Holocaust survivor Jo Benkow, a popular Norwegian Jewish politician, writer and photographer, has died. He was 88.

“Jews in Norway have lost a wise role model,” Norwegian Prime Minister Jens Stoltenberg wrote on Facebook.

Benkow survived the Holocaust by fleeing Nazi-occupied Norway with his father and brother into neutral Sweden in 1942. The women of his family stayed behind and were murdered in Auschwitz that year.

The Trondheim native, born Josef Benkowitz, returned to Norway and in 1965 was elected to parliament as a representative of the Conservative Party, which he later headed for four years, beginning in 1980. Benkow resigned in 1993, several years after he was elected speaker of parliament.

His 1985 autobiography, “From the Synagogue to Lovebakken,” became a bestseller and broke the sales record for Norwegian nonfiction books.

Benkow, who in recent years had been a frequent defender of Israel, told Dutch Jewish journalist Maurice Swirc that he had decided to “stay out of discussions about Israel” until 2000, when he “came to the conclusion that it was no longer possible … because of the biased manner in which Israel was portrayed.” — jta

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