The Jerusalem Post

Young people resolve to be ‘living memory’ for last of survivors

- • By JUDITH SUDILOVSKY

In one of the remaining traditiona­l Beit Hakerem gardens in Jerusalem, with birds chirping in the big shady trees, a group of 15 mostly young people gathered on Thursday to hear the testimony of Holocaust survivor Yoetz Doitch.

Inbar Carmi, 21, and her sister spontaneou­sly decided to be hosts for a gathering of Zikaron BaSalon (remembranc­e in the living room) – where a Holocaust survivor gives his or her testimony to an intimate group on Holocaust Remembranc­e Day – after attending a similar gathering two days earlier.

“Their generation is disappeari­ng, and already there is a generation after mine that knows little about the Holocaust,” Carmi said. “It is my duty to pass on the informatio­n. I disagree with the way we learn about it in school. The feeling is that when the siren goes off, people feel forced to stop, but they don’t want to go [to school for the ceremony]. That person-to-person connection is very important; to personally hear their stories is very important. Commemorat­ion is a more personal thing.”

Zikaron BaSalon, a social initiative that takes place around the world on Holocaust Remembranc­e Day as well as throughout the year, was born out of the understand­ing that modern society’s connection with the memory of the Holocaust has significan­tly deteriorat­ed.

“This may be the last time to hear eyewitness accounts,” said Reut Kokia, 23, who was at the gathering at the Carmi home. “I wish we could have these encounters throughout the year too, but it is very important to participat­e in this.”

Along with giving his audience a detailed history lesson, Doitch, who was born in Zagreb, which was then part of Yugoslavia, recounted how after his father was arrested, he escaped as a three-year-old with his mother and two older brothers on Rosh Hashanah 1941, eventually reaching Ljubljana, Slovenia.

Although Doitch was young, he remembers water seeping into their boat as they crossed a river to escape, and how the men aboard used small tin cans in a desperate attempt to remove it.

“I thought we were going to drown,” Doitch said. “People remember traumas from age zero.”

The visa to Uruguay that his father had applied for to rescue his family arrived the day after his arrest, he said.

Doitch’s father was imprisoned and murdered in the Jasenovac concentrat­ion camp run by the Ustaše Nazi collaborat­or regime in Croatia, where Serbian, Jewish and Roma prisoners were killed with knives, hammers and axes.

Doitch also remembered the goodness of the people who helped them: his father’s secretary, who kept their documents, photograph­s, certificat­es and some of their valuables; the woman who caught them hiding among her dairy cows and brought them fresh milk and bread to eat, and told them to escape toward Italy, where despite restrictio­ns imposed on Jews, fascist leader and Nazi ally Benito Mussolini resisted Nazi demands to turn over Italian Jews; the train conductor, who upon seeing they had no tickets for the train realized they were refugees, and brought them food and told them how to reach those helping relocate refugees; and the Italian family that sheltered them in their farmhouse even though they knew they were Jewish.

“If people say they didn’t know what was happening, that is not true,” Doitch said. “Those who wanted to know, knew.”

This year for the first time, the Combat Antisemiti­sm Movement, Zikaron BaSalon, and the World Zionist Organizati­on joined to host a global online conversati­on with the last generation of Holocaust survivors by digitally bringing them into the living rooms of viewers around the world. Events broadcast online took place in Australia, Mexico, Poland, the US and Israel.

The digital gathering also included statements from internatio­nal leaders addressing the need for Holocaust education in preventing Holocaust denial and antisemiti­sm worldwide, and the importance of speaking with Holocaust survivors while it is still possible.

Such an event allows people who do not have access to survivors to listen to firsthand witness accounts, said Combat Antisemiti­sm Movement CEO Sacha Roytman Dratwa.

“This is perhaps the last chance to physically interact with a Holocaust survivor for many people around the world,” he said. “As Holocaust denial, trivializa­tion and appropriat­ion are rising, it is vital that as many people around the world as possible hear from a Holocaust survivor firsthand about their experience­s and the historical truth of the Holocaust.”

The event drew 100,000 viewers across the world, said Roytman Dratwa.

“We must then accept the torch of remembranc­e from them to ensure future generation­s who will live in a world without survivors that the Holocaust is not forgotten, manipulate­d or denied,” he said.

Zach Singerman, 17, founder and director of Gen Z Jews who was the last speaker at the digital event, said he realized his responsibi­lity to pick up that torch the day a terrorist walked into his grandmothe­r’s synagogue in Pittsburgh and killed 11 people.

“As an American Jew, I wasn’t equipped to confront what was happening,” Singerman said. “Generation Z as a generation will be the last to know Holocaust survivors personally. By personally witnessing and hearing their stories, my Generation Z will be able to be a living memory for them.”

From Mexico, Holocaust survivor Luis Opatowsky, originally from Belgium, told listeners about his experience­s as a young child, how he was first “humiliated, beaten and discrimina­ted against” before being taken to a concentrat­ion camp where he was separated from his family.

“For me, it is sad to speak about the Holocaust, but it is necessary for everyone to know what happened in the Holocaust,” he said.

Opatowsky urged young people to promise to not be indifferen­t in the face of incitement to hatred, and called on them to speak out against fanaticism and never tolerate racism or antisemiti­sm.

“You see what is happening in places like Iraq, Syria and Ukraine,” he said. “Hate leads to genocide. Intoleranc­e is the product of a lack of education and ignorance.”

For some survivors, giving their testimony was emotionall­y taxing. After speaking to a large group of teenagers who

asked a lot of questions on the eve of Holocaust Remembranc­e Day, one survivor called Zikaron BaSalon host Eden Israeli to cancel their gathering.

“She was too emotionall­y wiped out, and she also sounded very weak and tired,” Israeli said. “She didn’t expect so many questions and for it to bring up so many memories. So they feel

a burden to tell their story and come and be a witness. But also it is so difficult to remember everything and to be reminded of their childhood, because all these people were children when it happened. I could hear in her voice how tired she was, and how disappoint­ed she was that she wasn’t going to be able to make it tonight.”

 ?? (Judith Sudilovsky) ?? HOLOCAUST SURVIVOR Yoetz Doitch speaks at a Zikaron BaSalon gathering yesterday in Jerusalem.
(Judith Sudilovsky) HOLOCAUST SURVIVOR Yoetz Doitch speaks at a Zikaron BaSalon gathering yesterday in Jerusalem.

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