martin Aaron Max Herzel Riva Hirsch Riva & Aisic Hirsch Aisic Hirsch Max Steinmetz Jack Bass Henry Aizenman
Martin Aaron Max Herzel Riva Hirsch Riva and Aisic Hirsch Aisic Hirsch Max Steinmetz Jack Bass Henry Aizenman Ilse Nathan Ruth Siegler & Ilse Nathan

Riva and Aisic Hirsch

 

 

 

Riva’s Coat

Mitzi J. Levin

 

"Daddy’s little angel. That’s what he called me and that’s how I felt. I was loved, safe, happy, a little girl full of dreams."

Riva Hirsch lived a peaceful life with her father, mother, two brothers, and grandmother in Novaselitz, Russia.

"Father was a furrier and had a shop behind our house where he made garments from fur pelts. One of my fondest childhood memories was when he made a white rabbit coat, hat, and muff for me. It was so beautiful, and I loved to twirl around so that the coat’s pompoms and my dark braids would fly in the air."

 
     

 

Dark Sanctuary

Mitzi J. Levin

 

Out of the Dark

Becky Seitel

When little girls are 10 years old they should be playing with dolls or hosting tea parties.

When Riva Hirsch was 10 years old, she was hidden by nuns in a bunker near a convent in Ukraine. Fearful of frequent visits by the SS soldiers, the nuns were only able to visit the bunker every two or three days to leave food and water.

"When the door was cracked, it was my lifeline. The door separated me from the outside world. Inside that bunker, my life was lonely and frightening," she recalls.

So fearful were the nuns of being discovered, they often simply cracked the door and hurriedly threw in the food.

"I was living among rats. If I was fast enough to get to the food before the rats ran away with it, I ate. If I was too slow, I was forced to exist on lice. They were all over me. At times, I could hardly open my eyes or my mouth. Swallowing lice helped keep me alive. They were my breakfast, lunch, and dinner."

Riva existed in this dark isolation for two years.

"I don’t know how time passed. Day was night and night was day. I felt more dead than alive. But even though I didn’t have even the simple basics of life like other little girls, I was safe."

 
     
 

Liberation

Mitzi J. Levin

"In 1945, the door of the bunker opened wide. It had not been open more than a crack for two years.

"The nuns wrapped my frost-bitten feet in cloth and draped a blanket over my shoulders. I was suffering from malaria and typhus. My vision was impaired and my teeth had fallen out.

"A voice spoke in a language I didn’t understand. I later learned the Russian Army had liberated me.

"A hand pushed me forward. I moved toward the light and with small footsteps left the bunker in Ukraine.

"I was 12 years old."

 
     
 

Building Better Kids

Becky Seitel

Like many children of the Holocaust, Riva Hirsch was robbed of her childhood more than six decades ago by Adolph Hitler.

Today, she spends time working with the Elks Lodge of Mountain Brook to help promote the education and social development of Alabama’s youth.

Riva is well-known throughout the state for her dedication to raising money for the Elks Youth Camp. Located on Lake Martin in Tallassee, Alabama, the Elks Youth Camp offers
activities and programs for young people between ages eight and 13. The youngsters receive an opportunity to experience different surroundings while learning valuable lessons about life. The programs are designed to help build character while showing how important it is to work with others.

In 2006, Riva, single-handedly sold more Cadillac raffle tickets than any other Alabama member. This was just one of the reasons she was named Alabama Elk of the Year,
becoming the first woman to receive that honor in the history of the Mountain Brook lodge.

"Since we came to America in 1962, people have been wonderful to my husband and me," Riva says. "Being a part of the Elks Association gives me an opportunity to give something back to this country by giving our youth such a great opportunity to build character… and have fun!"

Riva is pictured with Hayden Cater.

 
     
 

Shield of Safety

Mitzi J. Levin

A soccer ball. Less than 12 inches wide and weighing just a few pounds. Something so small became a powerful shield of safety for Aisic Hirsch as a child. He was the only Jewish member of the school soccer team and was known as the star player. On the field he was respected and admired. Off the field, he was the target of anti-Semitism.

"There was a bridge near our school that we crossed each day. The non-Jewish boys would hide and wait on the Jewish children to come by. They would pelt us with rocks, call us ugly names, and pick fights.

"The only way I had to protect myself was by calling out, ‘It’s me, Aisic, the soccer player.’ When they recognized me, they would stop attacking us, at least until the next time."

 
     

 

Alone

Mitzi J. Levin

 

Dark Memories

Becky Seitel

The Warsaw Ghetto was the largest Jewish ghetto established under Nazi occupation. In the three years it existed, starvation, disease, and deportations to concentration camps and extermination camps decreased the population of the ghetto from an estimated 450,000 to 37,000.

