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Ovadia Baruch was born in Salonika in
1922 to a family of eight children. They lived in the Jewish
neighborhood of Baron Hirsch, and he and his sisters studied at a
Hebrew school.
In June 1942 Hitler’s racial laws were
applied to the Greek Jews and their neighborhood became a ghetto. On
15 March 1943, the ghetto residents were ordered to buy one-way
train tickets to an unknown destination, and the following morning
they were loaded onto cattle cars, 100 per compartment, without
food, water, or amenities.
Seven days later they arrived at their
destination. The doors were flung open, and search lights were
thrust into their faces. SS soldiers awaited the passengers
shouting, whipping them, and throwing them onto the platform. In the
confusion, Ovadia lost his family members and never saw them again.
Initially—due to the language barrier and the uniforms worn by the
inmates—the Salonika Jews thought they had been taken to a mental
asylum, not Auschwitz.
Following their arrival, Ovadia was
among a group of young Greek men who passed Mengale’s selection and
were taken to Auschwitz I. They were immediately sent to work, but
not knowing German, they had difficulty understanding instructions
and were constantly beaten.
Due to the hard labor, harsh conditions,
and constant torture, only five of the group survived, and it was
decided that they should be murdered. However a young,
German-speaking Greek prisoner, Ya'akov Maestro, saved them,
insisting that their professional skills could be utilized. The lie
was quickly exposed and Ovadia was beaten.
During one of his most terrible
beatings—having been caught stealing food— Ovadia screamed out in
his mother-tongue - Ladino: “Ho, Madre,” (Oh, Mother). A
young prisoner from Salonika, Aliza Tzarfati, heard his screams and
recognized the language. Ovadia fell in love with the beautiful
young woman and for the next three months they exchanged notes. In
his final note Ovadia wrote: “If by chance we are released, we will
marry.”
In January 1945 Ovadia was sent on a
death march to Germany via Dachau, Mauthausen, Gusen I, Gusen II,
and Melk, and on 5 May 1945 he was liberated by two American
soldiers who brought him to a hospital. On his recovery, Ovadia was
taken to Mauthausen and placed with other Greek former prisoners,
and in the summer of 1945 he returned to Greece.
Ovadia’s family’s house in Salonika had
been bombed, so he set up temporary home in the synagogue with other
survivors. As other Jews began to return to the city, lists of
survivors were compiled and posted, and he was overjoyed to locate
Aliza’s name. Ovadia wished to marry Aliza immediately, but she was
unsure, as in Auschwitz she had been subjected to medical
experiments, which had left her sterile. However Ovadia was not
dissuaded, and he agreed to Aliza’s condition that they immigrate to
Israel. Soon after, they married and immigrated illegally to
Palestine in a fishing boat.
They settled in Hod Hasharon and after
some time—to their surprise—Aliza conceived. The Jewish doctor who
had operated on her in Auschwitz had mercifully left her with one
ovary—an act that had cost him his life. Aliza gave birth to a boy,
and after some time, a girl.
Aliza died eight years ago. Ovadia has five
grandchildren and two great-grandchildren.
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