From Yahoo/AP:
“Last of Soviet soldiers who liberated Auschwitz dies at 98”
David Dushman, the last surviving
Soviet soldier involved in the liberation of the Nazi death camp at Auschwitz,
has died. He was 98. The Jewish Community of Munich and Upper Bavaria said
Sunday that Dushman had died at a Munich hospital on Saturday. “Every witness
to history who passes on is a loss, but saying farewell to David Dushman is
particularly painful,” said Charlotte Knobloch, a former head of Germany’s
Central Council of Jews. “Dushman was right on the front lines when the National
Socialists’ machinery of murder was destroyed.”
As a young Red Army soldier,
Dushman flattened the forbidding electric fence around the notorious Nazi death
camp with his T-34 tank on Jan. 27, 1945. He admitted that he and his comrades
didn't immediately realize the full magnitude of what had happened in
Auschwitz. “Skeletons everywhere,” he recalled in a 2015 interview with Munich
newspaper Sueddeutsche Zeitung. “They stumbled out of the barracks, they sat
and lay among the dead. Terrible. We threw them all of our canned food and
immediately drove on, to hunt fascists.” More than a million people, most of
them Jews deported there from all over Europe, were murdered by the Nazis at
Auschwitz-Birkenau between 1940 and 1945. Dushman earlier took part in some of
the bloodiest military encounters of World War II, including the battles of
Stalingrad and Kursk. He was seriously wounded three times but survived the
war, one of just 69 soldiers in his 12,000-strong division. His father — a
former military doctor— was meanwhile imprisoned and later died in a Soviet
punishment camp after falling victim to one of Josef Stalin's purges.
After the war, Dushman helped
train the Soviet Union's women's national fencing team for four decades and
witnessed the attack by eight Palestinian terrorists on the Israeli team at the
1972 Munich Olympics, which resulted in the deaths of 11 Israelis, five of the
Palestinians and a German policeman. Later in life, Dushman visited schools to
tell students about the war and the horrors of the Holocaust. He also regularly
dusted off his military medals to participate in veterans gatherings. "Dushman
was a legendary fencing coach and the last living liberator of the Auschwitz
concentration camp," the International Olympic Committee said in a
statement.
IOC President Thomas Bach paid
tribute to Dushman, recounting how as a young fencer for what was then West
Germany he was offered “friendship and counsel" by the veteran coach in
1970 ”despite Mr Dushman’s personal experience with World War II and Auschwitz,
and he being a man of Jewish origin." "This was such a deep human
gesture that I will never ever forget it,” Bach said in a statement. Dushman
trained some of the Soviet Union's most successful fencers, including Valentina
Sidorova, and continued to give lessons well into his 90s, the IOC said. Details
on funeral arrangements weren't immediately known. Dushman's wife, Zoja, died
several years ago.
^ This is sad to hear since he
was part of liberating an historic (and horrible) part of German, European and
World History. ^
https://news.yahoo.com/david-dushman-helped-liberate-auschwitz-194351822.html
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