, Vanessa Lapa approached a reporter at Die Welt through her lawyer and proposed that the material be published. Later, at a meeting with a reporter from the paper, she brought Himmler's letters and photographs from 1927 to 1945 – the year he committed suicide.
In the three years since, Die Welt has been authenticating the letters with the help of the German Federal Archives. The handwriting matches that in letters from Himmler to his wife in the archives.
On June 22, 1941, after hearing on the news about Operation Barbarossa – the German invasion of the Soviet Union – she wrote to her husband: "There is still caviar left in the fridge. Take it." His daughter, Gudrun, wrote: "It is terrible we are going to war with Russia. They were our partners. After all ... Russia is too big. The battle will be very difficult – if we want to conquer it all."
Two days after the beginning of Operation Barbarossa, Himmler made his way to Hitler. He tried ringing home almost every day but forgot about one very important date. "I am so sorry that I forgot our anniversary," he wrote to Marga four days late on July 7, 1941. "Many things happened during those days," he added. "The fighting was very difficult, especially for the SS."
The collection also includes some love letters and erotic messages.
"I am so fortunate I have a bad husband who loves his bad wife… as she loves him," Marga wrote. In other instances, the lovebirds use the word "revenge" flirtatiously." The revenge - it will be fun," he wrote to her on January 9, 1928, while aboard a train to Munich. "I am nothing but revenge. Forever," he added. "My black soul thinks about impossible things."
"We, the thugs of the German struggle for freedom, are meant to be lonely and banished," he wrote to her on Christmas of 1927. And on December 30 of the same year, he wrote, "I can imagine the horror waiting for us in the future, that sooner or later I will bring pain and suffering to the dearest to my heart on Earth."
Soon after, in January of 1928, Marga called her husband, a "bad man with a hard and coarse heart." In response, he called her a "small woman."
Marga's anti-Semitism is apparent in the couple's correspondences.
On February 27, 1928, she wrote to him about "the Jewish scum." Himmler responded: "My poor love, you have to deal with the Jews because of the money." Before they wed, she had sold her share in a Berlin clinic to her Jewish partner. "A Jew will always be a Jew," Himmler wrote to his wife, after she complained to him. "If only I could help you," he wrote.
On November 14, 1938, after Kristallnacht, Marga wrote in her journal: "This thing with the Jews – when will the scum leave us alone so that we can live our happy lives?"
The correspondence contains no mention of the genocide against the Jewish people, nor any mention of the concentration camps. "I'm off to Auschwitz, kisses, your Heini" is an example of how Himmler brought up his work. "In the coming days I'll be in Lublin, Auschwitz, Lviv and then in new parts. I wonder if I'll be able to phone…best wishes, have a nice trip and enjoy our little daughter. Many warm blessings and kisses, you daddy," he wrote to his wife on July 15, 1942. 

Friday, January 24, 2014

Tzudik Greenwald - Av Hrachamim



צודיק גרינוולד, חזן בית הכנסת הגדול בפרנקפורט ודור שלישי לניצולי שואה, בקליפ חדש ומצמרר לקראת יום השואה הבינלאומי שיחול ביום שני הקרוב, 27.1.14.

"קהילות הקודש שמסרו נפשם על קדושת השם, הנאהבים והנעימים בחייהם ובמותם לא נפרדו" שר צודיק בקולו המרטיט יחד עם בנו בתוככי מחנה ההשמדה אוושויץ. הקליפ מתחיל על פסי הרכבת המובילים אל גיא ההריגה בו נספו מעל מיליון יהודים, ומסתיים בירושלים בירת הנצח של העם היהודי.

Spine Tingling Clip Commemorates International Holocaust Day

Tzudik Greenwald, grandson of Holocaust survivors, international singer and cantor of the Great Synagogue in Frankfurt, has released a spine-chilling clip in honor of International Holocaust Day (next Monday, Jan 27, 2014).

Tzudik and his son are standing in the Auschwitz concentration camp as Tzudik, in his awesome, trembling voice sings, "The holy communities who gave up their lives to sanctify God's name, beloved and pleasant in their lives, unseparated in their deaths..." 

