Antelope Valley Press

Dushman, who helped liberate Auschwitz, dies at 98

- BY MELISSA EDDY The New York Times Company

BERLIN — David Dushman, who as a soldier for the Soviet Union drove his tank through the electric fence surroundin­g the Nazi death camp at Auschwitz on Jan. 27, 1945, and is believed to have been the last surviving liberator of the camp, died in Munich on Saturday. He was 98.

Dushman’s death was confirmed in a statement Sunday by the Munich Jewish community organizati­on. No cause of death was given.

“Every witness to history who leaves us is a loss, but parting with David Dushman is particular­ly painful,” organizati­on President Charlotte Knobloch said in the statement.

Dushman was a 21-year-old Red Army soldier when he drove his T-34 into the high, electric barbed-wire fence surroundin­g the Auschwitz death camp in Nazi-occupied Poland.

Approachin­g the camp, he recalled peering through the viewing slit of his tank and, even after years of bloody fighting, being shocked by what he witnessed.

“Everywhere there were skeletons. They stumbled from the barracks, sat and lay among the dead,” he told the German newspaper Süddeutsch­e Zeitung in 2015.

By the time Dushman reached Auschwitz, he had already survived two of the war’s bloodiest battles on the eastern front, at Stalingrad and Kursk. By war’s end, he had been wounded three times. He said he was one of only 69 men from the 12,000 in his division to survive.

It was only after the war, however, that he began to comprehend what he had witnessed at the death camp.

More than 1.1 million men, women and children were murdered in the camp, which was set up in 1940 in the suburbs of Oswiecim, a Polish town that was annexed by the Nazis. More than 6 million Jews were murdered in the Holocaust.

A Russian Jew, Dushman and his family were familiar with anti-Semitism and state-sanctioned discrimina­tion against Jews in the Soviet Union.

Dushman’s birth certificat­e said he was born in Minsk on April 1, 1923, but he maintained that his true place of birth was the Polish port city of Danzig, now Gdansk. He said his mother, Bonislava, changed the location for political reasons.

His father, Alexander, a doctor in the Soviet military and hero of the Revolution, fell out of favor with Josef Stalin, the Soviet leader, and was banished in 1938 to a gulag in Siberia. He died there in 1949.

After the war, Dushman studied medicine in Moscow, out of love for his mother, a pediatrici­an who wanted her son to carry on the family’s tradition of doctoring.

But his passion was fencing, and after his studies, Dushman dedicated himself to the sport.

He became the top-ranked fencer in the Soviet Union in 1951 and went on to become a coach at the elite Spartak Moscow sports club from 1952 to 1988.

He was married to his wife, Zoja, for 60 years, and since the couple never had children, he said he came to consider the young people he coached as family.

Dushman’s wife died in 2011 at their home in Munich, where they had emigrated in 1996. No informatio­n on survivors was immediatel­y available.

At the 1972 Munich Olympics, his team won two golds, two silvers and three bronze medals. But the victories were overshadow­ed by the attack on the Israeli team, who were housed across from the Soviets in the Olympic Village.

“We heard shots and the buzz of helicopter­s above us,” he later recalled. “We and all of the other athletes were outraged.”

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