After 80 years, not many Auschwitz survivors are left. One man makes
telling the stories his mission
Send a link to a friend
[January 24, 2025]
By MELANIE LIDMAN
HAIFA, Israel (AP) — Naftali Fürst will never forget his first view of
the Auschwitz-Birkenau concentration camp, on Nov. 3, 1944. He was 12
years old.
SS soldiers threw open the doors of the cattle car, where he was crammed
in with his mother, father, brother, and more than 80 others. He
remembers the tall chimneys of the crematoria, flames roaring from the
top.
There were dogs and officers yelling in German “get out, get out!”
forcing people to jump onto the infamous ramp where Nazi doctor Josef
Mengele separated children from parents.
Fürst, now 92, is one of a dwindling number of Holocaust survivors able
to share first-person accounts of the horrors they endured, as the world
marks the 80th anniversary of the liberation of the Nazis’ most
notorious death camp. Fürst is returning to Auschwitz for the annual
occasion, his fourth trip to the camp.
Each time he returns, he thinks of those first moments there.
“We knew we were going to certain death,” he said from his home in
Haifa, northern Israel, earlier this month. “In Slovakia, we knew that
people who went to Poland didn’t return.”
Strokes of luck
Fürst and his family arrived at the entrance to Auschwitz on Nov. 3,
1943 – one day after Nazi leader Heinrich Himmler ordered the cessation
of the use of the gas chambers ahead of their demolition, as the Soviet
troops neared. The order meant that his family wasn’t immediately
killed. It was one of many small bits of luck and coincidences that
allowed Fürst to survive.
“For 60 years, I didn’t talk about the Holocaust, for 60 years I didn’t
speak a word of German even though it’s my mother tongue,” said Fürst.
In 2005, he was invited to attend the ceremony to mark the 60th
anniversary of the liberation of Buchenwald, where he was liberated on
April 11, 1944, after being moved there from Auschwitz. He realized
there were fewer and fewer Holocaust survivors who could give
first-person accounts, and decided to throw himself into memorial work.
This will be his fourth trip to a ceremony at Auschwitz, having also met
Pope Francis there in 2016.
Some 6 million European Jews were killed by the Nazis during the
Holocaust — the mass murder of Jews and other groups before and during
World War II. Soviet Red Army troops liberated Auschwitz-Birkenau on
Jan. 27, 1945, and the day has become known as International Holocaust
Remembrance Day. An estimated 1.1 million people, mostly Jews, were
killed in Auschwitz-Birkenau.
Just 220,000 Holocaust survivors are still alive, according to the
Conference on Jewish Material Claims Against Germany, and more than 20
percent are over 90.
A meeting place after the war
Fürst, originally from Bratislava, then part of Czechoslovakia, was just
6 when the Nazis first started implementing measures against the
country’s Jews.
He spent ages 9 to 12 in four different concentration camps, including
Auschwitz. His parents had planned to jump off of the cattle car on the
way to the camp, but people were packed so tightly they couldn’t reach
the doors.
His father instructed the entire family, no matter what, to meet at 11
Šulekova Street in Bratislava after the war. Fürst and his brother were
separated from their mother. After numbers were tattooed on their arms,
they also were taken from their father. They lived in Block 29, without
many other children. As the Soviet army closed in on the area, so close
they could hear the booms from the tanks, Fürst and his brother, Shmuel,
were forced to join a dangerous journey toward Buchenwald, marching for
three days in the cold and snow. Anyone who lagged behind was shot.
“We had to prove our desire to live, to do another step and another step
and keep going,” he said. Many people gave up, longing to end the hunger
and thirst and cold, and just sat down, where they were shot by the
guards.
[to top of second column]
|
Holocaust survivor Naftali Fürst pauses during an interview at home
in Haifa, Israel, Tuesday, Jan. 14, 2025. (AP Photo/Maya Alleruzzo)
“We had this command from my father: ‘You must adapt and survive, and
even if you’re suffering, you must come back,’” Fürst recalled.
Fürst and his brother survived the march, and an open-car train ride in
the snow, but they were separated at the next camp. When Fürst was
liberated from Buchenwald, captured in a famous photo that included
Nobel laureate Elie Wiesel in the bunkbeds, he was sure he was alone in
the world.
But within months, just as Fürst's father had instructed, the four
family members reunited at the address they memorized, the home of
family friends. The rest of their family – grandparents, aunts, uncles,
were all killed. His family later moved to Israel, where he married, had
a daughter, four grandchildren, and three great-grandchildren, with
another on the way.
‘We couldn’t imagine this tragedy'
On Oct. 7, 2023, Fürst awoke to the Hamas attack on southern Israel, and
immediately thought of his granddaughter, Mika Peleg, and her husband,
and their 2-year-old son, who live in Kfar Aza, a kibbutz on the border
with Gaza where scores of people were killed or kidnapped.
No one in the family could get in touch with the family.
“It just kept getting worse all day, we couldn’t get any information
what was happening with them,” said Fürst. “We saw the horrors, that we
couldn’t imagine this type of horror is happening in 2023, 80 years
after the Holocaust.”
Toward midnight on Oct. 7, Peleg’s neighbors sent word that the family
had survived. They spent almost 20 hours locked inside their safe room
with no food or ability to communicate. Her husband’s parents, who both
lived on Kfar Aza, were killed.
Despite his close connection, comparisons between Oct. 7 and the
Holocaust make Fürst uncomfortable.
“It’s awful and terrible and a catastrophe, and hard to describe, but
it’s not a Holocaust,” he said. As awful as the Hamas attack was for his
granddaughter and others, the Holocaust was a multi-year “death
industry” with massive infrastructure and camps that could kill 10,000
people a day for months at a time, he said.
Fürst, who was previously involved in coexistence work between Jews and
Arabs, said his heart also goes out to Palestinians in Gaza, although he
believes Israel needed to respond militarily. “I feel the pain of
everyone who is suffering, everywhere in the world, because I think I
know what suffering is,” he said.
Fürst knows that he is one of very few Holocaust survivors still able to
travel to Auschwitz, so it’s important for him to be present there to
mark the 80th anniversary.
These days, he is telling his story as many times as he can, taking part
in documentaries and movies, serving as the president of the Buchenwald
Prisoner’s Association and working to create a memorial statue at the
Sered' concentration camp in Slovakia.
He feels a responsibility to be the mouthpiece for the millions who were
killed, and people can relate to the story of a single person more than
the hard numbers of 6 million deaths, he said.
“Whenever I finish, I tell the youth, the fact that you were able to see
living testimony (from a Holocaust survivor) puts a requirement on you
more than someone who did not: you take it on your shoulders the
obligation to continue to tell this.”
All contents © copyright 2025 Associated Press. All rights reserved |