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Obituaries

Obituary: Naomi Blake

Brave and gifted sculptor who sabotaged Nazi bombs in Auschwitz factory

November 22, 2018 11:14
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3 min read

The work of sculptor, Auschwitz survivor and human rights campaigner Naomi Blake, who has died aged 94, proved her affirmation of hope and faith in humanity. In spite of her Holocaust experiences, Naomi believed “there is something positive in the human figure – there is a lot of good in people…with my past, if I were pessimistic, somehow, it wouldn’t have been worthwhile surviving”.

Born Naomi Düm in Mucacevo, former Czechoslovakia, Naomi was the youngest of the ten children of Chay-Adel and Elazar Düm. In 1942 there were 32 members of the family, including her parents four grandparents, nine siblings, six spouses and ten young nieces and nephews. By 1945 only eight members remained; the rest had been murdered during the Holocaust.

Her mother had died of pneumonia in early 1944, but in that year Naomi’s family were rounded up and forced onto a crowded cattle truck to Auschwitz. Upon arrival, she and her sister Malchi were separated from the rest of their family, only learning much later of their fate in the gas chambers. Naomi and Malchi were set to work in a munitions factory, but bravely learned to sabotage the bombs they were assembling. Living off watered down soup in squalid, insanitary conditions, Naomi recalled the solidarity of inmates and local residents of a nearby town sneaking food to her. When the Russians came to liberate the camps in 1945, Naomi and Malchi were sent on a death march and seized the opportunity to escape, hiding in the snow whilst the retreating Nazi soldiers fired shots at them.

After both girls reunited with the few surviving members of their family in Mukacevo, Naomi left to fulfil her dream of building a Jewish homeland. She made her way to Italy to board an illegal ship, the Enzo Sereni, bound for Palestine. The boat was intercepted by the British and the passengers taken to Atlit Prison near Haifa.