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Israel’s oldest Holocaust survivor dies at age 109 on Yom Hashoah

“I am in shock—I have no words. Honestly, we thought she’d make it to 110,” her granddaughter said.

Nechama Grossman, Israel's oldest Holocaust survivor. Credit: Courtesy of the Grossman family.
Nechama Grossman, Israel’s oldest Holocaust survivor. Credit: Courtesy of the Grossman family.

Nechama Grossman, Israel’s oldest Holocaust survivor, died at the age of 109 on April 24, coinciding with Yom Hashoah, or Holocaust Martyrs’ and Heroes’ Remembrance Day.

Her granddaughter Luba told Kan News, “I am in shock—I have no words. Honestly, we thought she’d make it to 110. Yesterday, I gave her a bath, and she wasn’t feeling well. She was lucid until the end and died peacefully. On Holocaust Remembrance Day of all days.”

In recent days, Grossman “dreamed that there were Nazis near her; she woke up and said she dreamed they were choking her. She was afraid of the Nazis—that it was coming back,” Luba told the public broadcaster.

“She always said that we need to live in peace and without wars. All the grandchildren served in the army so it wouldn’t happen again. On Oct. 7, [2023], her great-grandchildren were in the army. It was very hard for her. She cried that it’s happening again, and that antisemitism is rising.”

Her son, Vladimir Shvetz, told reporters recently: “My mother, Nechama Grossman, is 110 years old—one of the oldest Holocaust survivors in the world. She lived through the worst of humanity, and she survived. She raised her children, her grandchildren, her great-grandchildren to teach them that unchecked hatred cannot win.”

He added that “we must remember her story, remember the Holocaust, remember all the survivors; learn from it so that her past does not become our future.”

Grossman’s funeral was held on April 25 in her hometown of Arad, some 28 miles east of Beersheva.

Eve Kugler, a 94-year-old Holocaust survivor from the United Kingdom who had been scheduled to participate in the March of the Living in Poland on Thursday, also died on Yom Hashoah. Kugler was born in 1931 in Germany and experienced the 1938 Kristallnacht pogrom.

Approximately 120,000 of the Holocaust survivors who made Israel their home after the 1941-1945 destruction of European Jewry remain alive as of this month, the Ministry of Welfare and Social Affairs said last week.

According to the government figures, around 10% of the country’s survivors, or 13,000 people, died since last year’s Yom Hashoah in May 2024.

Some 1,400 (0.6%) of the estimated 220,800 Holocaust survivors living in 90 countries today are centenarians, and half of the remaining survivors live in Israel, according to figures published by the Conference on Jewish Material Claims Against Germany on Tuesday.

The Claims Conference’s report, titled “Vanishing Witnesses: An Urgent Analysis of the Declining Population of Holocaust Survivors,” projects that just half of the Holocaust survivors alive worldwide today will remain in six years, with just 30%, or about 66,250, remaining in 2035.

By 2040, just 22,080 survivors will remain, according to the Claims Conference.

Jewish News Syndicate (JNS) is the fastest-growing news agency covering Israel and the Jewish world. We provide news briefs features opinions and analysis to 100 print newspapers and digital publications on a daily basis.
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