For one Nazi Holocaust survivor, Hamas' Oct. 7 attack hit harder
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[January 26, 2024]
By Hannah Confino and Rami Amichay
TEL AVIV (Reuters) - Haim Raanan says he survived two holocausts.
The first was as a boy in a Jewish ghetto in Hungary during World War
Two. The second was in a kibbutz in southern Israel, hiding in a safe
room beside his grandson, who was around the same age as he was during
the Nazi persecution.
He, his grandson, son and caregiver hid for hours, keeping silent in the
stuffy and small room, hoping not to be discovered by the Palestinian
gunmen who burst in from the Gaza Strip on Oct. 7 and took over their
town.
Their house was not attacked, but more than 100 of his friends and
neighbours from Kibbutz Beeri were killed or taken as hostages to Gaza.
Altogether, about 1,200 people were killed and 240 taken captive by
Hamas that day in the attack that triggered the more than
three-month-old war in Gaza.
Six million Jews died in the Nazi Holocaust, but Raanan - whose family
would hide from bombs in crowded basements and lived in fear of
Hungary's fascist Arrow Cross militias - remembers that from the eyes of
a young boy.
This year he agreed to have his picture taken and speak at an exhibition
called 'Humans of the Holocaust', which uses digital storytelling to
connect the dwindling numbers of living survivors to a younger
generation that is less familiar with the Nazi atrocities.
Raanan was saved, along with thousands of other Jews, by Swedish
diplomat Raoul Wallenberg, who issued diplomatic papers allowing them to
move to a safer area. He was 10 around the time the war ended.
He suffered for years from the trauma of his childhood, but it was less
tangible, he said. The Hamas Oct. 7 rampage hit him even harder on a
personal level, though he is aware that such a comment will not be easy
for everyone to understand or accept.
"Logically and emotionally, this (time) I will remember the tough
feeling," he explained from the retirement home in Tel Aviv where he and
his wife have been staying since towns along the Gaza border were
evacuated.
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Haim Raanan, 88, a Holocaust survivor who also survived the deadly
October 7 Hamas attack on Kibbutz Beeri, speaks during an interview
with Reuters at his temporary accommodation in Tel Aviv, Israel
January 21, 2024. REUTERS/Alexandre Meneghini
REMEMBRANCE
Two days later, the 88-year-old attended the exhibition, hosted by
the European Union delegation in Israel, ahead of Saturday's
International Holocaust Remembrance Day.
In the photograph of him that is on display, Raanan sits on a couch,
a dog tag around his neck in solidarity with the hostages still
being held by Hamas, holding up a cellphone showing a black and
white picture.
In that smaller, grainy picture from decades earlier, he and his
mother are seen shoulder to shoulder, each with the yellow star
patch on their chests that Jews were once forced to wear.
From behind the podium, with the dog tag still dangling around his
neck, Raanan again spoke of the more powerful emotions he felt from
the Oct. 7 attack, which prompted the retaliatory Israeli offensive
in Gaza in which Palestinian health officials say at least 25,700
people have been killed.
"In the Kibbutz Beeri massacre, I know every single person, every
single member of my kibbutz and their children. For me, it was a
second holocaust," he said.
When a violinist stood and played a sombre song, Raanan sat and wept
quietly to himself.
"Two years from now, five years from now, 10 years from now, there
won't be any Holocaust survivors to tell their stories," said Erez
Kaganovitz, the exhibition's creator.
"We have to remember what happened in the Holocaust, and we have to
understand what are the dangers of antisemitism and blind hatred.
And if we won't tackle this issue and if we won't push back against
antisemitism, history might repeat itself."
(Writing by Ari Rabinovitch, Editing by Timothy Heritage)
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