At his son’s bar mitzvah some six decades ago, an unconfident Eddie Jaku struggled to articulate himself as he addressed the crowd in his thick European accent.
Carrie Fellner
The Sydney Morning Herald
December 15, 2021
At his son’s bar mitzvah some six decades ago, an unconfident Eddie Jaku struggled to articulate himself as he addressed the crowd in his thick European accent.
Carrie Fellner
The Sydney Morning Herald
December 15, 2021
Mr Perrottet said Mr Jaku had left a great mark on the city through his role as the Sydney Jewish Museum’s oldest Auschwitz survivor and volunteer.
He had been energetically telling his story to visitors and school groups since the museum’s opening in 1992.
“A man who endured great pain and terror and yet had such a zest for life,” Mr Perrottet said.
“That is the story of Eddie’s life. He turned suffering into strength.”
Eddie Jaku was born to a large German family in 1920. He was detained multiple times during the war, including in the Buchenwald and Auschwitz concentration camps, from which he was sent on a death march.
While his beloved parents were executed in the gas chambers, he engineered multiple escapes from Nazi incarceration throughout the war.