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About Israel Friedman "Is"

Israel Friedman grew up in Brooklyn, NY.  After he started college, he wanted to drop out and enlist.  When he went to sign up however, he was rejected due to his eyesight.

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The medical training we received did not prepare us for the injuries we were faced with treating.  And no amount of training could have prepared us for what we were confronted with upon arrival at Buchenwald.

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-- Israel Friedman

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Bound in this volume are the memories of  the 120th Evacuation Hospital who served in WWII and who treated Holocaust survivors and political prisoners at Buchenwald and beyond.

 

  The book was written and compiled by Israel Friedman and others in the 120th.

 

Click the "pdf" icon below to read their stories and view photos taken in 1944 and 1945.

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As the war continued and the U.S. involvment increased, he was drafted and passed the eye test wearing his glasses.  After basic, he received

medical core training and was assigned to the 120th Evacuation

Hospital and sent overseas.  

After leaving Buchenwald and arriving in Cham, Israel wrote a letter to his mom telling her of the atrocities the 120th discovered and about a child he had just met, whom he wanted to adopt and bring home to Brooklyn.  You can read Israel's letter by clicking this "pdf" icon.

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Even after sixty years, Ben Fainer never forgot Israel and his kindness.  Time did not lessen the bond they formed of liberator and liberated.

In his memoir, he poured out his heart recalling their time shared

together vividly as if it were yesterday.  

Little did I know my dad's occasional use of Yiddish in our house once served a higher purpose than just keeping some conversations from my brother's and my ears.

 -- Richard Friedman

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After the war, Israel spent most of his life helping other distressed

children. He was a Social Worker for New York City, and then

supervised an office of Attendance Teachers (Truant Officers)

in one of Brooklyn’s most distressed attendance districts. His office

was devoted to finding children missing from classes and providing

the family and social services needed to get them back to class

and a chance at  a better future. 

 

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