buenos aires, argentina | On his 68th birthday, Jorge Klainman decided he could remain silent no more about his Holocaust horrors.
The Polish-born, retired businessman sat at his electric typewriter, he said, “and suddenly the curtains of my memory began to part, revealing events that happened 50 or 60 years ago. After that my life changed completely. I felt liberated.”
The result was “El Septimo Milagro,” a harrowing Spanish-language tale of life and death in a series of Nazi concentration camps that has captivated readers from Buenos Aires to Barcelona.
Translated into English as “The Seventh Miracle,” Klainman’s first-person account differs from most other Holocaust memoirs in its extraordinary attention to detail. It ranges from the 1939 roundup of Jews from his Polish hometown of Kielce to Klainman’s frightful March 1944 encounter with psychopathic concentration camp commandant Amon Goeth, the SS officer portrayed by Ralph Fiennes in Steven Spielberg’s movie “Schindler’s List.”
Goeth marked Klainman, then 15, for execution by firing squad.
“The end had come,” Klainman wrote. “They were going to shoot me and burn me. I thought of my loved ones, and that soon I would be joining them. I reached a state of mind where I just wanted, with all my being, to get it over with.”
But Klainman’s Ukrainian executioners somehow missed their target, and later that night fellow Jewish prisoners risked their lives to bring his bleeding body to the infirmary. A kindly doctor there gradually nursed the teenager back to health.
Fate intervened five more times before he was liberated by American soldiers in 1945. In 1947 — with the help of international Jewish organizations — Klainman set sail from Italy to Rio de Janeiro, caught a plane to Asuncion, Paraguay, and smuggled himself across the heavily guarded border into Argentina, where he eventually married and raised a family.
And now, with anti-Semitism rising in his adopted country, Klainman said he feels compelled to share his story with Argentines who may not have gotten the message.
“Ten years from now there won’t be any Holocaust survivors left to transmit the truth to young people,” he said in an interview at his Buenos Aires apartment. “They’ll begin forgetting the Jewish Holocaust just as they’ve forgotten the Armenian Holocaust. So it’s important that everybody knows what happened. That way they’ll be able to understand the terrible struggle of the Israeli people against the fundamentalist Islamic savages who want to throw us into the sea.”
Klainman, a jewelry retailer by profession, lived in Tel Aviv from 1971 to 1990 and again from 1999 to 2004. He is fluent in Polish, Russian, German, Yiddish, Hebrew, Spanish and Italian, and was recently appointed official representative of the Holocaust Museum in Buenos Aires.
Klainman said he was inspired to write “El Septimo Milagro” after his son Miguel began asking him questions about his past.
“For 50 years I guarded my silence like a hermit, but then I got tired of these delinquents denying the Holocaust,” he said. “I realized that by keeping silent, I was becoming an accomplice, collaborating with them.”
Klainman said he has “lots of work to do” in explaining the Holocaust to fellow Argentines, many of whom grew up with anti-Semitic attitudes encouraged by the Roman Catholic Church and the thousands of Nazi war criminals who were welcomed by Argentina’s military dictatorship after World War II.
“I’ve visited many colleges and universities throughout Argentina, giving speeches for high school kids,” Klainman said. “I even spoke at a Catholic seminary, and afterward the kids cursed the Vatican for ignoring the Jews.
“Usually when I finish speaking after an hour, for three or four minutes they sit there in silence. Then they surround me, hundreds of kids, hugging me, crying, asking for my autograph. Once I took a taxi in
Corrientes and the driver recognized me. He took my hand and kissed it, and told me, ‘God bless you, may you never die.'”