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Holocaust survivor, rescuer reunited

associated press
Holocaust survivor Joseph Bonder (right) embraces Bronislaw Firuta, the Polish man who helped shelter him from the Nazis, at John F. Kennedy airport in New York on Wednesday. The men haven't seen each other since 1944.associated press Holocaust survivor Joseph Bonder (right) embraces Bronislaw Firuta, the Polish man who helped shelter him from the Nazis, at John F. Kennedy airport in New York on Wednesday. The men haven’t seen each other since 1944.

NEW YORK (AP) | A Holocaust survivor and the Polish Christian who risked his life to save him are especially grateful this Thanksgiving season: The two men were reunited for the first time in 65 years.

Joseph Bonder, 81, went to John F. Kennedy International Airport on Wednesday afternoon to welcome Bronislaw Firuta, 83, from Wroclaw, Poland.

“My dear, beloved Joseph, we both outlived Stalin and Hitler, and I can’t believe we are here today,” said Mr. Firuta, as the two men embraced in an airport press room, recognizing each other from photos they exchanged.

The two then chatted in their native Polish as Mr. Bonder’s wife, three grown sons and seven grandchildren looked on.

The two men haven’t seen each other since the Soviet army liberated Ostra Mogila, Poland, in 1944, although they have been in touch by phone and letters since the 1950s.

Mr. Firuta was 15 when he and his family helped hide 13-year-old Mr. Bonder and his 18-year-old sister, Joan, for three years as the Nazis searched for Jews in the town. The two families knew each through Joan, a teacher who had Mr. Firuta as a student.

“I’m very excited to see him after all these years,” Mr. Bonder said in a telephone interview from his home in Monroe Township, N.J., hours before Mr. Firuta arrived.

In the late summer of 1941, the Bonder family was living in a Jewish ghetto when Mr. Bonder’s father sent the two children to stay with the Firutas, who lived about 1 1/2 hours away. Mr. Bonder’s parents did not survive World War II.

The Firutas harbored the two teenagers in a barn loft and hay shed attic and later, when it became too dangerous, in woods behind their home.

“They would come about once a day to bring us food. They would put it in a bucket as if they were feeding the animals,” in case authorities arrived, Mr. Bonder said.

If they were found out, Mr. Bonder said, the Firutas could use the excuse that the barn was an open structure that anyone could enter.

It wasn’t easy hiding, Mr. Bonder said. The teenagers had no games or books and spent much of their time lying around.

There were two close calls when local police came searching, but they were never caught.

“Someone would come and tell us and we would run,” he said. “Everything was luck. Not everybody hits the lottery. So we were lucky.”

That first winter, the two teens stayed with different Christian families, but never for more than a day or two so as not to jeopardize their safety. In the spring and for the next year and a half, they sought shelter during the day deep in the woods behind the Firutas’ home and at night in their barn or shed.

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