The clip begins on the rail tracks leading to the death valley in which more than a million Jews lost their lives, and ends in Jerusalem, the eternal capital of the Jewish people.

אב הרחמים (קהילות הקודש)
לחן: יוסי גרין
רצ'יטטיב: צודיק גרינוולד
עיבוד: רפאל ביטון
מקהלה: מקהלת הילדים "מלאכים"
ילד סולן: אברהם שמעון גרינוולד
תזמור: הסינפונת של מארק שיימר
מיקס: זהר זלץ - אולפני אשל
צילום: יחזקאל איטקין
עריכה: משה פרדס
הפקה וייצוג בלעדי: מיקוד הפקות בע"מ 08-6513969, mikudh@gmail.comhttp://www.mikud.ws

Monday, November 18, 2013

As Ban Ki-moon visits Auschwitz today, it's time for the UN to get serious on anti-Semitism UN promotes a new human rights culture that sees racism everywhere, and antisemitism nowhere



By Hillel Neuer
November 18, 2013
As Ban Ki-moon today makes the first official visit of a UN secretary-general to the Auschwitz death camp, it is a time for the world body to recall its promise to meaningfully address anti-Semitism.
In 2004, former secretary-general Kofi Annan held a historic UN gathering on anti-Semitism where he called on the Geneva-based human rights machinery of the United Nations to become “mobilized in the battle against anti-Semitism.” This appeal has largely gone ignored.
Few if any of the UN human rights mechanisms—including those experts specifically charged with addressing racism and discrimination—have addressed anti-Semitism in any meaningful way.
While there are constructive events through a relatively new UN Holocaust educational program based out of New York, these have not found an echo in the substantive reporting of the UN's vast international human rights apparatus.
In 2007, UN Watch published a comprehensive report card on the UN’s record in combating anti-Semitism. The study revealed inaction—and, worse, the aiding and abetting of anti-Semitism through an infrastructure of manifestly one-sided and irrational UN measures designed to demonize the Jewish state.
When the UN General Assembly's 4th Committee last Thursday adopted nine resolutions on Israel, and none on the rest of the world, the ambassador of Syria, co-sponsor of the resolution on the Golan, used the occasion to accuse Israel of being a Nazi state and acting like Hitler. The chair thanked him with not a word of rebuke.
The same occurs repeatedly at the UN Human Rights Council. When UN Watch's updated report card comes out, the world body's grades will sadly be no better.
That said, in principle the secretary-general's visit today is a welcome development for the leader of an organization founded in 1945 on the ashes of the Holocaust, with the aim to save succeeding generations from the scourge of war and to reaffirm faith in fundamental human rights and in the dignity and worth of the human person.
It was the Holocaust they had in mind when, under the leadership of Eleanor Roosevelt and René Cassin, the UN in 1948 adopted the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, whose second sentence speaks of the “disregard and contempt for human rights” that “have resulted in barbarous acts which have outraged the conscience of mankind.”
The deafening silence and moral indifference that allowed Auschwitz to happen must serve as remembrance and reminder of the moral imperative for the United Nations—founded as the anti-Hitler alliance—to speak out and take action in the face of all acts of genocide and atrocity, as well the incitement to hatred that over history have been the warrant to crimes against humanity.
When discussing the Holocaust, however, the UN too often makes sure to draw only abstract and universal lessons, overlooking what the Nazi crime was all about.
Many welcomed the UN’s 2005 decision to hold an annual Holocaust Remembrance Day. Disappointingly, however, UN statements on this day refuse to draw the obvious lessons about the need to confront the genocidal antisemitism of our own time, be it the poisonous words of the Hamas charter, weekly sermons across the Middle East, or statements by regime leaders in Tehran—let alone the terrorism and catastrophic nuclear weapons program that are justified and fueled by those words of hate.
A typical example was the annual message published this year by UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Navi Pillay. She carefully omitted mention of even the word antisemitism.
UN officials such as Pillay appear to be comfortable discussing the Holocaust—so long as it can be invoked to support the organization’s own politicized and highly problematic agenda on racism, all of which is carried out under the rubric of texts and mechanisms that emerged from its infamous 2001 Durban conference, a notorious spectacle of anti-Israel vitriol that included mass street rallies shouting anti-Semitic slogans.
Eleanor Roosevelt would be ashamed to find that the UN she helped create has today become the leading global force behind a new human rights culture that tends to see racism everywhere—and anti-Semitism nowhere.
The secretary-general and other UN officials should recognize, in addition to all the perfectly legitimate universal lessons, that Auschwitz was the product of anti-Semitism, a cancer that continues to metastasize. The death camp Mr. Ban is seeing today was the most deadly instrument in the Nazis’ deliberate murder of six million Jews, part of Hitler's publicly stated goal to achieve the “annihilation of the Jewish race.”
Mr. Ban's visit also comes ten days after the European Union Agency for Fundamental Rights released a major poll showing an alarming rise in anti-Semitism. A survey of nearly 6,000 self-identified Jews in eight European Union countries showed that two-thirds of respondents found anti-Semitism to be a major problem in their countries, while more than 75% said the situation had become more acute over the last five years. Jews in Europe cannot even pray in synagogue without the protection of intense security.
Let us hope that today's visit will cause the United Nations to reflect on its history and founding purposes, and to reaffirm its solemn commitment to fight atrocity and racial discrimination—and anti-Semitism.

