Martin Aaron

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Martin Aaron Veteran

Birth
Romania
Death
20 Oct 2018 (aged 89)
Birmingham, Jefferson County, Alabama, USA
Burial
Birmingham, Jefferson County, Alabama, USA GPS-Latitude: 33.4896667, Longitude: -86.8461778
Plot
Block 40
Memorial ID
View Source
Martin Aaron passed away on October 20, 2018 at the age of 89.

He was born in Sapinka, Romania and arrived in the US in 1948 after surviving the Holocaust.

He served in the US Army from 1951-1953.

He became a resident of Birmingham in 1953 and joined Knesseth Israel and served as Gabbai for many years.

He was employed by Berman Brothers Iron and Metal for 35 years.

He is survived by his wife Shirley Aaron, daughter Patricia Pancer, Sons Marvin Aaron (Jennifer), David Aaron, and grandchildren Jack, Lucy, Phoebe, and Bailey.

He is proceeded in death by his first wife Sylvia Gerber, his parents Menachem and Leah Handel Aaron, two sisters, and three brothers.

If you would like to make a memorial in Martin's honor, please make donations to Knesseth Israel Congregation, Collat Jewish Family Services or a charity of your choice. Graveside service will be held at Elmwood Cemetery on Tuesday, October 23, 2018.

Martin was born in the Czechoslovakian village of Tereshva in 1927, but home was across the Tisa River in Sapinta, Romania, a town with about 100 Jewish families. In 1940, Romania was forced to cede northern Transylvania to Hungary, and conditions for the Jews deteriorated rapidly: public school was forbidden, businesses confiscated, travel restricted, and, ultimately, forced labor.

Martin was fifteen in 1944 when the Jews were taken by wagon to Tyachev. This was a ghetto in every sense of the word. After several weeks, Martin's family was put on a train for two days and nights, arriving at Auschwitz II (Birkenau). This was the last time Martin and his older brother, Moshe, would ever see his parents, two sisters, and two younger brothers again.

The boys were settled into deplorable barracks, when guards came looking for prisoners with skills. Anxious to get out, Martin and Moshe called themselves mechanics, and after a week, were transferred to a labor camp in Bunzlau, Germany. It was here that Martin was given the number 46006 as his identity. The boys worked mixing cement to build foundations for factory walls. Had he remained at Bunzlau, Martin would have been freed by the Soviets in a few days. Instead, Martin was marched for five or six weeks through Germany to Gurlitz, Leipsig, then Nordhausen. Of the 100 men who began the journey, fewer than twenty-five survived. Moshe stayed at Bunzlau and was liberated from there, eventually immigrating to Israel, but died shortly thereafter, succumbing to the ravages of his concentration camp hardships.

Skeletally thin and so weak that he could hardly stand, Martin was put on a train to Bergen-Belsen. Several days later, on April 15, 1945, the British liberated the camp. Martin is certain that he would not have survived another day. He was taken by medical truck to Celle for recuperation and then brought back to Bergen-Belsen, which had been organized into a Displaced Persons (DP) Camp.

An aunt and uncle in New York saw a notice in the Jewish paper about Martin's search for relatives; they sponsored his immigration. On March 3, 1948, Martin arrived in New York City. He was drafted by the U. S. Army during the Korean conflict and after discharge, settled in Birmingham, married Sylvia Gerber, and had one son. Sylvia died suddenly in 1967. In 1974, Martin met and married Shirley Beck Zalla, also widowed with one son. Together they became a family. Martin worked at Berman Brothers Iron and Metal Company for thirty-five years.
Martin Aaron passed away on October 20, 2018 at the age of 89.

He was born in Sapinka, Romania and arrived in the US in 1948 after surviving the Holocaust.

He served in the US Army from 1951-1953.

He became a resident of Birmingham in 1953 and joined Knesseth Israel and served as Gabbai for many years.

He was employed by Berman Brothers Iron and Metal for 35 years.

He is survived by his wife Shirley Aaron, daughter Patricia Pancer, Sons Marvin Aaron (Jennifer), David Aaron, and grandchildren Jack, Lucy, Phoebe, and Bailey.

He is proceeded in death by his first wife Sylvia Gerber, his parents Menachem and Leah Handel Aaron, two sisters, and three brothers.

If you would like to make a memorial in Martin's honor, please make donations to Knesseth Israel Congregation, Collat Jewish Family Services or a charity of your choice. Graveside service will be held at Elmwood Cemetery on Tuesday, October 23, 2018.

Martin was born in the Czechoslovakian village of Tereshva in 1927, but home was across the Tisa River in Sapinta, Romania, a town with about 100 Jewish families. In 1940, Romania was forced to cede northern Transylvania to Hungary, and conditions for the Jews deteriorated rapidly: public school was forbidden, businesses confiscated, travel restricted, and, ultimately, forced labor.

Martin was fifteen in 1944 when the Jews were taken by wagon to Tyachev. This was a ghetto in every sense of the word. After several weeks, Martin's family was put on a train for two days and nights, arriving at Auschwitz II (Birkenau). This was the last time Martin and his older brother, Moshe, would ever see his parents, two sisters, and two younger brothers again.

The boys were settled into deplorable barracks, when guards came looking for prisoners with skills. Anxious to get out, Martin and Moshe called themselves mechanics, and after a week, were transferred to a labor camp in Bunzlau, Germany. It was here that Martin was given the number 46006 as his identity. The boys worked mixing cement to build foundations for factory walls. Had he remained at Bunzlau, Martin would have been freed by the Soviets in a few days. Instead, Martin was marched for five or six weeks through Germany to Gurlitz, Leipsig, then Nordhausen. Of the 100 men who began the journey, fewer than twenty-five survived. Moshe stayed at Bunzlau and was liberated from there, eventually immigrating to Israel, but died shortly thereafter, succumbing to the ravages of his concentration camp hardships.

Skeletally thin and so weak that he could hardly stand, Martin was put on a train to Bergen-Belsen. Several days later, on April 15, 1945, the British liberated the camp. Martin is certain that he would not have survived another day. He was taken by medical truck to Celle for recuperation and then brought back to Bergen-Belsen, which had been organized into a Displaced Persons (DP) Camp.

An aunt and uncle in New York saw a notice in the Jewish paper about Martin's search for relatives; they sponsored his immigration. On March 3, 1948, Martin arrived in New York City. He was drafted by the U. S. Army during the Korean conflict and after discharge, settled in Birmingham, married Sylvia Gerber, and had one son. Sylvia died suddenly in 1967. In 1974, Martin met and married Shirley Beck Zalla, also widowed with one son. Together they became a family. Martin worked at Berman Brothers Iron and Metal Company for thirty-five years.

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