Kuwait Times

They survived the Holocaust. Must they go back into hiding?

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NEW YORK: They survived the Europe of the Holocaust. But a recent rise in anti-Semitic acts in the United States has rekindled old fears: Should they again go into hiding, or should they instead reach out to share their experience­s? Nearly all of them were children or adolescent­s in the early 1940s. They remember having their youth stolen from them — by fear, by desperate flight, by separation from relatives, and in some cases by the Nazi death camps. If there was one country where they felt they were safe, it was the United States, where many of them have now lived for decades.

They have, to be sure, heard the occasional antiSemiti­c slight or perhaps seen a swastika daubed on a wall, but still they felt safe - an all-important word for them. Now, however, these survivors - several of whom came together in the Oheb Shalom synagogue in an affluent New Jersey suburb to celebrate Hanukkah and to mark Internatio­nal Holocaust Survivors Night are deeply worried: Anti-Semitic acts in the US soared last year by 37 percent, according to FBI statistics.

The October 27 slaughter at a synagogue in Pittsburgh, where a white nationalis­t has been charged with gunning down 11 mostly elderly Jews as they worshiped, greatly heightened those fears. “A crazy man listened to Trump,” said David Lefkovic, 89, referring to the Pittsburgh shooter. As an adolescent in southweste­rn France during World War II, he was saved only by his blond hair from being snatched up in a roundup of Jews. Trump “calls anybody that he doesn’t like ‘weak’ — that’s exactly Nazi language,” said Adela Dubovy, who, as a 6-year-old, survived the notorious Theresiens­tadt concentrat­ion camp. “You’re weak, you’re to be destroyed.”

‘It can happen again’

“Before, they were hiding,” Lefkovic said of America’s anti-Semites. “It’s now out in the open that it’s okay to pick on the Jews all over again,” said Hanna Keselman, who was born in Germany in 1930 and spent much of the war in France and Italy.

The anti-Semites “are very strong, even in colleges,” said Roman Kent, who survived life in camps including Auschwitz. “They should have people that are more intelligen­t.” In recent weeks, anti-Semitic acts have taken place on the campuses of some of America’s most prestigiou­s universiti­es, including Columbia and Cornell in New York state and Duke in North Carolina. Of the Pittsburgh massacre, said Kent, who took part in negotiatio­ns with Germany over compensati­on to be paid to Jews, “I’m afraid that it can happen again, and it will happen again.”

‘I don’t want to live that way’

Adela Dubovy said she has four grandchild­ren at various universiti­es. She said she lives in a retirement home — a “bubble” that insulates her to some extent. But she admits to being “scared.” “Now I don’t wear my Star of David. I tell my grandkids: Don’t wear your kippah (yarmulke) in the street - you don’t want to be attacked.” “I understand” the urge to be discreet, said Keselman, “but I would not tell my grandchild­ren that.” “I don’t want to live that way anymore... I did it. Enough of that.”

When she traveled back to Italy, where her father was arrested and then killed, “I purposely wore a Jewish Star of David. I felt, ‘This is me back, and I feel safe here.’” Today, said the soft-spoken 88-year-old, “I want to live free and open with everyone.” Keselman, a painter, is not fond of public speaking but she forces herself to meet with young people to keep alive the haunting memories that some people feel will be lost forever when the final survivors die. Roman Kent says he regrets that too few members of younger Jewish generation­s have picked up the torch. “If they would, then there would not be 60 or 70 percent that don’t know the word Holocaust,” he said.

 ?? —AFP ?? WASHINGTON: US President Donald Trump speaks during a Hanukkah reception with Holocaust survivors in the East Room of the White House.
—AFP WASHINGTON: US President Donald Trump speaks during a Hanukkah reception with Holocaust survivors in the East Room of the White House.

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