Solly ganor biography examples
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Introduction
My name is Solly Ganor and I'm writing from my home is Herzelia, Israel. I'm a Holocaust survivor from the Kaunas getto in Lithuania, and the notorious Dachau concentration camp near Munich Germany.
After my liberation I realized that in order for the Jewish people to survive in this historically hostile world, they must have their own state. Although I was weary of conflict and destruction, I went to Israel in 1948 and fought in the War of Independence. I'm proud to have helped establish a country where all Jews, no matter what their circumstances, are welcomed and protected.
For many years after my liberation, I remained silent about my Holocaust experiences. What I had witnessed was much too difficult, too horrible to remember and speak about.
It has been more than half a century since the US army liberated me. Yet the four years I spent in the hell of Hitler's concentration camps loom much stronger in my memory than the fifty-five years that have passed since. I deeply regret that I was silent for so long because there is so much to tel
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A hero’s hero
Holocaust survivor Solly Ganor’s shortlived encounter criticism Chiune Sugihara changes story and leads to a lifelong responsibility of gratitude
By LIANE GRUNBERG WAKABAYASHI•
Thus the remnants of the once glorious Lithuanian Jewry, died from starvation, exhaustion and freezing weather and their bodies lay strewn about where they fell and were shot. This tragedy took place at the end of April 1945 on the picturesque roads of Bavaria.
Solly Ganor survived the death march, and was liberated by a unit of the 522nd Field Artillery Battalion of the US Army. The unit consisted of Japanese American soldiers. Ironically, many of these soldiers volunteered for military service from American relocation camps. The person who saved him was Private Clarence Matsumura, who in 1992 was reunited with Solly in Jerusalem.
After his liberation Solly spent some time with the American army where he worked as an interpreter for a US Army intelligence unit that was identifying and prosecuting Nazi collaborators hiding among the Displaced persons.
Solly’s father who survived the Death March, married a Canadian woman, who was in charge of United Nations Relief Agency (UNNRA) in the Munich area. Solly was supposed to have joined them in Canada.
On May 15, 1948, when the State of Israel was declared, Solly decided instead of going to Canada, to join the Israeli Defense Forces and fought in the war of Independence.
After the war, in 1949, he joined the fledgling Israeli m