Chicago Sun-Times

Last survivor of Rome Jews deported to Nazi death camps

- BY FRANCES D’EMILIO

ROME — Piero Terracina, described as the last survivor among the Roman Jews who were deported from the Italian capital to Nazi death camps during World War II, has died at 91.

Mr. Terracina died on Sunday, Rome’s Jewish Community said.

As a 15-year-old, he escaped the roundup by German occupying troops of Rome’s Jews in 1943 and went into hiding with his family. But a few months later, as his family marked Passover in April 1944, he was arrested and deported to the Auschwitz-Birkenau Nazi death camps with his family, where his parents, three siblings and other relatives perished.

Mr. Terracina’s recounting of the horrors of the Holocaust to young people won praise from Italian leaders. In addition to speaking at forums, he accompanie­d Italian students to the Auschwitz memorial in Poland to educate them about the Holocaust.

President Sergio Mattarella hailed Mr. Terracina as a “tireless witness to the memory of the Holocaust.”

Noemi Di Segni, president of the Union of Italian Jewish Communitie­s, hailed Mr. Terracina as a “true light in these dark times,” which she described as being marked by words of hate and denial of the Holocaust.

On Jan. 19, 1945, Mr. Terracina was forced to march, along with other remaining prisoners at the Birkenau camp, by Nazi officers. But during the march, the German troops fled to escape approachin­g Russian soldiers.

Mr. Terracina recalled how he and other freezing companions then sought refuge in the abandoned Auschwitz death camp.

“The cold was terrible and the miserable blanket that we had froze at our mouth, becoming a block of ice,” La Repubblica quoted him as saying.

On Jan. 27, 1945, he and other survivors were freed by Soviet troops.

Even before many Italian Jews were hauled off to death camps by Nazi occupiers, the country’s small Jewish population was already suffering under Fascist leader Benito Mussolini, whose regime, in 1938, enacted anti-Jewish laws. Among other things, the laws banned Jews from holding public positions, including teaching, and forced Jewishowne­d stores to put signs in their windows identifyin­g them as such.

Jewish students in public schools, including Mr. Terracina, were expelled. He continued his studies at a Jewish school.

 ?? ALESSANDRA TARANTINO/AP ?? Piero Terracina (right) and fellow Holocaust survivor Sami Modiano (left) with Rome’s mayor, Virginia Raggi (second from left), mark Internatio­nal Holocaust Remembranc­e Day in Rome in 2017.
ALESSANDRA TARANTINO/AP Piero Terracina (right) and fellow Holocaust survivor Sami Modiano (left) with Rome’s mayor, Virginia Raggi (second from left), mark Internatio­nal Holocaust Remembranc­e Day in Rome in 2017.

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