Hillel Neuer is the executive director of UN Watch, a non-governmental human rights organization in Geneva, Switzerland. Published in The Times of IsraelNov. 18, 2013.

Tuesday, July 16, 2013

Auschwitz - The Blueprint of Genocide (Documentary)

Using newly-released (in 1994) files, concealed by the KGB in Moscow and held in archives for nearly 50 years, the programme exposes the events behind the planning and building of the Auschwitz concentration camp. Professor Gerald Fleming, a researcher into Nazi war crimes and architect Robert van Pelt, investigate these files and reveal evidence which shows how German civilian engineers and Bauhaus-trained architects deliberately colluded with the SS to plan the genocide.

Friday, June 14, 2013

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has opened a Holocaust exhibition at the Auschwitz Nazi death camp site in southern Poland June 13 2013

Thursday, June 13, 2013

Oswiecim, Poland - Israel's PM Opens Exhibit at Auschwitz

Oswiecim, Poland - In a defiant speech coming from the place symbolizing the suffering of Jews during World War II, Israel’s prime minister warned on Thursday that the Jewish state will do everything to prevent another Holocaust and to defend itself against any threat.

Benjamin Netanyahu spoke during the inauguration of a new pavilion at the former Nazi death camp of Auschwitz that is to educate visitors about the Holocaust and Nazi’s quest to exterminate Jews. Auschwitz with adjacent Birkenau was the most notorious of a system of death camps that Nazi Germany built and operated in occupied Poland.
“From here, the place that attest to the desire to destroy us, I, the prime minister of Israel, the state of the Jewish people, say to all the nations of the world: The state of Israel will do whatever is necessary to prevent another Holocaust,” Netanyahu said, as he stood in front of the red-brick former prisoner block that houses the new exhibition.
“We must not be complacent in the face of threats of annihilation. We must not bury our heads in the sand or allow others to do the work for us,” he said, not naming the threat but apparently meaning Iran and its nuclear program.
Before the speech, he visited Block 27, which is now dedicated to presenting Auschwitz in the larger context of the World War II genocide. More than 1.1 million of the 6 million Jews killed in the Holocaust died in the Auschwitz-Birkenau death camp.
Survivors of the Holocaust visit  exhibition SHOAH at the Auschwitz-Birkenau State Museum, Block 27 at the opening a new pavilion at the former Nazi German death camp of Auschwitz, in Oswiecim, Poland, on Thursday, June 13, 2013.The exhibition in Bloc 27 was curated by Israel’s Yad Vashem Institute Chairman Avner Shalev. It is meant to educate visitors about the Holocaust and the Nazi Germany’s quest to exterminate the Jewish people.The event closed Netanyahu’s two-day visit to Poland that was steeped in symbolism, as it focused on the Jewish people's painful history there during World War II as well as on the strong relations between Poland and the Jewish state today. (AP Photo/Czarek Sokolowski)Survivors of the Holocaust visit exhibition SHOAH at the Auschwitz-Birkenau State Museum, Block 27 at the opening a new pavilion at the former Nazi German death camp of Auschwitz, in Oswiecim, Poland, on Thursday, June 13, 2013.The exhibition in Bloc 27 was curated by Israel’s Yad Vashem Institute Chairman Avner Shalev. It is meant to educate visitors about the Holocaust and the Nazi Germany’s quest to exterminate the Jewish people.The event closed Netanyahu’s two-day visit to Poland that was steeped in symbolism, as it focused on the Jewish people's painful history there during World War II as well as on the strong relations between Poland and the Jewish state today. (AP Photo/Czarek Sokolowski)
Among some 4.2 million names of Holocaust victims listed, page after page, on a 14-meter (yard) -long list, Netanyahu found the name of Yehudit Hun, the twin sister of his late father-in-law, killed in Bilgoraj, southeastern Poland.
“If there are Holocaust deniers, have them come to Block 27 and go over one name at a time,” Netanyahu said in clear reference to Iran’s President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad who questions the extent of the Holocaust.
The exhibition was curated by Israel’s Yad Vashem Holocaust memorial. It aims to provide the backdrop of the Holocaust, the Nazi Germany’s ideology for murder, and the physical and spiritual struggle of its victims. It also includes survivor testimonies and drawings by some of the 1.5 million children killed in the Holocaust.
The Germans carried out the Holocaust to a large extent in occupied Poland, because it had Europe’s largest Jewish population and it was at the heart of a railway network that allowed the Nazis to easily transport Jews there from elsewhere in Europe. Many Israeli leaders are children of Holocaust survivors, and Israel has the world’s largest population of survivors.
In recent years, Poland has become one of the friendliest states to Israel.


 Israel's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu (R) and Polish Culture Minister Bogdan Zdrojewski (2-L) sign a memorial book during a visit at the new permanent national exhibition 'Shoah' at the Auschwitz-Birkenau State Museum in Oswiecim, Poland, 13 June 2013. The 'Shoah' exhibition in Block 27 at the Auschwitz-Birkenau State Museum was curated, designed and built by Yad Vashem, in coordination with the Auschwitz-Birkenau State Museum. Netanyahu is on a two-day visit to Poland.  EPA/JACEK BEDNARCZYK Israel's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu (R) and Polish Culture Minister Bogdan Zdrojewski (2-L) sign a memorial book during a visit at the new permanent national exhibition 'Shoah' at the Auschwitz-Birkenau State Museum in Oswiecim, Poland, 13 June 2013. The 'Shoah' exhibition in Block 27 at the Auschwitz-Birkenau State Museum was curated, designed and built by Yad Vashem, in coordination with the Auschwitz-Birkenau State Museum. Netanyahu is on a two-day visit to Poland.  EPA/JACEK BEDNARCZYK

