Welcome to the WWII Forums! Log in or Sign up to interact with the community.

Samuel Willenberg

Discussion in 'WWII Obituaries' started by GRW, Feb 21, 2016.

  1. GRW

    GRW Pillboxologist WW2|ORG Editor

    Joined:
    Oct 26, 2003
    Messages:
    20,829
    Likes Received:
    3,054
    Location:
    Stirling, Scotland
    "Samuel Willenberg was taken to the camp in Poland in 1942, aged just 19, and survived the gas chambers only because he told guards he was a builder – advice he had been given from a fellow captor.
    His two sisters were killed at the camp, along with more than 870,000 other Jewish people, and Mr Willenberg was one of just 67 known survivors.
    Given the job of sorting through the belongings of people who had been sent to the gas chambers, he discovered his sisters had been killed after finding their belongings among the pile he was given.
    In 1943, Mr Willenberg was part of an escape that saw 200 people revolt against guards and flee the camp – although the majority were killed attempting to leave and he was shot in the leg as he climbed over a pile of bodies to jump the fence.
    Much is known about Mr Willenberg’s time in Treblinka and his subsequent dedication to the underground resistance, which he joined following his time at the camp, as he spent his later life sharing his experience with historians, writing an autobiography and creating art about the camp.
    Following his escape, he joined the Polish army, before moving to Israel in 1950, where he married wife Ada, also a Holocaust survivor, and had a daughter, who he is survived by.
    He re-visited Treblinka on numerous occasions, leaving his home in Israel to take youth groups to the site and explain the horrors that happened there."
    http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/europe/samuel-willenberg-treblinka-last-survivor-poland-nazi-death-camp-dies-aged-93-a6887106.html
     

Share This Page