Manya Brodeski-Titelman was an only child, born in 1932 in
Zhabokrich, in the Ukraine.
In July 1941, the German army entered the town, followed by
the Romanian army. The Jews were ordered to gather in five
cellars where the Romanian soldiers proceeded to shoot them.
Manya lost consciousness. When she awoke, she saw that her
mother had been killed. Her father had survived.
Manya and her father hid in the cellar until nightfall. They
then escaped to the forest but after a week, starving and
cold, they returned. A few days later, they were herded into
the town ghetto, where they lived under grueling conditions in
one apartment with several other families.
One day, the police ordered both adults and children back to
the cellars to remove the bodies of those killed in the
massacre. The bodies were in a terrible state of
decomposition, and the horrified prisoners were forced to bury
them in a mass grave. Manya identified her mother’s body by
the red boots she had been wearing. She and her father managed
to bury her in a grave near their house.
During this period, thousands of Jews from Bessarabia were
being herded to the nearby River Bug, where they were
murdered. Manya’s father would throw boiled potatoes to them
across the ghetto fence, and even bring survivors to their
home.
Towards the end of the war, the Romanians gathered all the
Jews in the main square of the town, planning to kill them.
Suddenly, a group of German soldiers arrived and warned the
Romanians that the Russian army had arrived. The Romanians
fled. To the Jews’ astonishment, the German soldiers turned
out to be partisans in disguise.
In 1980, Manya and her family immigrated to Israel. In 2003,
she was among a group that erected a memorial tombstone on the
site of her town’s mass grave.
In March 2007, Manya’s husband Boris, a Holocaust survivor and
soldier in the Red Army, passed away. She has two daughters,
five grandchildren and one great-grandchild.