Yaacov (Jacki) Handeli was born in 1928 in Salonika, Greece,
to an affluent family of six, whose roots in Salonika dated
back to the 16th century.
In 1941, the Germans entered Salonika. They implemented
anti-Jewish laws, and turned the Baron Hirsch quarter of the
city into a ghetto, into which Jacki and his family were
marched, in a humiliating parade. Two weeks later, the family
was deported to Poland, with some 85 people crammed into each
wagon. After a week, the food and water ran out. Every time
the train stopped, the Germans would remove the bodies of
those who had died and rob the others of their possessions. It
was then that Jacki learnt his first sentence in German: “You
won’t need this any more.”
The train arrived at Auschwitz, and the prisoners were sent to
the first selection. Jacki and his brothers Yehuda and Shmuel
saw their parents and sisters for the last time, and were then
taken immediately to carry out different tasks in the camp.
Like the other refugees from Salonika, they were unable to
speak to the Germans or with other Jews in the camp because
they did not know Polish, German or Yiddish. After his two
brothers died, Jacki was taken under the wing of Salonika
boxer Jaco Razon, who helped him survive the terrible
conditions in the camp.
In January 1945, the prisoners were sent on a death march.
Jacki remembers the snow-covered road dotted with the blood of
those who had been murdered, the march to the Gleiwitz camp,
and then onwards to Dora-Mittelbau in open coal trucks,
exposed to the cold and the rain, without food or water, until
they reached Bergen-Belsen, where they remained until
liberation by the British.
In 1947, Jacki immigrated to Eretz Israel. He volunteered in
Mahal and fought in the War of Independence. Jacki is the sole
survivor of his family. He and his wife Rachel have two
children.