The Limited Times

Now you can see non-English news...

He was saved from several selections: the Holocaust survivor who was one of the last of the Auschwitz prisoners has passed away - voila! news

2022-12-27T20:31:56.246Z


Mordechai Papirblat died today at the age of 99. During the war, he was a prisoner in the labor camp for about 900 days and managed to escape from the death march in 1945. After he was injured in the War of Liberation, he started working at "Yediot Ahronoth" and even had the status of the front page. The book "The Carp Smuggler" he wrote was published in Israel and Germany


with the number 46794 by him.

Paperbelt (Photo: Courtesy of the family)

Mordechai Papirblat and prisoner number 46794, one of the last prisoners of the Auschwitz camp, died today (Tuesday) at the age of 99. His funeral will be held on Thursday.



Papirblat was born in 1923 in the city of Radom in Poland to a traditionalist family.

When he was 10 years old, he immigrated with his family to the capital city of Warsaw, where he attended school until moving to the city ghetto at the outbreak of World War II.

Together with his brother and sister, he managed to escape from the ghetto and reached the village where their family members lived, but their parents stayed behind and died.



Mordechai was captured on July 10, 1942 and taken to the Auschwitz labor camp, where he received prisoner number 46794. He was a prisoner and worked in hard labor for a period of about 900 days until he managed to escape from the death march at the end of January 1945. One of the few who managed to survive for such a long time in the camps .

After I found that none of my family members were alive, I illegally immigrated to Israel," Paperblatt (Photo: Courtesy of the family)

"I survived several selections," Papirblat said in his testimony, "I was employed in very difficult jobs. In January 1945, the German guards took all the camp prisoners on a death march towards Germany. About a week later, on the verge of exhaustion, I managed to escape. I wandered for two weeks on the way back to Poland, to my hometown Radom. After not finding any of my family members alive there, I joined a group of war survivors and by illegal immigration we arrived in Palestine, in January 1946."



In Israel he was hired as an apprentice at a printing house.

When the War of Liberation broke out, as a member of the Haganah, he was recruited to the Givati ​​Brigade and was wounded in one of the operations in the south of the country.

After a long recovery, he moved to work at "Yediot Ahronoth" and over time, reached the senior rank of the permanent position of the front page of the newspaper that was common in the country at the time.



In 1954 he married Sima and they had two sons, three grandchildren and four great-grandchildren.

In recent years, Papirbalt used to tell, mainly to teenagers, about his survival journey, which he also recorded in the book "The Carp Smuggler".

His book was later also translated into German and distributed for sale in Germany.

  • news

  • News in Israel

  • Events in Israel

Tags

  • holocaust

  • Holocaust survivors

  • Auschwitz

Source: walla

All news articles on 2022-12-27

You may like

Trends 24h

Latest

© Communities 2019 - Privacy

The information on this site is from external sources that are not under our control.
The inclusion of any links does not necessarily imply a recommendation or endorse the views expressed within them.