Friday, May 31, 2013

Hidden Polish Jew Celebrates Bar Mitzva At Kotel After Discovering He Is Jewish

Jerusalem - Mariusz Robert Aoflko, a 64-year-old Jewish attorney from Krakow who grew up thinking he was a Polish Catholic, celebrated his bar mitzva on Thursday at the Kotel with friends and other hidden Jews from Poland.
Mariusz contacted Shavei Israel’s emissary in Krakow, Rabbi Boaz Pash, once he discovered he was Jewish thirteen years ago, and met Michael Freund, founder and chairman of Shavei Israel, at the entrance of the Auschwitz Concentration Camp in Poland and told him the story of how he discovered his Jewishness.
Mariusz spent his entire life as a Catholic. However, 13 years ago, right before his mother passed away, she told him that he is Jewish. And not only a Jew, but a Kohen (a member of the Jewish priestly caste). Both of Mariusz’s parents were born to Jewish families who perished in Auschwitz.
After the war, the fear of being Jewish in Poland led his parents to hide their religion and to live as Polish Catholics, which in turn was a lifestyle and identity they passed on to Mariusz, hiding the fact that he was Jewish.
In April, Mariusz met Michael Freund, founder and chairman of Shavei Israel, at the entrance of the Auschwitz Concentration Camp in Poland and told him the story of how he discovered his Jewishness.
“When Mariusz told me his incredible story, I was deeply moved,” Freund said, adding, “I told him that since 13 years have passed since he found out he was a Jew, it is an appropriate time for him to have a bar mitzva.” Freund then offered to arrange for the event to take place at the Kotel, all paid for by the organization. Mariusz was very moved by the gesture and of course agreed.
Currently, Mariusz (who now goes by the name of Moshe) is visiting Israel for the first time and celebrated his bar mitzva at the Kotel on Thursday , 13 years after the secret was revealed, which he calls “his rebirth.”
According to Shavei Israel, there are approximately 4,000 Jews registered as Jewish living in Poland, but experts suggest there may be tens of thousands of other Jews in Poland who to this day are either hiding their identities or are simply unaware of their family heritage.
In recent years, a growing number of such people, popularly known as the “Hidden Jews of Poland”, have begun to return to Judaism and to the Jewish people.

Content is provided courtesy of the Jerusalem Post

Wednesday, October 3, 2012

Auschwitz Sonderkommando Shlomo Venezia dies at 88Greek-born prisoner wrote about his survival transporting corpses from gas chambers to crematorium


ROME (JTA) – Shlomo Venezia, a Holocaust survivor who wrote about his experiences in an Auschwitz Sonderkommando unit and spent years bearing personal testimony to the Shoah, has died.
Venezia, who was born in Salonika (Thessaloniki), Greece, died Sept. 30 in Rome at the age of 88.
Deported to Auschwitz in 1944, he was one of the few survivors of the notorious Sonderkommando units – teams of prisoners forced to move and cremate the bodies of those killed in the gas chambers. His mother and two sisters were killed in Auschwitz. He wrote about his experiences in a memoir, “Sonderkommando Auschwitz,” published in 2007.
Venezia was very active speaking about the Holocaust at schools, public events and in the media, and he accompanied Italian student groups on study trips to Auschwitz.
His death “leaves a vacuum and great pain,” said Rome Mayor Gianni Alemanno.
Nicola Zingaretti, the president of Rome province, said, “It is difficult today, and it has always been difficult, to find the words to thank Shlomo for all that he has given us and all that he has taught us, and it is difficult, maybe impossible, to comprehend the depth of his suffering, his courage and his generosity.”
The director general of the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization, or UNESCO, Irina Bokova, also paid tribute. “Shlomo Venezia was an exceptional and tireless witness of this dark period of history,” she said in a statement.
“He dedicated many years of his life telling his story in Italy and throughout Europe to serve as a warning for the future. He influenced a whole generation of young people, teachers and historians, thanks to his deep loyalty to the memory of the deceased. All those who knew him were struck by his modesty and his strength of character,” she said. “His death is a call to intensify efforts for educating and transmitting the history of the Holocaust around the world.”

