The Jerusalem Post

The success story of the Holocaust survivors in Israel

- COMMENT • By AVI DICKSTEIN Avi Dickstein is a board member of March of the Living and chairman of the Yom Ha’atzma’ut event.

Today is Memorial Day for Israel’s fallen soldiers. March of the Living alumni, together with the entire Jewish people, bow their heads and honor the memory of 23,928 IDF casualties who fell in the battles of Israel. May their memories be for a blessing.

Among those who fell in the War of Independen­ce was Amnon Zilberspit­z, a Holocaust survivor from Hungary who immigrated to Israel, settled in Kibbutz Dorot, enlisted in the Givati Brigade, and was killed in the battles of Beit Guvrin by an Egyptian sniper.

Half a million Holocaust survivors survived the inferno and were gathered in the DP camps in post-Holocaust Europe, waiting to begin new lives overseas or in the Land of Israel. From this number, 360,000 immigrated to Israel, most of whom had not belonged to any Zionist organizati­on before their immigratio­n. After surviving the Nazi torture, they settled in Israel and immediatel­y joined the national mission to build the Jewish state.

The Sabras and even some of the leaders of the Yishuv acted coolly towards them in the early years after their immigratio­n. Despite the negative way they had been treated, those same survivors joined in the War of Independen­ce with all their energy and numbered almost half of the fighting force in the war.

Holocaust survivors fought in the War of Independen­ce on every front – in the breakthrou­gh to Jerusalem, in the Negev, in the liberation of the Galilee, and as Shaike Gavish, later commander of the Southern Command, said: “Without the Holocaust survivors, we would have been defeated.” More than one-third of the dead in the War of Independen­ce were Holocaust survivors.

In Natan Alterman’s “The Silver Platter,” a classic of Hebrew poetry recited at Remembranc­e Day ceremonies in the early years of the state, the place of Holocaust survivors was absent. Alterman wrote sympatheti­cally about Holocaust survivors in later works.

Without any institutio­nal and organizati­onal representa­tive assisting in their absorption, the survivors began to integrate into Israeli society like a phoenix rising from the ashes. In 1949, the survivors establishe­d 45 settlement­s throughout the country, doubled the population of the kibbutz and the moshavim movements, and began to integrate into the activities of the young state.

Their influence in the legislativ­e process led to the Yad Vashem Law, the Holocaust Remembranc­e Day Law, and the Nazi Victims Law. Many of them joined the legal system as judges, and even as the president of the Supreme Court.

Some 1,350 Holocaust survivor physicians joined the country’s fledgling medical system and made up more than a third of the medical system, primarily in the periphery. Many of them joined the security forces and the IDF, reaching high rank and receiving numerous awards. Holocaust survivors integrated into academia and research, and many of them became outstandin­g researcher­s and even won the Israel Prize. In science, the Nobel Prize in Chemistry was awarded to Holocaust survivors. In hi-tech, a Holocaust survivor founded Intel, which employs 14,000 people in Israel. In art, literature, theater, cinema and media, survivors have stood out. Even in politics, Holocaust survivors excelled, becoming mayors, Knesset members and ministers.

Until the Eichmann trial in 1961, there was little public recognitio­n of Holocaust survivors, and many were silent. “The Eichmann trial straighten­ed the backs of Holocaust survivors,” Mickey Goldman said this week, rightly so. Sixty years after the trial, the Israeli public has begun to change its attitude toward survivors. The public started to study their experience­s and their suffering, beginning a process of learning and sympathy, but there is still a way to go.

The media occasional­ly points out the poverty of Holocaust survivors. Indeed, it is our duty to take care of them. However, most of the Holocaust survivors who have joined the society do not seek assistance. On the contrary – they are the ones who help build the country in all walks of life. There are more than a million children of Holocaust survivors, active in hi-tech, science, academia, building communitie­s, business, economics and law.

No Western country recognizes the phenomenon of immigratio­n and integratio­n into the country’s life like that of the Holocaust survivors in this country. Holocaust survivors establishe­d their homes on their own, without any assistance from any institutio­nal body.

As the number of Holocaust survivors naturally decreases, and with the abundance of recent research and essays on their contributi­on to the building of the state, we must continue the process of appreciati­on in public discourse to express gratitude for their contributi­ons.

The March of the Living, whose purpose is to carry the torch of remembranc­e and perpetuate the legacy of the Holocaust and the rebirth, has always cultivated continuous contact with Holocaust survivors around the world. Holocaust survivors have guided and led educationa­l visits to Poland, and youth continue to connect with them after their visits.

It is incumbent upon each of us to continue the process of recognitio­n and appreciati­on. We thank the Holocaust survivors for their significan­t contributi­on to the building of the Land of Israel and for the support of the many Holocaust survivors overseas in strengthen­ing the State of Israel and strengthen­ing Jewish education.

The survivors chose to live purposeful­ly. They chose life. They chose to build up our state and people. Let us never forget their legacy and our duty to carry it forward from generation to generation.

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