David Stoliar, Survivor of World War II Disaster, Dies at 91
By ROBERT D. McFADDENJAN. 23, 2016
Photo
The
refugee ship Struma in the Istanbul harbor in February 1942. Turkey
held the ship for 71 days before towing it out to sea. Credit United
States Holocaust Memorial Museum
(The death of David
Stoliar, in 2014, received little attention outside Oregon, where he
lived. The New York Times, which had prepared an obituary, learned of
his death on Friday.)
For more than a half century, David Stoliar
remained a silent witness to the worst civilian maritime disaster of
World War II, the only survivor among nearly 800 Jews fleeing the
Holocaust in Romania aboard a refugee ship that was barred from
Palestine, interned by Turkey for months, set adrift without power and
torpedoed by a Soviet submarine in the Black Sea in 1942.
The
sinking of the overloaded ship, a 150-foot steamer called the Struma,
was a calamity compounded by Britain’s refusal to admit the refugees
into Palestine and by Turkey’s 71-day quarantine, ending with the vessel
being towed out to sea. The coup de grĂ¢ce was fired by the submarine as
the ship lay dead in the water seven miles offshore.
The doomed
voyage of the Struma might have been a forgotten footnote to Holocaust
history had it not been for Mr. Stoliar’s survival and his willingness
years later to attest to the indifference and brutal decisions that put
Palestine out of reach and led to the deaths of hundreds at the hands of
nominal allies against Hitler.
Photo
The ID card of David
Stoliar, the sole survivor of the Struma, which was carrying nearly 800
Jews fleeing Romania. Credit United States Holocaust Memorial Museum
Mr.
Stoliar died on May 1, 2014, at his home in Bend, Ore., at the age of
91, his wife, Marda, said. News of his death was not widely reported,
although a short item appeared in The Oregonian. The loss of the Struma,
and Mr. Stoliar’s survival, were largely unknown until the turn of the
century, when he spoke to a New York Times reporter.
The war in
Europe had been underway for two years and Jews in Romania, their
numbers swollen by refugees from Czechoslovakia, Austria and Hungary,
were perishing under the nation’s fascist Iron Guard. Thousands hoped
for passage out of Constanza, Romania’s port on the Black Sea, and
through the Bosporus to Palestine. Their desperation was ripe for
exploitation.
On Dec. 11, 1941, the Struma left Constanza with
more than 790 Romanian, Bulgarian and Russian Jews — the number is still
disputed — crammed into a squalid, leaky former cattle boat with bunks
stacked 10 high, little food or fresh water, no kitchen and only eight
toilets. There were no life preservers and just two small lifeboats. The
crew of 10 were mostly Bulgarians.
Passengers paid up to $1,000
each, gouged by a charlatan who lied about the ship’s seaworthiness and
visas, which were never provided. Mr. Stoliar’s father, a textile
manufacturer, paid his passage. When the engine failed a few miles out,
the captain of a passing tug repaired it in exchange for the passengers’
wedding rings, their last valuables.
Three days later, as the
Struma limped toward Turkey, the engines failed again. Turkish tugs
towed it into the Bosporus, the divide of Europe and Asia. Neutral
Turkey, whose leaders feared angering either Britain or Germany,
interned the Struma offshore while its fate was considered. Istanbul’s
Jews donated food, but conditions onboard deteriorated as talks dragged
on.
Britain, which had control of Palestine, limited Jewish
immigration to avoid antagonizing the Arabs, and refused to let the
passengers continue without visas. Ten were allowed to disembark in
Istanbul: a woman who suffered a miscarriage, and nine others helped by
an American oil executive, the Jewish Agency in Palestine and a Turkish
Jew who aided refugees.
Finally, the Turks cut the Struma’s
anchor, towed the ship back into the Black Sea and set it adrift. It was
spotted the next day by a Soviet sub, identified years later as SC-213.
Its commander had standing orders from Stalin to sink all neutral ships
in the Black Sea to prevent supplies from reaching Germany.
Photo
Snapshots
of Mr. Stoliar that appeared in The Sunday New York Times: at his
office in Cairo, and after his wedding in Cairo. Credit United States
Holocaust Memorial Museum
Despite the target’s benign profile, a
torpedo was fired at it dawn on Feb. 24, 1942. In a gray overcast, it
struck amidships with an explosion that tore the Struma apart.