Aisic Hirsch was the only member of his family to survive the Warsaw Ghetto. After his younger brother, Samuel, and his grandmother died in the ghetto, Aisic’s mother arranged for his escape. She discovered guards could be paid to look the other way as the organization "Save the Children" helped children flee the Ghetto.

"I didn’t want to leave my mother, but she told me, ‘Only one of us is going to live, and it’s going to be you.’ She arranged for me to slip out at night with a group of children. I never saw my mother again."

But getting out of the Ghetto was only the beginning. Even though some guards could be paid to turn their backs as children escaped, others were waiting on the outside to catch them and turn them in for a reward. Aisic made it past the guards and chose to separate himself from the others in order to attract less attention.

Familiar with the route back home, he walked at night and hid during the day. After three days, he reached the home of a family friend and asked for help. Unable to take him in for fear of German retaliation against his family, the man directed Aisic to hide in the nearby cemetery…the same cemetery where Aisic’s father had been buried the previous year. The man told him he would send food by his son every other day. At the cemetery, Aisic found shelter in a small cave - a frightening hiding place among thick weeds and broken tombstones.

Aisic’s suspicion of the man’s son began when he no longer looked Aisic in the eyes when he brought the food. Suspicion turned into fear, and Aisic started hiding in a tree on the days he expected the boy.

"One day at dusk, as I sat high on a tree branch, I saw him approaching with German soldiers. I had been turned in for a reward. Guns drawn, the soldiers approached my hiding place and began to shoot inside. Then, they pierced inside the cave with bayonets. They left without even checking to see if I was dead or alive.

"The memory of that night is never far from my thoughts. I recall the feeling of hunger, having no one to turn to for comfort, and the uncertainty of where I would go. I was a frightened ten-year-old boy, a little boy alone in the dark."

 
     
 

Liberation

Mitzi J. Levin

"The Russian Army arrived in our Polish village in May 1945. They set up their headquarters on the farm where I was living. I was posing as a Catholic orphan, helping a lady tend her farm. Her sons had already fled since they worked in the Gestapo’s office.

"I thought the Russians were going to kill me. Since they didn’t believe I was Jewish, they beat me along with the others.

"After I convinced them I was indeed a young Jewish boy hiding on the farm, I was able to celebrate liberation from the Germans.

"I was 14 years old."

 
     
 

Birth of a Nation

Becky Seitel

Young Aisic Hirsch was sixteen years old when he traveled to Palestine, now Israel, in 1946. As a young boy, he had survived nearly two years in the Warsaw Ghetto and a little more than three years working as a farm hand in Poland. There, he had posed as a Catholic boy, complete with a false name and fake birth certificate.

The arrival of Russian troops freed him from the terrors of the Holocaust, making it possible for him to emigrate. In the years following World War I, Palestine had become a British
Mandate, and Jewish immigration had steadily increased. British efforts to restrict this immigration were countered by international support for Jews following the near-extermination of European Jews by the Nazis.

"I was the only survivor in my family, so I had nowhere to go after liberation. Palestine held new promise for me," says Aisic. "I became a policeman and soon met my wife, Riva, who’s also a survivor."

As tensions grew between the Jewish and Arab populations and Arab attacks on Jews increased, and with little apparent support from the British mandate authorities, the Jewish
community began to rely on itself for defense.

In 1948, Aisic joined the Israeli military and fought in the War of Independence. On May 14 of that year, the State of Israel was born.

"I think the Holocaust accelerated the creation of Israel," Aisic says. "I’m proud that I was a part of that process. I’m proud that I was a part of the birth of a nation."

 
     

 

Beshert

Becky Seitel

 

Friday Night

Becky Seitel

When Aisic Hirsch talks about the terror he experienced in Poland during the Holocaust, his wife, Riva Hirsch, understands more than anyone. That’s because she experienced circumstances very similar to Aisic’s, almost 1,000 miles away in Ukraine.

Riva and Aisic Hirsch married in Haifa in 1950, five years after they were liberated by Russians troops.

"We both went to Palestine after the war, and it was there that I met my beshert, a Yiddish word that means perfect match, soul mate, destiny," Riva explains.

"I was a police officer and often ate at a local café. Riva was a waitress there, just 16, and the most beautiful girl I had ever seen," says Aisic.

Through the years, they’ve shared much more than the painful story of their past. They’ve shared many happy family times, always observing and celebrating their Jewish faith and
heritage, a faith and heritage that made them a target of murder by the Nazis and then brought them together in Palestine.