Saturday, January 26, 2008

Survivors of the Holocaust: Fanya and Misha

MISHA AND HIS MOTHER WHO HOLDS PHOTO OF HER DEAD HUSBAND, A DECORATED WAR HERO

Their friends – a blind old woman Fanya with her unique son Misha. Misha is a middle-aged man who, as he puts it himself, is unmovable; his life is only his job and his mother, who cannot stay alone. Misha dresses and washes her, gives her medicine in time and cooks for her, does shopping and laundry and alongside with this remains cheerful, ironical, amiable and extremely hospitable.

Here I also always stay long, and raise a toast with him to his mother’s health. Misha gives his mother expensive pills which he buys for full price not waiting for any preferential prescriptions, he spends all possible money to make his mother’s sufferings less.

Why cannot this man hire a nurse to stay with his blind mother while he is away so as not to worry all the time that she will fall or kick herself on the way to the bathroom? Because his salary and her pension are enough only to survive through their everyday difficulties.

CLICK HERE TO HELP FANYA AND MISHA

Survivors of the Holocaust: Meir and Galina

MEIR Shub., Lithuania

Born in 1924, Meir S. studied at the Yiddish-speaking Shalom Aleichem school in Kovna, Lithuania, graduating just two days before the start of the war. He managed to flee to Russia ahead of the advancing German Army. After the war, Shub earned a doctorate and taught philosophy. In the 1980s, he wrote to people in the West requesting Jewish history books, devouring works by Dubnow, Graetz, Zinberg and others. Then, in 1991, with Soviet tanks ensconced in Vilnius, he bravely began building the Jewish Studies Department at Vilnius University. Later he became a founding faculty member of the Vilnius Yiddish Institute.

Now, retired, very ill and almost totally deaf, Shub, 83, needs medications that cost many times what he receives as a pension. His wife, Katya, is also sick.

During World War II, Shub fought bravely in the Russian Army's 16th Lithuanian Division, also called the "Jewish Division." He was severely wounded, but he managed to reach Berlin, where in victory he carved on the Reichstag wall, "And here in Berlin am I Meir Shub the Jew from Lithuania."

CLICK TO HELP MEIR

Photo: MEIR HOLDS PHOTO OF HIS MOTHER, MURDERED BY THE NAZIS.



GALINA, BELARUS

She was 3 months old in 1922 when a pogrom broke out in her Belarusian village. As a band of anti-Semitic thugs stormed her family's home, her mother quickly stashed her under a bed. When the intruders entered the room, cutting up the feather pillows with bayonets, her mother prayed that
her baby wouldn't cry. Miraculously, the entire family survived. And so her mother renamed her “Chai”, meaning “Life.”

During World War II, Galina served as one of the Russian army's first women aerial gunners and as a bombardier mechanic, working on American planes delivered to Russia during Roosevelt’s Lend Lease policy.


Now in her late 80s, she's confined to a wheelchair, her legs mangled and twisted, disabled with multiple ailments, she rarely leaves her apartment because she can't navigate the staircase.

Despite her infirmities, she cared for her bedridden husband who had suffered a stroke -- feeding, washing and repositioning him; changing his linens; and reading to him from Jewish newspapers -- for the last 13 years, with no outside help. She is ill herself, yet she cried to God to stay alive so she could continue tending to him.

When The Survivor Mitzvah Project sent her $300 and she was able to buy a washing machine, her life improved; she was no longer exhausted from washing all her husband's clothing and soiled bed sheets by hand.

And when he died last August, after languishing in a coma from a second stroke – (a period of time that found Galina praying that she herself would die, because she no longer had the strength to lift him and take care of him) The Survivor Mitzvah Project sent another $600, enough to pay for her medications and his burial and tombstone.

Now Galina has a renewed sense of hope for her future -- for the chance to relax and to read and memorize her beloved poems about Victory Day -- "I didn't think I could survive it, but now I want to live a little," she said.

CLICK HERE TO HELP GALINA

Who Are These People?

Mera A., Lithuania.

Mera A., 88, is one of only six Jews still residing in the small Lithuanian village of Mariampol and the only one who was raised there. She lives with her severely retarded adult daughter, who receives no social service assistance. Her husband died of liver cancer in 1992. Mera suffers from lung and heart problems and walks unsteadily, rarely venturing outside.

Teenage hooligans frequently target Mera and her family in anti-Semitic attacks. They destroyed the front door of her first-floor apartment.

When Mera was 8, her mother died. At the start of World War II, her brothers were immediately shot by the Lithuanian Death Head squads. Mera escaped by running into Russia. The Jews who didn't escape, 8,000 in total, were massacred and thrown into one mass grave. Mera wrote, "Those who did not save themselves were all shot. Everybody was undressed, naked, and shot. Then the hole was covered with lime. And were all put in one grave. All together, children, men, women and elders. Those who witnessed this told us that after that, for three days, the earth in this grave was raising up and down and there was moaning coming out of the grave.”

Mera desperately needs money for food, heat and medications.