Most
of the passengers and crew went down with the groaning ship in 250 feet
of water. But scores more, including Mr. Stoliar, 19, who had been
asleep in a deckhouse, were hurled into the sea with a rain of debris,
mostly planking from the shattered deck.
After years of silence, Mr. Stoliar told the story in 2000 in an interview with Douglas Frantz, then a reporter for The Times.
“I
was one of the lucky ones who was blown up into the air, and I fell
into the sea,” Mr. Stoliar said. “When I came to the surface, there was
nothing except a tremendous amount of debris and many, many people
swimming in the water. It was very, very cold, and we had a hard time
moving our feet and our hands.”
Mr. Frantz and Catherine Collins
later recounted the sinking in a 2003 book, “Death on the Black Sea.”
Mr. Stoliar told them he saw people screaming and thrashing in waves
strewn with kindling. Many were clinging to a partly submerged section
of the wooden deck, with cables and twisted metal from the ship’s
railing attached to it.
He swam to the group, still clad in his
heavy leather jacket, grabbed the railing and looked about at the
terrified faces, shivering and sobbing in the cold. There was nothing to
do but hang on. Hours passed and the cries gradually faded as people
succumbed to hypothermia and exhaustion. Some floated off, others
slipped into the deep.
One man lost his grip, grabbed Mr. Stoliar
by the collar and dragged him under. But Mr. Stoliar broke free and
regained his hold as the man sank out of sight. Soon birds appeared,
flying over the corpses. As the dead drifted away, the decking grew
lighter and rose in the water. Mr. Stoliar, a strong youth, dragged
himself on top.
Photo
David Stoliar, in an undated handout photo from the family, was quiet for decades.
In
the afternoon, the Struma’s first mate, Lazar Ivanof Dikof, floated by
on a door. Mr. Stoliar pulled him onto his raft of wreckage. He told Mr.
Stoliar of seeing the torpedo’s approach. In the numbing cold, they
were surrounded by floating bodies. No one else appeared to be alive as
night fell, and in the morning Mr. Dikof, too, was dead.
Alone
now, Mr. Stoliar thought of giving up. He took out a jackknife to slit
his wrists, but his fingers were too numb to open the blade. A short
while later, about 24 hours after the Struma had sunk, a large ship
appeared in the distance. He waved frantically, and saw figures on deck
waving back.
Soon a rowboat approached. He was pulled
aboard, wrapped in blankets and taken to a Turkish fishing village. His
hands and feet were frostbitten. He was hospitalized in Istanbul, then
jailed for six weeks, apparently to keep him from the news media.
Referring to the Turks, he recalled, “I was the only witness to their
inhumanity, really, from the beginning to the end.”
David Stoliar
was born in Kishinev, Romania, on Oct. 31, 1922, the son of Jacob
Stoliar, a Jewish textile manufacturer in Bucharest. His parents were
divorced when he was 10, and he lived with his mother in Paris for
several years.
In 1936, he returned to Bucharest and finished high
school. He wanted to become an engineer, but the war intervened. He was
taken for forced labor, digging trenches. As brutality against Jews
spread, his father tried to save him by arranging his passage aboard the
Struma.
For months the ship’s sinking became a rallying cry for
Jews around the world. It generated protests, a general strike in
Palestine, death threats against British officials and responses by
Turkey and Britain that voiced regrets but denied responsibility.
Mr.
Stoliar reached Palestine eventually and joined the British Army’s
Jewish Brigade in 1943, serving in Egypt and Libya. He also fought with
the Israeli Army in the 1948 war of independence. He became an oil
executive in the early 1950s and lived in Japan for 18 years.
In
1945 he married Adria Nacmias. They had one son, Ronnie. His wife died
in 1961. In 1968 he married Marda Emslie. Besides his wife, he was
survived by his son and a granddaughter.
Mr. Stoliar moved to
Oregon in 1971 and later retired. For decades he said nothing about the
Struma, whose sinking was largely forgotten, noted mainly in scholarly
books. But interest was revived in 2000, when Greg Buxton, a Briton
whose grandparents had died onboard, organized a successful search for
the vessel, which they photographed.
Mr. Stoliar spoke to
newspapers and magazines and appeared in a 2001 documentary, “The
Struma,” by the Canadian director Simcha Jacobovici. “For 58 years, no
one asked me about the Struma,” he said, “and I felt that no one cared. I
carried the memories in my head as if it happened yesterday.”
Sunday, January 24, 2016
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