Thursday, August 30, 2012

POLAND HOPES TO IDENTIFY REMAINS OF AUSCHWITZ HERO


WARSAW, Poland (AP) -- It could hardly have been a riskier mission: infiltrate Auschwitz to chronicle Nazi atrocities. Witold Pilecki survived nearly three years as an inmate in the death camp, managing to smuggle out word of executions before making a daring escape. But the Polish resistance hero was crushed by the post-war communist regime - tried on trumped-up charges and executed.
Six decades on, Poland hopes Pilecki's remains will be identified among the entangled skeletons and shattered skulls of resistance fighters being excavated from a mass grave on the edge of Warsaw's Powazki Military Cemetery. The exhumations are part of a movement in the resurgent, democratic nation to officially recognize its war-time heroes and 20th century tragedies.
"He was unique in the world," said Zofia Pilecka-Optulowicz, paying tribute to her father's 1940 decision to walk straight into a Nazi street roundup with the aim of getting inside the extermination camp. "I would like to have a place where I can light a candle for him."
More than 100 skeletons, mostly of men, have been dug up this summer. On one recent day, forensic workers and archaeologists wearing blue plastic gloves and masks were carefully scraping away at the soil and piecing together bones as if working on a jigsaw puzzle. The front of one skull had been blown away by bullets; another had apparently been bludgeoned; a skeleton showed evidence of multiple gunshot wounds.
Near the pit where the bodies were dumped under cover of night stand the well-tended tombstones of the very judges and prosecutors who sent these World War II heroes to their deaths under orders from Moscow, which was fearful that the Polish patriots might use their seasoned underground skills to turn the nation against its new pro-Soviet rulers.
"The perpetrators have not been punished and the bodies of the victims have not been found," said Krzysztof Szwagrzyk, a historian in charge of the dig. "Those times will be coming back to us until we find the bodies and bury them with due honors.
"We are doing them justice."
Pilecki's son Andrzej and dozens of other relatives of victims have been swabbed in the hope their DNA will be a match for the skeletons. Initial work is being carried out to determine age, sex, height and injuries of the victims. It will take several months to determine if Pilecki, who was killed by a bullet to the back of his head, is among them. Thousands of resistance fighters were killed across Poland; the remains of up to 400 are believed to have been dumped in the Powazki mass grave.
Pilecki was 38 when Germany invaded Poland on Sept. 1, 1939, triggering the start of World War II. He helped organize a resistance campaign during which many fellow fighters were caught and sent to Auschwitz, which in the early war years served more as a camp for Polish resistance fighters than Jews. That inspired him to hatch an audacious plan: He told other resistance commanders that he wanted to become an Auschwitz inmate to check on rumors of atrocities.
Carrying documents bearing the alias Tomasz Serafinski, the Catholic cavalry officer walked into the German SS street roundup in Warsaw in September 1940, and was put on a train transport to Auschwitz, where he was given prisoner number 4859.
He was "exceptionally courageous," said Jacek Pawlowicz, a historian with Warsaw's Institute of National Remembrance.
