Solomon Perel
Solomon Perel (also Shlomo Perel or Sally Perel; born 21 April 1925) is an Israeli author and motivational speaker. He was born to a German-Jewish family and escaped persecution by the Nazis by masquerading as an ethnic German. His life story is told in the 1990 film Europa Europa loosely based on his autobiography Ich war Hitlerjunge Salomon (I Was Hitler Youth Salomon). He made several visits to schools to tell his story.
Solomon Perel | |
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Sally Perel in 2016 | |
Born | April 21, 1925 |
Biography
Perel was born in Peine, Lower Saxony, to Jewish parents who had emigrated to Germany from Russia. When the Nazis came to power, systematic persecution of Germany's Jewish citizens began. In 1935, the Perel family relocated to Łódź, Poland, where Solomon's aunt lived, after their shoe store was looted and Perel was expelled from his school.[1]
After the Germans invaded Poland in September 1939, Solomon Perel and his brother Yitzhak attempted to escape to the Soviet-occupied part of Poland. Solomon succeeded and was placed in a Komsomol-run orphanage in Grodno, while his brother made his way to Vilnius in Lithuania.
Perel fled from the orphanage after the Nazis invaded the Soviet Union in June 1941, and was captured by a German army unit. Since he was a native German speaker, Perel was able to convince his captors that he was a Volksdeutscher (an ethnic German living outside Germany) and was subsequently accepted into his captors' unit as a Russian–German interpreter. He played a key role in the capture of Joseph Stalin's son, Yakov Dzhugashvili, and thereafter became endeared to his German army unit. The unit's commanding officer even made plans to adopt him, providing him with further protection. As a circumcised Jew, Perel was constantly in danger of being discovered by his military unit, and attempted on several occasions to flee back to the Soviets, each time unsuccessfully. He conjured various excuses to avoid medical examinations that would have revealed he was circumcised. One army doctor took a sexual interest in him, and on one night when he had entered the shower after everyone else had left, the doctor attacked him from behind and attempted to rape him. Perel managed to fight him off, but when he turned around, the doctor saw that he was circumcised and realized he was a Jew. The doctor did not inform on Perel, as doing so would have exposed him as a homosexual. According to Perel, "I knew his secret and he knew mine, and after that incident he took care of me until he was killed."[2]
Being still a minor, Perel was told he could not remain with the army. Instead, he was sent to a Hitler Youth boarding school in Braunschweig, where he continued to hide his Jewish identity under the name of Josef Perjell (changed to Josef Peters for the film Europa Europa). While there he was put through classes on Nazi racial theory and pre-military preparation exercises. In order to hide the fact that he was circumcised, he refrained from showering with other students whenever possible, or showered while facing the wall or while wearing underwear.[1] At the time he had a girlfriend by the name of Leni Latsch. She was a member of the Nazi-instituted League of German Girls (BDM), so although Perel loved Leni he dared not tell her that he was Jewish, fearing of her informing the authorities. Later, Leni's widowed mother discovered he was Jewish but did not reveal his secret.
Towards the end of the war, Perel was drafted into the army as an infantryman and assigned to guard a bridge armed with a handheld anti-tank rocket launcher. On the night of 20 April 1945, the eve of his 20th birthday, shortly after he had been inducted into the army, Perel was captured by the United States Army, without having engaged in combat. He was released the next day as he was a junior conscript. After the end of the war he briefly served as an interpreter for the Red Army. After traveling back to his birthplace, and making dozens of inquiries, he finally located his brother Yitzhak, who was married and living in Munich. Perel moved to Munich to be with him. He learned that his father had died of starvation in the Łódź ghetto, his mother was murdered in a gassing truck in 1944, and his sister was shot while on a death march. Likewise he learned that his other brother, David, was alive and in Mandatory Palestine. Solomon resolved to join him, and in July 1948 sailed for Haifa, in the newly declared state of Israel.[2][1]
Once in Israel, Perel was inducted into the Israel Defense Forces and fought in the 1948 Arab–Israeli War. After being released from the Israeli army he became a businessman. In 1959 he married his wife Dvora, and they had two sons. Perel did not return to Germany until 1985, at the invitation of the Mayor of Peine, to participate in a commemoration of the destruction of the Peine Synagogue.
I Was Hitler Youth Salomon
Perel later wrote a book about his exploits, titled Ich war Hitlerjunge Salomon (I Was Hitler Youth Salomon). His work was later adapted into the 1990 film Europa Europa, produced by CCC Film. He often tours and gives talks throughout Europe about his wartime experiences.
The Dutch playwright Carl Slotboom wrote a play based on Perel's story titled Du sollst leben (Dutch: Je zult leven; English: Thou Shalt Live), which was first aired in Zevenbergen, Netherlands, on 4 May 2012, which is also Remembrance of the Dead in the Netherlands. Salomon Perel visited Zevenbergen to see the play.
See also
References
- Perel, Solomon (1997). Europa Europa. John Wiley & Sons Inc. ISBN 0-471-17218-9.
- French: Perel, Shlomo, Europa, Europa (Paris: Ramsay, 1990), translated from the Hebrew by Lysette Hassine-Mamane, 265 pages.
- Hebrew: Korim li Shelomoh Perel! (Tel-Aviv: Yedi'ot Aharonot, 1991); Eropah, Eropah (Tel-Aviv: Yedi'ot Aharonot, 1994, 2004)
- Polish: Europa, Europa (Warszawa: Wydawn. Cyklady, 1992)
- German: Ich war Hitlerjunge Salomon (München: Heyne, 1993; Berlin: Nicolai, 1998, 2001)
- German/Dutch/English: Du sollst leben/Je zult leven/Thou shalt live (play by the Dutch author Carl Slotboom)
- Czech: Přežil jsem v Hitlerjugend (Praha, 2001)