WATCH: Teen Raises $15K to Send Holocaust Survivor to Israel to Visit Last Living Relative & Finally Celebrate Nazi Cancelled Bar Mitzvah

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Drew Principe, right, and Henry Oster share a hug at a gathering where the Holocaust survivor met some of the donors who helped send him on his first trip to Israel. (Photo: CONTRIBUTED PHOTO/JENNIFER PRINCIPE)
A Southern California teen raised about $15,000 to send an 89-year-old Holocaust survivor to Israel so the man can meet his last living relative and finally receive his bar mitzvah, according to a newspaper report Monday.

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Drew Principe, 17, said he came up with the idea for a fundraiser after meeting Henry Oster during a school assembly in January.

Oster told students at Viewpoint High near Los Angeles about his experiences during World War II.

In 1941 he and his family were deported by Nazis from their home in Cologne, Germany, a few weeks before he was supposed to celebrate his bar mitzvah, a Jewish coming-of-age ceremony generally held at 13. They were taken to a ghetto in Poland before he was taken to the Auschwitz concentration camp. He was sent to a few different camps before being liberated at 17 and eventually moving to Los Angeles to become an optometrist.

Principe discovered that Oster had never been to Israel, so the teen decided on the spot to give the man a bracelet he had bought on a trip to the Holy Land a few years ago. The bracelet has the Shema, a Jewish prayer, inscribed on it.

Henry Oster (R) and Drew Principe.
Principe gave Oster a matching Shema Bracelet. (Contributed photo/Spungen Family Foundation)

 

“It really is a gesture that cannot be measured,” Oster told the Ventura County Star about the gift (http://bit.ly/2sPw1Bg). “I don’t wear jewelry, but I have not taken this off except for the shower.”

Principe and Oster began a “life-changing” friendship, the teen told the newspaper.

A Southern California teen raised about $15,000 to send an 89-year-old Holocaust survivor to Israel so the man can meet his last living relative and finally receive his bar mitzvah, according to a newspaper report Monday.

An online fundraiser took off and quickly raised close to $15,000.

Oster and his wife along with Principe and his family left on Monday for Israel, where Oster will meet his cousin and be formally recognized by the Israeli Holocaust memorial as a survivor.

He will also celebrate the bar mitzvah he never had.

Ultimately, Oster said, he decided to accept the offer and have the ceremony in memory of those who died and will never have the chance to experience the ceremony.

Oster (far right, at Buchenwald) was at the camp when it was liberated by the U.S. Army in 1945. He lost both of his parents in the war, his father of starvation at the Lodz ghetto and his mother to the gas chambers of Auschwitz.

“I decided to honor my father and my parents and … the desecrated Torah and all the victims who never had a chance,” Oster said.

 

Information from: Ventura County Star, http://venturacountystar.com