www.washingtonpost.com Open in urlscan Pro
96.16.159.126  Public Scan

Submitted URL: https://apple.news/AwF7BfovtRf-luF6IsGyrqA?articleList=A24hqrm0WSOKGsYYwFRQYCw
Effective URL: https://www.washingtonpost.com/lifestyle/2022/03/29/holocaust-survivors-reunite-waksal-ron/
Submission: On April 04 via api from US — Scanned from DE

Form analysis 1 forms found in the DOM

GET https://www.washingtonpost.com/newssearch/

<form id="search-form" method="get" class="search-form dn flex-ns items-center relative" action="https://www.washingtonpost.com/newssearch/" role="search"><label for="query" aria-labelledby="searchTitle"><input type="text" id="query"
      autocomplete="off" name="query" class="no-shadow text-input brad-4 font-xxxs pa-0 b-none dn hidden" style="width:0;height:34px;line-height:20px;transition:all 0.25s cubic-bezier(0.49, 0.37, 0.45, 0.71)" placeholder="Search" aria-label="search"
      value=""></label><span id="searchTitle" class="dn">Search Input</span><button type="submit" name="btn-search" class="pa-0 focus-highlight btn btn-sm dn dib-ns btn-show-search-input btn-gray" aria-label="search"><svg
      class="content-box fill-white va-m" width="16" height="16" viewBox="0 0 16 16" xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" aria-hidden="true" focusable="false" role="img">
      <title>Search</title>
      <path d="M10.974 9.56l3.585 3.585-1.414 1.414-3.585-3.585a5.466 5.466 0 1 1 1.414-1.414zm-1.04-3.094a3.466 3.466 0 1 0-6.934 0 3.466 3.466 0 0 0 6.933 0z" fill-rule="nonzero"></path>
    </svg></button></form>

Text Content

Accessibility statementSkip to main content
Search InputSearch
SectionsMenu
SectionsMenu
The Washington PostDemocracy Dies in Darkness
Try four weeks free
Sign inProfileSolid
Sign inProfileSolid



Advertisement


Close
The Washington PostDemocracy Dies in Darkness
Inspired Life


THEY WERE PRISONERS IN THE HOLOCAUST TOGETHER. THEY JUST REUNITED.


THEY MET AT A NAZI FORCED LABOR CAMP 80 YEARS AGO AND NEVER KNEW WHAT BECAME OF
THE OTHER

By Sydney Page
March 29, 2022 at 6:00 a.m. EDT
By Sydney Page
March 29, 2022 at 6:00 a.m. EDT
Headphones
Listen to article
6 min


Sam Ron, 97, left, and Jack Waksal, 97, at an annual gala hosted by the U.S.
Holocaust Memorial Museum. The two Holocaust survivors worked in the same forced
labor camp in Pionki, Poland, and reunited at the event after 79 years.
(Jacqueline Marie Photography)
Share this story

The last time Jack Waksal saw Sam Ron was in 1943, at the peak of World War II.
They shoveled coal, side by side, at a forced labor camp in Pionki, Poland.

Over the past eight decades, Waksal wondered if his friend and fellow Jewish
prisoner survived the war. On March 20, he finally got his answer: Remarkably,
yes.

WpGet the full experience.Choose your planArrowRight

At an annual gala in South Florida, hosted by the U.S. Holocaust Memorial
Museum, Ron, 97, who was an honorary chair at the event, delivered a poignant
speech. As he shared his story of survival with the 400-person audience, Waksal,
also 97, suddenly recognized the man onstage.

“I know this person,” Waksal thought to himself. “We were like brothers.”

Story continues below advertisement



As soon as Ron stepped away from the podium, Waksal rushed to approach his
long-lost companion.

“He jumped out from his seat and came running over to me,” Ron recalled. “He
started hugging me and said, ‘You are my brother!’ ”



At first, Ron didn’t recognize Waksal, but before long, the face in front of him
became eerily familiar. The harrowing memories — and their brotherly bond — came
flooding back.

Advertisement


“In Pionki, we worked in the same camp together,” Ron said. “It was a very
emotional moment. It was unbelievable.”