Pilecki is the only person known to have volunteered for Auschwitz. His terse dispatches to the outside world were slips of thin paper stitched inside clothes of inmates leaving the camp or left in nearby fields for others to collect. They included only code names for inmates who were beaten to death, executed by gunfire or gassed. As sketchy as they were, they were the first eyewitness account of the Nazi death machine at Auschwitz.
Pilecki survived hard labor, beatings, cold and typhoid fever thanks to support from a clandestine resistance network that he managed to organize inside the camp. Some of its members had access to food, others to clothes or medicines.
He plotted a revolt that was to release inmates with the help of an outside attack by resistance fighters; it was never attempted because considered too risky, Pawlowicz said.
Pilecki escaped in April 1943 when he realized that the SS might uncover his work. With two other men he ran from a night shift at a bakery that was outside the death camp's barbed wire fence.
After his escape, Pilecki wrote three detailed reports on the extermination camp.
One describes how his transport was met by yelling SS men and attacking dogs: "They told one of us to run to a post away from the road, and immediately sent a machine gun round after him. Killed him. Ten random colleagues were taken out of the group and shot, as they were walking, as `collective responsibility' for the `escape' that the SS-men arranged themselves."
Pilecki's heroics were for the most part in vain. Even though his accounts of gas chambers made it all the way to Poland's government-in-exile in London and to other Western capitals, few believed what they were reading.
After escaping, Pilecki rejoined Poland's Home Army resistance force and fought in the 1944 Warsaw Uprising, the city's ill-fated revolt against the Nazis. In 1947, he was arrested by the secret security of the communist regime, imposed on Poland after the war, and falsely accused of planning to assassinate dignitaries.
The Soviet plan after World War II was to subdue the Poles by crushing resistance and erasing any sense of Polish identity or history. Today, more than two decades into Poland's democracy, however, enough documentation and funds have been gathered to restore the banned past and try to find and identify the heroes' bodies.
In addition to Pilecki, the search is on for the remains of other wartime resistance heroes, including Brig. Gen. August Emil Fieldorf, a top clandestine Home Army commander who once served as emissary to Poland of the country's government-in-exile. He was accused of ordering killings of Soviet soldiers - charges that Poland's communist authorities later admitted were fabricated - and hanged in 1953.
Szwagrzyk is not sure if Pilecki will be found at Powazki cemetery because it is not the only such clandestine site in Warsaw or the rest of Poland.
But his place in history is gradually being restored. A street in Warsaw is now named after him, as are some schools across the country.
He found communist prison harder to endure than Auschwitz. A fellow inmate described seeing him in prison slumped, unable to raise his head because his collar bones had been broken. At his show trial, he was hiding his hands because his fingernails had been ripped out during torture.
At one court session, he told his wife Maria that the secret security torture had sapped his will to go on.
"I can live no longer," he said.

