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TEL AVIV – In the waning months of World War II, Lola Kantorowicz faced a harrowing challenge: concealing her pregnancy while imprisoned at the Bergen-Belsen concentration camp. Deceptively, her pregnancy went unnoticed amidst the widespread suffering, as many prisoners appeared similarly emaciated and malnourished.
In March 1945, amid the chaos of advancing Russian troops through Germany, Lola went into labor. Her daughter, Ilana, arrived on March 19—a mere month before British forces liberated the camp, marking a pivotal moment of survival against overwhelming odds.
Today, at 81 years old, Ilana Kantorowicz Shalem stands as one of the youngest Holocaust survivors. Her survival is a testament to the historical timing of her birth, coinciding with the disintegration of Nazi power. Otherwise, her fate might have been tragically different.
Recognizing the dwindling number of living Holocaust survivors, Shalem has chosen to share both her own story and her mother’s for the first time, ensuring the legacy of their experiences endures.
International Holocaust Remembrance Day, observed globally on January 27, commemorates the liberation of Auschwitz-Birkenau, the infamous death camp where approximately 1.1 million people—predominantly Jews—were murdered. The United Nations General Assembly established this annual commemoration in 2005, underscoring the importance of remembering and honoring these harrowing events.
About 6 million European Jews and millions of other people, including Poles, Roma, people with disabilities and LGBTQ+ people, were killed by the Nazis and their collaborators. Some 1.5 million were children.
Commemorations this year are taking place amid a rise of antisemitism that gained traction during the two-year-long war between Israel and Hamas in Gaza.
Love in dark places
Shalem’s mother and father met as teenagers in the Tomaszow Ghetto in Poland. Lola Rosenblum was from the town, while Hersz (Zvi) Abraham Kantorowicz was moved to the ghetto from Lodz, Poland.
After spending several years in the ghetto under hard labor conditions, including losing family members, they were shuffled through several labor camps, where they were able to continue meeting clandestinely for several months.
“My mother said there was actually a lot of love in those places,” Shalem recalled of the labor camps. “They used to walk along the river. There was romance.”
Her mother’s friends used to help set up secret meetings between the two, who had married in an informal ceremony back in the ghetto.
In 1944, the couple was separated. Hersz Kantorowicz would eventually perish in a death march just days before the war ended. Lola spent time in Auschwitz and the Hindenburg labor camp. She completed a death march to Bergen-Belsen in Germany while pregnant.
“If they discovered she was pregnant, they would have killed her,” Shalem said. “She hid her pregnancy from everyone, including her friends, because she didn’t want the extra attention or anyone to give her their food.”
Yad Vashem archivist Sima Velkovich, who has researched Shalem’s story, called it “unimaginable” that a baby was born in such conditions.
“In March, the conditions were really awful, there were mountains of corpses,” Velkovich said. “There were thousands, dozens of thousands of people who were ill, almost without food at that time.”
To this day, Shalem doesn’t have an explanation for how her mother not only survived the conditions of the camp but gave birth to a healthy baby. Mother and daughter spent a month in the Bergen-Belsen camp before it was liberated by the British, and then two years in a nearby camp for displaced persons.
They then moved to Israel, where her father’s parents had moved before the war. Shalem’s mother held out hope for years that her father had survived. She never married again, nor had additional children.
The child of everyone
In the immediate months after the war, baby Ilana was constantly fussed over, one of the only children in the refugee camp.
“Actually, I was everyone’s child, because for them, it was some kind of sign of life,” Shalem said. “Many, many women took care of me there, because they were very excited to be with a little baby.”
Photos from that time show a beaming baby Ilana surrounded by a cadre of adults. Her mother’s friends spoke of her as “a new seed,” and a ray of hope during a dark time, Shalem said.
She’s not aware of any other children born in the Bergen-Belsen concentration camp who survived. Yad Vashem, Israel’s Holocaust museum and research center, has documented over 2,000 babies born at the Bergen-Belsen refugee camp after its liberation, between 1945 and 1950. The museum at Bergen-Belsen was able to locate documentation of Ilana’s birth, including the hour she was born, which is now kept at Yad Vashem.
A subject few spoke about
Shalem, who studied social work, started asking her mother questions while she was in university in the 1960s, when it was still taboo in Israeli society to dig into the experiences of survivors.
“Now we know, in order to absorb trauma, we need to talk about it,” Shalem said. “These people didn’t want to talk about it.”
She noted how, in the wake of the Oct. 7, 2023, Hamas-led attack on southern Israel, many survivors of that attack immediately began to speak about what happened to them.
But the aftermath of the Holocaust, especially in Israel, was different. Many survivors were trying to forget what had happened. Ilana’s mother often faced disbelief when she shared her story of giving birth in a concentration camp, so she mostly stopped telling it. Sometimes her mother would talk about what she endured with other survivor friends, but rarely with strangers, Shalem said.
Less than 200,000 Holocaust survivors left
Shalem has never publicly shared the story of her mother, who died in 1991 at the age of 71. Last year, she completed a genealogy course at Yad Vashem and began to understand how few Holocaust survivors are left to share their stories.
According to the New York-based Conference on Jewish Material Claims Against Germany, also referred to as the Claims Conference, there are approximately 196,600 living Holocaust survivors, half of whom live in Israel. Nearly 25,000 Holocaust survivors died last year. The median age of Holocaust survivors is 87, meaning most were very young children during the Holocaust. Shalem is among the youngest.
Shalem, who has two daughters, remembers sharing her own pregnancies with her mother, and marveling at what she had endured.
“It’s a situation that was very unusual, it probably required special strength to be able to believe,” Shalem said.
“She said that one of the things was that if she had known my father was killed, she wouldn’t have tried so hard. She wanted him to know me.”
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