The last time he had seen Waksal, they were frail and fearful teenagers, covered
in coal. But now, nearly 80 years later, they were both dressed in their finest
suits, surrounded by their growing families.

Story continues below advertisement



Like Waksal, Ron had wondered what happened to his friend. As they spoke at the
event, though, they finally learned how their respective fates unfolded — and
how they both ended up there.

Ron was born just outside Krakow in 1924, and was originally named Shmuel
Rakowski. After hiding in a barn with his parents and brother for several months
at the onset of the war, Ron was sent in a cattle car to Plaszów, a forced labor
camp, in March 1943.



“When you get in a cattle car, you don’t really know what’s going to happen to
you,” Ron said. “You become an animal.”

Advertisement


A few months later, he was transferred to Pionki, another forced labor camp that
made munitions. That’s where he met Waksal, who was born in the Polish village,
Jedlińsk, and was sent to Pionki in 1942 from a similar camp.

Story continues below advertisement



“We unloaded coals every day. Sometimes we were standing [for] close to 24
hours,” Waksal said. “It was a very hard job.”

“We were working very hard, and there was very little food and sanitation,” Ron
echoed. “We were hungry. It was not unusual to wake up in the morning and
someone next to you was dead.”

Despite their squalid living conditions and horrific treatment, both men said
they felt fortunate to have had each other.

“We were so close,” Waksal said. “He was always with me.”

A Jewish girl was saved by a Ukrainian family during World War II. Now her
grandchildren are returning the favor.

The camp was dismantled in 1944, and prisoners were sent to the Sachsenhausen
concentration camp near Oranienburg, Germany. While Ron went there, Waksal
managed to escape and spent eight months living in the forest.

Advertisement

Story continues below advertisement



A group of 15 Jews hid in the woods with him, and of them, only six survived.

“I was lucky I was not killed,” said Waksal, whose brother was with him in the
forest and was murdered by Nazis a month before liberation.

His parents and two sisters were all killed in Auschwitz. Waksal was the sole
member of his family to survive the war.



Ron, meanwhile, remained at Sachenhausen until April 1945, when he was sent on a
three-week-long death march. On May 2, he was liberated by the Americans.

“In that minute, my nightmare of six years was over,” Ron said. “We were free.”

His brother was killed in the Holocaust, but his parents survived, and Ron
reunited with them in Poland before moving to what was then Palestine in 1946.



He ultimately relocated to Canton, Ohio, in 1956 with his wife and two children,
and started a successful construction company.

Advertisement

Story continues below advertisement



Eventually, Waksal settled in Ohio, too. After the war ended, he moved back to
his birth village in Poland, where he reunited with his wife, whom he grew up
with in Jedlińsk. She survived Auschwitz.

They lived in Germany at a displaced persons camp for five years and moved to
Dayton in 1950, where Waksal worked in the auto industry. The couple went on to
have three children, seven grandchildren and five great-grandchildren.

“I’m so proud of them,” said Waksal, who now lives in Bal Harbour, Fla., while
Ron resides in Boca Raton, Fla.

The two survivors — both of whom have dedicated their lives to Holocaust
education and speak regularly to young people about their experiences in the war
— never crossed paths until the annual gala, a fundraiser for the museum in D.C.
Ron had attended the yearly event in the past, but this was the first time
Waksal participated.



When he saw Ron onstage that evening, “I thought I was dreaming,” Waksal said.
“I’m lucky that I’m still alive, and he’s lucky that he’s alive.”

Advertisement

Story continues below advertisement



Once Ron realized who Waksal was, he felt the same way.

“It was an amazing thing, and it does not happen every day,” said Ron, who has
four grandchildren and one great-granddaughter. “This is something unusual.”

A baby was taken from her mother’s arms in the Holocaust. The family just
reunited.

The emotional reunion was profoundly moving for others at the event, including
Robert Tanen, the southeast regional director at the U. S. Holocaust Memorial
Museum.

