Become a Member
Obituaries

Obituary: Charles Stevens

Horrific wartime cruelty helped survivor become a faith-healer

February 21, 2019 16:43
OBITS.jpg
2 min read

Despite a life touched by pain, sorrow and hardships that would have defeated a lesser mortal,  Charles Stevens, who has died aged 96, chose to use his experiences to help others through faith-healing. 


While the Second World War was still raging, he reached England from Poland and joined British Intelligence, working for them until the end of the War. His early  years in Nowy Sacz in Poland  were relatively normal until Antisemitism eventually made his school life intolerable.


The son of Hannah and Kalman Sieradski, Charles was partly educated in his local yeshiva until the horrific invasion of  his home town by the Nazis, resulting in the murder of most of his family and the seizure of their home. At the age of 16, Charles managed to escape to Russia but, as he spoke many languages, the Russians considered him a spy and imprisoned him in a Siberian prison camp.


He endured unspeakable cruelty, including torture and starvation at the hands of the Russians, but when the Germans invaded Russia once again he was segregated and imprisoned by the Nazis. When he left the camp he weighed three and a half stone, but miraculously survived.