"We wait for the winter with horror," she said.
CLICK HERE TO HELP MERA SURVIVE


BASYA K., BELARUS

A tiny woman who’s family was decimated by the Nazis, Basya worked tirelessly for over 40 years in a plywood factory, doing manual labor that men twice the size could not keep up with. She lives with her older sister, Fanya, who is going blind, and has no money for a needed eye operation. Basya has severe problems with her legs, and still she must climb up and down the stairs of their 6th floor walk-up to bring in food and necessities in order to keep her and her sister alive. Her true love was shot during the opening days of the war and she never married. The letters the sisters have received from The Survivor Mitzvah Project are the only letters they have ever received in their lives. They watch their mailbox daily and write, “we cry because you love us so much.”

CLICK here to help Basya and her sister survive, bringing them medical aid, and food.
Photo: BASYA HOLDS A PHOTOGRAPH OF HERSELF FROM BEFORE THE WAR



Malka R., Belarus

Born in 1910, she suffered the horrors of the first World War, the famines that followed, the rise of Nazism, The Holocaust (where her father was shot because he refused to undress and submit to the Nazis dehumanization), Stalinism, and the deaths of her children, whom she has long outlived. Now bedridden and cared for by the sister of her dead son’s long dead wife, Malka needs medications and help.


CLICK here to help Malka survive.



Yudel R., Lithuania

Yudel is a large man; still well over six feet tall. in his late 80s. When I visited him in September 2007, as I walked in the door he said, “How long can you spend with me because I have a lot to tell you.” (All this was in Lithuanian, Russian and a bit of Yiddish so I had a friend who translated for me). He was a teenager when the war started. He lived in a small town and every single Jewish person in the town including all of his brothers, sisters, their children, his grandparents, mother - his entire family was murdered by the Lithuanian collaborators. They were all rounded up and shot. He managed to run into the woods and save himself.

Photo Above: YUDEL , A DECORATED WAR HERO, WITH MEDALS HE RECEIVED DURING THE WAR

He eventually joined the Partisans and then the Russian Army.

YUDEL’S SISTER BELLA WHO WAS MURDERED BY THE LITHUANIANS ALONG WITH HER YOUNG CHILDREN.
YUDEL’S BROTHERS MENACHEM, DOVYD & BENJAMIN – ALL MURDERED BY THE LITHUANIANS
When the war ended Yudel came back to Lithuania and wanted to take revenge on the murderers of his family. (Because they were all killed by local Lithuanians, neighbors, he knew exactly who killed everybody in his town). His friend cautioned him not to take revenge saying that since Lithuania was now in the Russian zone, the KGB would find him and he would be executed. His friend told him, “You’re a smart guy, figure out another way.” So Yudel made a list of all the murderers – using his own knowledge, other eyewitnesses and even Gestapo records. He dressed himself up as a KGB man, in a suit, with a broken starter pistol from track and field sticking out of his pocket. He then went door to door – to each house of the murderers who were now all back home with their families living normal lives. -He informed each one that the KGB knew exactly what they did and they were to write a confession of their crimes, and if they left out even the smallest detail, they would be executed or sent to Siberia. Each and every one gave him a full confession.

His plan was to turn the information over to the authorities so that the murderers would be punished for their war crimes. But at the same time, the United States State Department, was allowing all of the murderers to leave Lithuania and enter the US. Their reasoning was that since the Lithuanians and the Russians were enemies, the Russians would kill the Lithuanians if they were not allowed to immigrate. Although it was nearly impossible for the victims (Jews) to enter the US, these Naziz, Fascists and collaborators were welcomed and became US citizens. So Yudel knew he was running out of time, and there would be no justice. So he started writing anonymous letters, hundreds of them, to the families of the murderers. They all started with “I know what you did” and went on to list all of the atrocities they committed, in detail, taken from their own words. In one situation the letter came to a home and the teenage daughter opened it. She was horrified and went to her father, brandishing the letter, asking him if it was true. The father looked at her and said, “Have I been a good father?”. The daughter replied, “Yes”. The father then went into his study and hung himself.

The daughter then went to the police explaining that her father received this letter and then he killed himself. Shortly, a “real” KGB agent knocked on Yudel’s door. But, as luck would have it, the KGB agent was someone Yudel know from his brigade, someone with whom he had shared a foxhole. The agent asked Yudel if he wrote an anonymous letter. When Yudel answered that he had carefully written hundreds including that one, the KGB agent said, “Yudel, two things. One, be very careful. Two, thank you very much. You have saved us a lot of work, a long trial and an execution. Keep up the good work.”

In the 1980s, Yudel smuggled the list of murderers out of Lithuania and brought t to the US. The US State Department did nothing in prosecuting these murderers who were now US citizens. Then, when Lithuania got its independence in 1991, the Lithuanian government would do nothing as now these same men, the ones who managed to still be living in Lithuania, had fought for independence and were now considered war heroes!

As I was leaving Yudels’s apartment, knowing that he is dying of cancer and wondering about his list, I asked him where the list was. He took me to his room, and in the corner of a small cupboard in a paper bag was a little book, Yudel’s list of hundreds of names in alphabetical order, each one a mass murderer.

PAGES FROM YUDEL’S LIST
It was obvious that when he passes away his room will be cleared out and the book most likely thrown away. I asked him if I could photograph it. Yudel graciously allowed The Survivor Mitzvah Project to photograph every single page.

CLICK Here TO help Yudel.