“It was so special because it’s two survivors that had a shared experience so
many years ago,” Tanen said. “There’s an unspoken connection between the two of
them.”

“They not only survived,” he added, “but they thrived.”

His colleague, Kyra Schuster, a longtime curator at the museum, said reunions
like this don’t happen often.

Story continues below advertisement



“It’s incredible for all parties involved,” Schuster said.

Plus, she noted, “it’s going to become more rare as everyone gets older.”

Advertisement


Waksal and Ron have already started making up for lost time. They’ve had several
phone calls since the gala, and they are arranging to meet again in person.

“He wants to see me, and I want to see him,” Ron said. “We have a lot of talking
to do.”

“No question about it,” Waksal added.

The nonagenarians said their individual journeys — and their unexpected
reunification — reinforces that despite the horrors they endured in the
Holocaust, in the end, they came out victorious.

“I have a great family, and he has a great family, too,” Ron said. “I think we
both did very well.”

“It’s a story of hope,” he continued. “We are 97 years old, and we both made
it.”

Indeed, Waksal said, “it is a miracle.”



Have a story for Inspired Life? Here’s how to submit.

Comment
181 Comments
GiftOutline
Gift Article
READ MORE INSPIRED LIFE STORIES
HAND CURATED
 * Her dad died. So her favorite NFL star took her to the father-daughter dance.
   
   News•
   
   February 10, 2022
 * The world’s oldest living land animal? At age 190, it’s Jonathan the
   tortoise.
   
   News•
   
   January 30, 2022
 * An 8-year-old slid his handwritten book onto a library shelf. It now has a
   years-long waitlist.
   
   News•
   
   January 31, 2022

View 3 more storiesChevronDown



Loading...


Advertisement


Advertisement

Loading...
Advertisement


Advertisement

Company
 * About The Post
 * Newsroom Policies & Standards
 * Diversity and Inclusion
 * Careers
 * Media & Community Relations
 * WP Creative Group
 * Accessibility Statement

Get The Post
 * 
 * Become a Subscriber
 * Gift Subscriptions
 * Mobile & Apps
 * Newsletters & Alerts
 * Washington Post Live
 * Reprints & Permissions
 * Post Store
 * Books & E-Books
 * Newspaper in Education
 * Print Archives (Subscribers Only)
 * e-Replica
 * Today’s Paper

Contact Us
 * Contact the Newsroom
 * Contact Customer Care
 * Contact the Opinions team
 * Advertise
 * Licensing & Syndication
 * Request a Correction
 * Send a News Tip
 * Report a Vulnerability

Terms of Use
 * Digital Products Terms of Sale
 * Print Products Terms of Sale
 * Terms of Service
 * Privacy Policy
 * Cookie Settings
 * Submissions & Discussion Policy
 * RSS Terms of Service
 * Ad Choices

washingtonpost.com © 1996-2022 The Washington Post
 * washingtonpost.com
 * © 1996-2022 The Washington Post
 * About The Post
 * Contact the Newsroom
 * Contact Customer Care
 * Request a Correction
 * Send a News Tip
 * Report a Vulnerability
 * Download the Washington Post App
 * Policies & Standards
 * Terms of Service
 * Privacy Policy
 * Cookie Settings
 * Print Products Terms of Sale
 * Digital Products Terms of Sale
 * Submissions & Discussion Policy
 * RSS Terms of Service
 * Ad Choices









THE WASHINGTON POST CARES ABOUT YOUR PRIVACY

We and our partners store and/or access information on a device, such as unique
IDs in cookies to process personal data. You may accept or manage your choices
by clicking below, including your right to object where legitimate interest is
used, or at any time in the privacy policy page. These choices will be signaled
to our partners and will not affect browsing data.


WE AND OUR PARTNERS PROCESS DATA TO PROVIDE:

Actively scan device characteristics for identification. Select basic ads. Store
and/or access information on a device. Create a personalised ads profile. Select
personalised ads. Create a personalised content profile. Select personalised
content. Measure ad performance. Measure content performance. Apply market
research to generate audience insights. Develop and improve products. View list
of partners

I accept Manage cookies