Tuesday, August 21, 2012

Children of Nazis and Jewish Survivors March Together Across Poland


270 grandchildren of Nazis as well as Holocaust survivors and their children from German speaking countries, Israel, the U.S., Belarus and Poland, began a week-long march across Poland Monday, passing alongside the Nazi death camps.
The march began at Auschwitz, near Krakow, in southern Poland and will end on Friday at Treblinka, 65 miles north-east of the capital Warsaw.
MK Lia Shemtov, Knesset Deputy Speaker, will be a special guest at the final ceremonies.
Marchers will visit the sites of several death and concentration camps set up in occupied Poland, including Belzec, Majdanek, Sobibor and Chelmno.
The march was conceived by a Protestant church in Tuebingen, southern Germany, in collaboration with Polish groups.
“The idea came in our church in Tuebingen when a lot of people were looking into their family history and they found out their families were involved in Nazi crimes,” Heinz Reuss, an organizer with the church, told AFP on Monday.
“We want to speak up for Israel and against anti-Semitism, but obviously as Germans you can’t do it without looking into your own families because of their involvement,” he added. “Our first march was in 2007 in Tuebingen. There were several concentration camps around it during the war. At the end of the war there were death marches to Dachau.”
“It was our first march with Holocaust survivors.”
“Participants will march in small relay groups between several death and concentration camps installed in Poland by Nazi Germany. In this way they would like to ask for forgiveness for what their grandparents did in order to break a kind of conspiracy of silence on these acts in Germany,” Zbigniew Judasz, a local Polish organizer, told AFP.
The week-long march began with a ceremony at the Birkenau death campnear Auschwitz.
German marcher Bäerbel Pfeiffer asked for forgiveness for her grandfather, an electrician who installed the electrified barbed wire fence at Auschwitz-Birkenau and wired the camp’s gas chambers.
Waving German and Israeli flags, the marchers then began their march to Kielce, 105 miles south of Warsaw.

Monday, August 13, 2012

Israel Police Fulfill ‘Unwritten Will’ in Auschwitz - Hundreds of officers visit the infamous Auschwitz-Birkenau death camps in uniform. ‘Fulfilling our slain brothers’ last command.’


Two hundred and fifty Israel Policeofficers visited Poland in recent days to tour and learn about the Holocaust. The delegation was the largest police group to leave the country in Israel’s history.

The trip was led by Southern District Commander Yossi Pariente. “Our presence here today, on the ground of the Auschwitz-Birkenau death camp, in the uniform of the Israel Police and with the national flag, is the victory, and the unwritten final will, of ourbrothers who were murdered,” he declared.

The delegation included officers from across the country, commanders-in-training, and representatives of bereaved families.

Prior to leaving for Poland the officers visited the Yad Vashem Holocaust Memorialmuseum in Jerusalem. Yad Vashem staff accompanied them on their trip to explain the history of the sites they saw.