An 83-year-old Holocaust survivor living in northern Israel celebrated at a Safed synagogue his bar mitzah ceremony 70 years after its die moment.
A few dozen friends and family, as well as Safed’s police commissioner, accompanied Hanoch Shachar to a local synagogue where many of them sang and danced with him before he had his first aliyah l’Torah – the act of reading from the holy book at synagogue after being called to do so from the bimah, or podium.
Join the JBN+ WhatsApp GroupJewish boys typically have an aliyah l’Torah when they turn 13, an age that in Judaism is when a boy becomes a man.
“I saw something was missing in my life, a tree, a branch, real parents,” Shachar, who survived the Theresienstadt concentration camp in what is now the Czech Republic, told the Israel Broadcasting Corporation during the event for a report that was aired Thursday. “Every Jew has a bar mitzvah at their right age, and I never had one,” he said. His entire family perished in the Holocaust.
Hannah Shachar, the man’s wife, said she was “very excited because it’s his dream, to have a bar mitzvah.”
Shachar brought with him to synagogue a violin that belonged to a boy who died in the Holocaust, he said. The dead boy’s parents gave Shachar the violin when he was a boy. “This violin is my way of asking Hashem why he took the talented boy who owned this instrument,” he told the film crew, using the Hebrew word for God.
Shachar, a marathon runner who during the ceremony hoisted without effort the Torah scroll in its metal casing, had prepared for a week for the ceremony, he said. His melamed, or instructor, was Rabbi Shlomo Hadad, one of the city’s best-known cantors.
“I prepare many children and tutor them but now I’ve had a privilege with this one, who is by far the oldest one I’ve eve tutored,” the cantor told the television crew.
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