By Tamar Runyan

Assisted by a ritual scribe, an Israeli police officer fills in one of the last letters of a Torah scroll dedicated in memory of a Holocaust survivor who passed away without children.

KATZRIN, Israel — Holocaust survivors from Holland and Israel, many with tears in their eyes, joined residents in the Golan Heights city of Katzrin to dedicate a Torah scroll in memory of a fellow survivor who, because of the horrors inflicted on her in a Nazi concentration camp, died childless.

Torah Dedication Perpetuates Life of Childless Holocaust Survivor

By Tamar Runyan

Assisted by a ritual scribe, an Israeli police officer fills in one of the last letters of a Torah scroll dedicated in memory of a Holocaust survivor who passed away without children.

KATZRIN, Israel — Holocaust survivors from Holland and Israel, many with tears in their eyes, joined residents in the Golan Heights city of Katzrin to dedicate a Torah scroll in memory of a fellow survivor who, because of the horrors inflicted on her in a Nazi concentration camp, died childless.

The gathering last week at the Chabad-Lubavitch center in Katzrin drew to a close the saga of Marta de Lange, who passed away almost a year ago in Canada. The Holland native survived medical torture at the hands of Josef Mengele – which left her sterile – only to learn that her entire family, her fiancé, and most of his family had perished during World War II.

After the war, she reestablished contact with what little family of Baruch van Gelder was left.

“She overcame horrific situations,” related Shlomit Shwartz, van Gelder’s great-niece and co-director of the Chabad House that hosted the Torah dedication ceremony. “She knew that she would never have children.”

Shifra Morozov, Shwartz’s mother and a Holocaust survivor herself, remembered reuniting with de Lange as both joyous and heartrending.

“I was staying with distant relatives who were miraculously spared,” said Morozov. “There I met Marta again.

“In the dark of the night,” continued Morozov, “she would spill out her heart and tell me about what she went through. She worked with a group of young girls who were forced to push women into the gas chambers.”

De Lange eventually moved overseas and Morozov went to live in Israel, and the pair lost touch. But 22 years ago, they crossed paths yet again when de Lange visited the Holy Land.

Article continued at Chabad.org