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Helping friends to get reunited

Writer Monica Porter has been putting people back to in touch with each other.

September 21, 2010 10:40
Lost and found: Dan Benjamin with wife Brenda

ByAnonymous, Anonymous

4 min read

Since 1999 I've been writing the Daily Mail's weekly Missing and Found column, something of a trailblazer in the burgeoning "reunion industry". The column has reunited countless long-lost friends, colleagues and relatives, while providing evocative glimpses into the past. And it will not surprise JC readers to learn that many of its reunion stories have involved Jewish people.

One poignant tale emanated from Australia. Melbourne-based artist Craig Forster got in touch on behalf of his wife Alena, whose Czech mother Eva Weisl was an inmate in Belsen. They hoped to trace Bill Bellamy, the former British soldier who had found Eva near to death from starvation when the British Army liberated the camp in April 1945. Bill had cared for her, feeding her tiny amounts of chocolate powder until she grew stronger.

In the late 1940s, Eva and her husband Paul Weisl emigrated to Australia. She was now 90 and Alena wanted, while there was still time, to reunite her with Bill. As Craig wrote: "We have him to thank not only for Eva's life, but for the existence of all our succeeding generations - my wife and our two daughters, both now expecting babies of their own. How easy it is with compassion and a big English heart to turn the tide of destruction back to life."

Sadly, I learned that Bill had died only a year earlier, after a full, wide-ranging life. But I was able to put Craig in touch with Bill's daughter Elaine in Glamorgan, as well his 93-year-old widow. "We deeply regret Bill's passing," emailed Craig, "but our family is delighted to be exchanging messages with Elaine and learning of Bill's life. We have invited her and her husband to stay with us."