From the AFP:
“Austria's oldest Holocaust
survivor dies at 106”
The oldest Austrian Holocaust
survivor, who lived through four concentration camps, has died at the age of
106, Vienna's Jewish Community organisation (IKG) said Friday. Marko Feingold,
who survived Auschwitz, in Nazi-occupied Poland and three German concentration
camps, died in the city of Salzburg on Thursday after a lung infection,
Austrian news agency APA reported. Despite his advanced age, Feingold had
remained active in speaking out against the Holocaust, taking part in numerous
conferences and events for schoolchildren. "I must have spoken to around
half a million people all in all," he told AFP in a 2018 interview, adding
he swore to himself in Auschwitz that he would tell his story. Born on May 28,
1913, in the Austro-Hungarian empire in what is now Slovakia, Feingold was
arrested in Prague and deported to Auschwitz in 1940. "They said I had
three months to live. And in fact after two and a half months I was about to
succumb to exhaustion when I managed to get transferred to the Neuengamme
camp," he told AFP. From there, Feingold -- or inmate 11,996 -- was taken
to Dachau and then on to Buchenwald, where he survived as a construction worker.
Having lost his father and siblings in the camps, he was freed from Buchenwald
when it was liberated by American forces in May 1945. But he could not go back
to Vienna as his group of survivors was prevented from travelling through the
Soviet occupation zone which surrounded the city. "A Russian soldier told
us that they had orders not to let us pass. The new (social democratic)
chancellor Karl Renner had said: 'We won't take back the Jews'," Feingold
said. Feingold then decided to go to Salzburg near the German border, which was
in the American occupation zone. There he founded a network which helped
100,000 Jews to emigrate to Britain-administered Palestine. He himself refused
to leave Austria despite the difficulties in the face of the country's deep-rooted
anti-Semitism. After the war Austria took refuge in an official narrative which
portrayed the country as a "victim" of the Third Reich and avoided
the process of debating complicity in Nazi crimes, as happened in Germany,
until well into the 1990s.
^ No one can ever really understand
what Marko Feingold went through during the Holocaust, but the fact that he
survived, created a life for himself after the war and lived to be 106 says a
lot about him. ^
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