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The starving children who reached Israel via Tehran

A new book tells the extraordinary story of the Jewish children who travelled 13,000 miles through Siberian gulags and central Asia to escape the Holocaust

November 21, 2019 11:52
Mikhal Dekel
6 min read

Growing up in Haifa, Mikhal Dekel didn’t view her Polish-born father as a Holocaust survivor. Unlike friends with tattooed arms and memories of concentration camps, he’d come to Mandate Palestine as a teenager, spoke Hebrew like a native, and never talked about the war.

In fact Hannan had survived a remarkable ordeal. At 12, he escaped Nazi Germany through the Soviet Union, travelling almost 13,000 miles through Siberian gulags and central Asia, before making it to what would become Israel at the height of the Holocaust. His penultimate destination, along with 920 other Jewish youngsters including his sister and cousin, was Iran; Hannan was one of a rare group called the Tehran Children.

Dekel, today an English professor at City College of New York, knew only that he had been rescued, but not what he went through. She has spent the last decade finding out, travelling between Poland, Uzbekistan and Russia to piece together his odyssey. She has now written a book about her journey, which tells his story and that of thousands more refugees.

That many Poles — Jewish and non — fled to Soviet Russia and ended up in Central Asia (Uzbekistan, Kazakhstan, Turkmenistan) is widely known. Indeed, Dekel points out, it’s the story of most Polish Jewish people who survived Nazi extermination. But the specifics of their journey, and particularly how some 116,000 Poles found themselves in the Middle East, has rarely been documented in full.