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Child Holocaust survivor describes rescue by Righteous Among the Nations

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Uploaded by on Apr 21, 2009

Lea Paz, née Weitzner, was born in 1930 in Lwow. Her father Herman, a civil judge, passed away when Lea was five, and Lea and her mother Gusta moved to the village of Kochawina to live on her grandfathers large farm.

In September 1942, Lea, Gusta and her grandmother were deported to Belzec. With rumors about the camp circulating on the train, Gusta pushed Lea out through a narrow opening in the side of the train car. Lea eventually found her way back to her grandfather and an uncle, Mundek, who had escaped the deportation. Mundek, who had lived in Mandatory Palestine but had come back to introduce his fiancée to his family and got caught in the war, was determined to save the young girl. He bought Lea false papers, and taught her Christian prayers and customs, all the while encouraging her to eventually emigrate to the Land of Israel.

Lea first lived with the Plauszewski family, and then with a relative of theirs, Stefania Gos, whose husband was a commander in the Polish underground. Her rescuers were later recognized as Righteous Among the Nations.

Just before liberation, Leas grandfather and Mundek were turned in by one of their neighbors. After Mundeks death, the family who had hidden him, the Wohanskis (later also recognized as Righteous Among the Nations), gave Lea his two picture albums filled with photographs of Mandatory Palestine.

Lea emigrated to Palestine on an illegal immigrant ship but was arrested by the British and interned in Cyprus. During a demonstration organized by the internees in Cyprus, Lea was wounded by British police gunfire. The story was published in the Jewish press in Mandatory Palestine, thus allowing her relatives on Kibbutz Merhavia to discover that she had survived. Lea was reunited with them after she was finally allowed to immigrate into Eretz Israel. She married Ephraim, and they have two children and six grandchildren.

For more details, click here: http://www1.yadvashem.org/yv/en/remembrance/2009/paz.asp

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Top Comments

  • This video has brought tears in my eyes.

  • Never in my life will I figure the Germans out. ...Never. What possessed them?

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All Comments (31)

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  • Oh my goodness. THIS has brought tears to my eyes! We recently read the Sunflower, and that story does not compare to this little video.

  • @Nir31 true

  • :'(

  • Hitler created the Nazi movement, it was his hatred that inspired them and they are all directly responsible, no one else

  • I just wanna jump through the computer and give her a hug.

  • i;ll be glad when there is no more suffering and pain in this world

  • i feel bad for all of the people who didnt make it and who did r.i.p

  • it was not the germans fault it was one person, hitler, you can't say that the german soldiers wanted to kill, they just began to believe they were better beacause what hitler said, he could create a new world. I don't think you can blame the gemans or someone else. This is my opinion and i'm not from german.

  • @wotters12345

    everybody knew, it was an open secret. The world is cruel because people are cynical and hypocrites and you see it everyday by every nation

  • the sad thing is i dont think the average german knew about the death camps till it was to late , still sad that the german people where treating hitler like a god

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