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I joined this group of children and they took us to Germany. Since all of us were in need of medical care, they took us to a place in Germany that would be good for our recovery. The name of this place was St. Otylien. I think it once was a German army hospital.
I stayed there for half or three-quarters of a year. We were being cared for by UNRRA [the United Nations Relief and Rehabilitation Agency]. We got all of our equipment from them, including food and clothing. We were organized into a children's commune, as if we were on a kibbutz.
We also were assisted by Zionist organizations. Every movement tried to assist us, so that when we got to Palestine, we would join their group -- HaShomer HaTzair or Ma'pai. We were in Dror [the Labor Zionist Youth Movement]. We had a counselor. We began to study a little and everyone recovered well. We played sports and went on some trips and we waited until we could go to Palestine. We constantly were promised that we would have certificates, but it took a long time.
Finally, we moved to another place, mostly because it had become impossible to stay for an extended period in St. Otylien. There would be official visits, to determine if people really needed to be hospitalized. We already were healthy and organized, so they took us to another place, also in Germany. In this new place, there were a lot of youth organizations from different movements. We waited there for another half-year, hoping to emigrate to Palestine.
In total, I was in Germany a year-and-a-half. Then they took the entire group of us to France. We lived some place close to Paris. After Paris, we went to Marseilles. Finally we left France -- not from the port of Marseilles, but from some other port. It was an illegal emigration.
This was in the beginning of 1947. We traveled in a very small boat with a lot of people until, as often was the case, the British caught us. They transferred us to their ship and took us to Cyprus. In Cyprus we lived in a fenced camp for seven or eight months. There was a youth facility there. At last, we were allowed to immigrate legally to Palestine. We joined Kibbutz Galil Yam near Herzliyah, which was part of the Aliyat HaNoar movement. We studied for half a day and worked the rest of the day. |
We were there more than a year. In 1948, the War of Independence broke out. Some in the group who were a little older wanted to enlist in the army. If everyone declined to enlist together, they planned to enlist on their own. Aliyat HaNoar representatives told us that we were not expected to enlist because we were too young, but that if we were needed, we would be drafted. Some of the older boys in the group left and enlisted in the army. Afterwards, the kibbutz decided that, in order to keep our group together, it would be better if we all enlisted.
I was about 16-and-a-half when I enlisted in the army. We were in the Pal'mach [the regular fighting force of the Jewish underground army during the British mandate]. The kibbutz sent us there because it was easier to keep the entire group together, as a division in a battalion of the Pal'mach. We participated in battles in the Negev and, towards the end of the war, in the mountains of Jerusalem.
Then we were given a choice: whoever wanted to was able to leave the army and return to the kibbutz. Whoever didn't want to return was allowed to finish his army service. The group split up. Some chose to go to the kibbutz. I stayed in the army until I finished my service.
In Israel, I managed to find some relatives. I stayed with them for a while and then I lived with a cousin who also was a refugee. I began working in a factory and I studied in the evenings. Eventually, I received my high-school equivalency diploma.
I worked, saved some money, then enrolled in the Technion. When I entered the Technion, my life became somewhat more orderly. As a student, I was not supposed to work. Mostly I studied, but I did work a little. In 1959, I finished at the Technion and after that I worked in my profession, as a building engineer in Tel Aviv. I got married and I had two children.
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The testimony of Menachem Bartel was taken in September, 1965, when he was interviewed in Tel Aviv by Miriam Tov.