Israel foundation connects to isolated Holocaust survivors

When the face of 86-year-old Holocaust survivor Naomie Lichthaus appeared on their screen, staff at the call centre of Israel's Yad Ezer La-Haver foundation were ready to respond.

The foundation established by Shimon Shabag in the northern port city of Haifa in 2001 has been supporting survivors of the Nazis for two decades, but its mission has expanded during the COVID-19 pandemic.

On Holocaust Remembrance Day, 76 years since the liberation of the Nazi extermination camp at Auschwitz, Holocaust survivors find themselves vulnerable to a virus that preys on the elderly and has forced many into painful isolation.

Before the pandemic, Yad Ezer ran a home for about 100 survivors while providing food as well as medical and psychological assistance to others who lived independently. But in October it expanded to include a round-the-clock call centre with electronic monitoring, installing tablets in people's homes to allow for rapid, direct communication.

"We call more than 3,500 people a day," Shabag told journalists. "We talk to them. We show them that we are here and that we're taking care of them."

There are an estimated 180,000 Holocaust survivors living in Israel, according to official data. Among them is Lichthaus, who was born in Chernivtsi, a city which falls in present day Ukraine.

 

She said when World War II broke out she was only six but would "never forget" the horror she experienced, including when men burst into her home and carried out a brutal anti-Semitic assault on her mother. She lives alone now and said her calls with Yad Ezer offer comfort.

"They ask me if I need anything or if I want to talk," she said, explaining that she recently asked for a mobility walker.

'More secure'

After disconnecting with Lichthaus, foundation volunteer Mourad Marehi was headed to her home on a motorbike to deliver the walker.

"I feel more secure walking around now," Lichthaus said after receiving the delivery, her weight supported by the device.

Shabag said that if someone doesn't answer a call to their tablet, "we immediately send one of our bikers" to see what's going on.

On multiple occasions, the foundation has found someone lying on the floor following a stroke, a heart attack or a fall, he explained.

Shabag told journalists that many survivors had been suffering from financial distress and other hardships like loneliness independent of the pandemic.

The traumas brought on by the virus, especially "the fear" of lacking the essentials needed to survive, had triggered painful war-era memories, he said.

The home run by Yad Ezer near the call centre is on Haifa's Kassel Street, but is known to locals as "survivors street".

One resident is Holocaust survivor Haya Caspi, an 88-year-old of Romanian origin who lost her parents during the war.

"It's hard because we're alone, but... we are lucky because they take care of us," she said.    (AFP)