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Loti (Nomi) Lang née Zeller was
born in 1933 in Sarajevo, to a family of three children. In 1941,
following the German shelling of the city and rumors of an imminent
German invasion, Loti’s father paid a Muslim acquaintance to take
8-year-old Loti and her 12-year-old brother Miko to his parents’
home in the village. Loti remembers leaving her mother crying at the
train station while her father ran frantically buying fruit to shove
through the train-car window. That was the last time she saw her
parents and eldest brother.
Mid-way through the journey, the family
acquaintance let the children off the train and disappeared. Alone,
the children agreed to look for their grandparents when daylight
broke. Yet to their bitter disappointment, when they finally found
the village their grandmother turned them away, sending Miko to a
nearby village to shepherd and Loti to a monastery to be cared for
by nuns.
After three months Loti was sent back to
the village where she wandered around offering shepherding and
sock-mending services for food and board. She maintained contact
with Miko, sometimes meeting him in the fields. One day Miko
announced he was joining the partisans: “When the war is over, I
will come back for you. If I do not return—it means I did not
succeed.” Despite being left alone, Loti was a strong girl, and
under her leadership the village children collected ammunition from
a German guard’s post for the partisans.
In 1944, a letter affixed to a photo of
Miko was thrown at Loti from a passing truck. In the letter, Miko
promised to arrive in two weeks—a promise he kept.
At the war’s end Loti was sent to a
Belgrade orphanage and Miko to a dormitory for orphaned students in
Breno, Czechoslovakia, to learn a profession. On one of Miko’s
visits, he told Loti that their parents had perished and that their
older brother’s fate remained unknown.
At 13, Loti returned to Sarajevo and
from there continued on to her grandparents’ village. Her
grandmother had died but her grandfather welcomed her warmly.
Three years later, in 1948, Miko, Loti, the siblings’
grandfather, his daughter, and Erwin Lang—who had been with Loti in
the orphanage and later married her—illegally immigrated to
Palestine. Loti and Erwin joined Kibbutz Mishmar Ha’Emek and Miko
went to Sha’ar HaAmakim. Following her army service at the nursing
school in Tel Hashomer, she dedicated herself to the profession for
some 40 years. Erwin and Loti have two daughters and five
grandchildren. Miko died five years ago.
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