Scottish Daily Mail

Grief, pain and a daring escape — by the last survivor of Treblinka

- CHRISTOPHE­R STEVENS

Tears are the stock in trade of every family history show. We’d feel cheated by Who Do You Think You are? or The repair shop if someone didn’t have a little weep over memories of a dearly loved grandma.

But the grief that poured out came from much deeper, more bitter wells in the second part of robert rinder’s pilgrimage to the site of the Nazi exterminat­ion camp where his mother’s relatives were slaughtere­d, in My Family, The Holocaust & Me (BBC1).

rinder and his mother, angela, travelled to the memorial ground where the gas chambers stood in Treblinka in eastern Poland. Their distress, as they learned how new arrivals were stripped and killed in t his human abattoir, was gut-wrenching.

By the end, angela could barely stand. It was plain to see why her son had always felt too protective of her feelings to ask how her family were murdered. ‘ This is so much more painful than I thought it was going to be,’ she whispered. ‘It’s so sad, rob, it’s so sad.’

The sorrow of Leon rytz, at 92 the last living survivor of Treblinka, was of a different sort — caused not by shock and anger, but by overwhelmi­ng pain. ‘My family is here,’ he said, his voice breaking.

‘My sisters, my brother, everybody.’ He covered his face with his hands and shook, as angela held him. ‘Life is very difficult.’

Leon was 15 when he was brought to the camp, where a friend of his father recognised him and dragged him to one side — away from the queue trooping to the death chamber. He was made to sort the clothes and valuables of the dead for the Nazi guards.

The documentar­y did not press Leon for details of his escape, perhaps because the old man was too frail and emotional.

This was his f i rst return to Treblinka in 75 years.

Three years ago, he told the Times Of Israel how his father’s friend, Jozef Kaufman, strangled a guard and took his bayonet, before with reckless daring they concealed themselves in a railway carriage leaving the camp.

Using the bayonet, as the train sped across occupied Polish territory, they prised open the wagon door and leapt into the darkness. Leon and Jozef survived, but a third man was killed by the fall.

seeing that every trace of the camp was gone, except some track and the stones that stand as memorials to the dead, seemed to help him.

‘I am not angry,’ he told rinder. ‘You must see in the future, much better, and hope we never, never be like this again.’

any such profound sense of history was entirely absent from much of Omid Djalili’s new daytime quiz show, Winning Combinatio­n (ITV). It’s strange to see a contestant stare at a board with names of 20thcentur­y British Prime Ministers and admit she has never heard of Clement attlee, Harold Macmillan and others.

This is comedian Omid’s first stab at a gameshow, and he was relying heavily on scripted quips. One contestant revealed she used to work as a ‘trolley dolly’ or air hostess, and had served actors rowan atkinson and John Malkovich. ‘I didn’t know they went on holiday together,’ Omid shot back.

But he was too quick to give hints. Trying to pick his answer in a film category, a player called spencer mused: ‘I t hi nk spielberg directed e.T.’

‘Gotta be!’ replied the quizmaster, and spencer didn’t need any second bidding. He answered ‘e.T.’ and won the point.

How the rules work is still anyone’s guess. This format is fast, but it needs work.

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