Australian Holocaust survivor saved by gas chamber malfunction dies aged 98


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Holocaust survivor Yvonne Engelman shared her story with countless Australians. (Supplied: Sydney Jewish Museum)


Australian Holocaust survivor Yvonne Engelman, who survived the horrors of the Nazi concentration camp Auschwitz, has died aged 98.

Yvonne died peacefully, after a short illness, surrounded by her children, grandchildren and great-grandchildren.


Funeral service attendees overfilled the chapel, pouring out onto the street to celebrate her life on Monday night.

The founding member of the Sydney Jewish Museum was remembered for her fight to stand up for what is right in the face of adversity.


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Yvonne Engelman was a founding member of the Sydney Jewish Museum. (ABC News: Jerry Rickard)




'Your knowledge can never, ever be taken away'

Every week for the past 32 years, Mrs Engelman volunteered at the Sydney Jewish Museum to share her story to thousands.

Her mission: "So it will never happen again".

Mrs Engelman was born in 1927, in Dovhe, a farming village in Czechoslovakia, where her family lived for many generations.

In 1944, the teenager, an only child, and her parents were taken to Auschwitz-Birkenau concentration camp in Nazi-occupied Poland, after being rounded up with other Jews in Czechoslovakia.

She promised her father that she would survive, a story she shared with the world over the years.

"My father said to me, 'I don't know where we are going, but I'm sure it's not a holiday,'" she said.

"'You have to promise me one thing: that you will survive.' I said, 'Of course I will survive.'


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The Auschwitz-Birkenau concentration and extermination camp in Poland, where more than 1 million Jews were murdered. (Reuters: Agencja Wyborcza.pl/Grzegorz Celejewski)


"They went to the left and I went to the right, and that was the last time I saw my parents."

Yvonne was the only member of her family to survive.

The 14-year-old had her head shaved and was stripped of her clothing before she was ushered into a room with showers, where she was locked up all day and night.

But the gas was malfunctioning, forcing her captors to put her to work, Mrs Engelman said.

"We worked 10 hours daily with a great fear that maybe we would be the next [gas chamber] victims," she said.

Auschwitz left its mark as one of the most infamous camps of the Holocaust, killing 1.1 million of the 6 million Jews who were murdered by Nazis in German-occupied Europe.


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Yvonne Engelman immigrated to Australia in an effort to get as far away from Europe as she could. (Supplied: Sydney Jewish Museum)


She said she was sent to work in a factory in Germany as allied forces crept closer to victory.

Once the war was over, Mrs Engelman made the decision to move to a country sponsoring orphans.

"I had a look at the map, I wanted to get away as far as I possibly can from Europe, so I chose Australia."

In 1949, in Sydney, Yvonne married another Holocaust survivor, John Engelman.

Theirs was the first Holocaust survivors wedding to take place in Australia.


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Yvonne married John Engelman in what was the first wedding of Holocaust survivors that took place in Australia. (Supplied: Sydney Jewish Museum.)




'Lived life as a celebration'

Yvonne was described by friends as someone who "lived life as a celebration".

She was grateful for everything, with a strong will and resolute spirit, her colleagues from the Sydney Jewish Museum said.

"She treasured her family and they treasured her; she was their centre and their heart."

Yvonne leaves a unique legacy, having inspired countless people of all ages and faiths with a message of tolerance and resilience.


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Yvonne Engleman is remembered for her resolute spirit. (Supplied: Sydney Jewish Museum)


Written by Daniela Pizzirani, ABC News.
 

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We had a lady live opposite us when I was a child. She was always so sad. My mum told me she was an Auschwitz surviver, the only one of her family who did. She used to make the most beautiful soft toys and teddies which she displayed in her front window. She gave so much pleasure to us kids who loved to see her latest creations. She never remarried. My mum said the soft toys she so lovingly made were in memory of the children she lost.
 
As with all of the other survivors of absolute horrors of the Nazis especially of the concentration camp, I consider them all as "Heroes".

Yvonne Engleman's story is an absolute wonderful story.
We hope that many other survivors had a "Just" life for themselves as with which Yvonne enjoyed.

I recognised her immediately in the posting.

May she have forever peace& be with her obviously extremely loving husband.
 

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