ROMANIA COMMEMORATES STRUMA

Shoah refugees ‘perished in an abyss of indifference’

Israeli Ambassador to Romania David Saranga (right) and Romanian Rear Admiral Mihai Panait at the commemoration ceremony for the victims of the Struma.Photo: Courtesy, Israeli Embassy in Romania
Israeli Ambassador to Romania David Saranga (right) and Romanian Rear Admiral Mihai Panait at the commemoration ceremony for the victims of the Struma.Photo: Courtesy, Israeli Embassy in Romania

ROMANIAN officials for the first time commemorated the victims of the sinking 80 years ago of the Struma, a ship that carried hundreds of Holocaust refugees from Romania.

The ceremony late last month took place in the coastal city of Constanta in southern Romania, from which the ship set sail in 1941 with 770 refugees, including more than 100 children, aboard.

In 1942, a Red Army submarine mistook the Struma for a hostile ship after Turkish authorities towed it away from its dock in Istanbul and left it in international waters without a working engine or an anchor. The sub torpedoed the ship, leaving only one survivor.

During the ceremony, which was attended by about 80 people, Romanian Rear Admiral Mihai Panait, the top commander of the country’s navy, and Florin Goidea, the director of the Constanta Port, laid wreaths on the water beside the dock from which the Struma set sail.

“It’s the first time that Romania officially commemorates the Struma’s tragedy on Romanian soil, and it’s part of the efforts of successive governments in recent years to face the past and the events of the Holocaust era, when half of the country’s Jewish community was murdered,” said David Saranga, Israel’s ambassador to Romania, who also attended the event.

In his speech, Panait acknowledged that historical record.

“We commemorate today not only a tragic event, but we also bring back the attention to the suffering caused by the repression of the Jews during the Second World War,” he said.

Romania was part of the Nazi-led Rome–Berlin Axis and an ally to Adolf Hitler’s Germany.

“We must react immediately to combat any form of intolerance, discrimination or racism. The best answer to such challenges is the honest and responsible education,” said Panait.

Saranga noted in his speech the persecution of Romanian Jews by their countrymen, while inserting a dig at the British by adding that Romanian Jews would have been able to reach pre-state Israel if it were not for British authorities’ refusal to let in the refugees, which left them stranded at the mercy of the Turks.

“For 10 weeks, Struma’s passengers had been abandoned in the port of Istanbul, because of the British government’s refusal to allow their entry to Israel,” he said.

Saranga told the story of one of the victims, 26-year-old Isaac-Itzhak Terkatin, a survivor of the vicious Iasi Pogrom of June 1941, which Romanians perpetrated against their Jewish neighbours.

Terkatin had hoped to emigrate to Israel and helped others leave before embarking the Struma despite the risks, said Saranga.

“His dream as well as that of other 768 Jews perished in the abyss of indifference.”

JTA

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