From Chabad:
“91-year-old Holocaust
Survivor Perishes in Mariupol Basement”
(Vanda Semyonovna Obiedkova was
born in Mariupol, Ukraine, in 1930 and survived the Nazi roundups that
swallowed her mother and family. Obiedkova, an active member of Mariupol's
Jewish community, died in a freezing basement in Mariupol on April 4.)
As she lay dying in a Mariupol
basement, freezing and pleading for water, Holocaust survivor Vanda Semyonovna
Obiedkova wanted to know only one thing: “Why is this happening?” Ill and
emaciated during the last two weeks of her life, the 91-year-old could not even
stand up. She died on April 4, not peacefully of old age in her own bed, but as
a victim of the horrific 21st-century war that has engulfed her hometown. “Mama
didn’t deserve such a death,” says Obiedkova’s daughter, Larissa, through
tears, just hours after arriving with her family in a safe location. She had
watched helplessly as her mother’s life ebbed away, remaining at her side until
the last moment. After her mother passed away, Larissa and her husband risked
their lives to bury Obiedkova, amid non-stop shelling, in a public park less
than a kilometer from the Azov Sea. “The whole Mariupol has turned into a
cemetery,” says Rabbi Mendel Cohen, director of Chabad-Lubavitch of Mariupol
and the Ukrainian port city’s lone rabbi. Obiedkova and her family had long
been active members of Mariupol’s Jewish community, the matriarch regularly
receiving medical aid from Cohen’s synagogue. “Vanda Semyonovna lived through
unimaginable horrors,” the rabbi says. “She was a kind, joyous woman, a special
person who will forever remain in our hearts.” Since the war began, Cohen has
been working full-time to evacuate community members from the inferno, working
the phones even on Shabbat, and most recently, Passover. Earlier this week he
was able to evacuate Larissa and her family.
(Her mother, Mindel (left), was
murdered, while her father managed to hide Vanda in a hospital for the duration
of the Nazi occupation.)
Vanda Obiedkova was born in
Mariupol on Dec. 8, 1930. She was 10 years old in October of 1941, when the
Nazis entered Mariupol and began rounding up the city’s Jews. When the SS came
to the family home and took away Vanda’s mother, Maria (Mindel), the little
girl managed to evade arrest by hiding in a basement. “She couldn’t scream;
that’s what saved her,” says Larissa. On Oct. 20, 1941, the Germans executed
between 9,000 and 16,000 Jews in ditches on the outskirts of Mariupol,
including Obiedkova’s mother and her mother’s entire family. The little girl
was later detained, but family friends came and convinced the Nazis that she
was Greek. Her father, who was not Jewish, then managed to get her checked into
a hospital, where she remained until Mariupol was liberated in 1943. Obiedkova
gave a full account of her life and Holocaust experience to the USC Shoah Foundation
in 1998. “We had a VHS tape of her interview at home,” says Larissa, who notes
that her mother retained a measure of Yiddish until the end. “But that’s all
burned together with our home.” Obiedkova married in 1954, when Mariupol was
known by the Soviet name of Zhdanov, and spent her entire life in the city. In
recent years, she lived with Larissa. “Mama loved Mariupol; she never wanted to
leave,” she says.
When the shelling and bombings
began in the beginning of March, the family moved into the basement of a
neighboring heating-supply store. The only assistance the family received
throughout that time came from Rabbi Cohen’s synagogue and community center. “There
was no water, no electricity, no heat—and it was unbearably cold,” she says.
Larissa spent all her time caring for her immobile mother, but “there was
nothing we could do for her. We were living like animals!” Two snipers had set
up positions near the closest sources of water, making every trip there
intensely dangerous aside from the bombs raining down from the skies. “Every
time a bomb fell, the entire building shook. My mother kept saying she didn’t
remember anything like this during the Great Patriotic War [World War II].”
‘It’s All Gone’
(Rabbi Mendel Cohen, director of
Chabad of Mariupol and the city's only rabbi, speaking at Mariupol's annual
Holocaust memorial at the site of the murder of the city's Jews in 1941. Since
the outbreak of war, he has been working to save his entire community.)
Back in 2014, when war began and
Mariupol was hit particularly hard, Larissa and her family joined Mariupol’s
Jewish community in evacuating with Rabbi Cohen to a Chabad campground outside
of Zhitomir, in western Ukraine. They returned when things quieted down, but
Larissa says there’s no going back this time. “I’m so sorry for the people of
Mariupol,” she says, as she breaks down once again. “There’s no city, no work,
no home—nothing. What is there to return to? For what? It’s all gone. Our parents
wanted us to live better than they did, but here we are repeating their lives
again.” The one, lonely bright spot, Larissa says, has been Rabbi Cohen and the
Chabad of Mariupol Jewish community, which has been a lifeline throughout the
last seven weeks of hell. “Thank G‑d, we have our Jewish community,” says Larissa, noting that her mother loved participating in
happy festivities over the years, including Passover. “People
need community, family, during this time. That’s
all we have left.”
^ This is the second (known)
Holocaust Survivor murdered by the Russians in Ukraine. They survived the
horrors of the Holocaust and the Nazi Germans only to die from the horrors of
the Nazi Russians. ^
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