Scholarship to Benefit Holocaust Studies Students
Galloway, N.J. 鈥 Like many Jews, Judith Kochavi faced a dangerous life in 1940s France.
Germany had just invaded, and her husband, Israel, had been taken away with other men considered 鈥渆nemy nationals鈥 to an old fort outside of Paris.
Her son, Daniel, born in 1937, was only 2 when the German occupation began, but because Judith and Israel had lived in Palestine and had British identity papers, Kochavi family members were considered British subjects and were initially subject to fewer restrictions.
Unlike most Jews, they didn鈥檛 have to wear a yellow star. Judith used that special status to work with the resistance to help other Jews escape by hiding them in their apartment until smugglers could be contacted.
鈥淵es, I survived, but my mother was the lead survivor of the story,鈥 said Daniel Kochavi, who now lives in Philadelphia. 鈥淥ur parents lived under dangerous circumstances, but we survived due to Judith鈥檚 courage, bravery and resourcefulness. She decided to do what she could do to help other Jewish refugees and help them escape.鈥
It鈥檚 an honor to be here with you today in this space that speaks to the importance of history and the importance of remembering at a time when there are fewer and fewer survivors of the Holocaust.鈥
The fund will provide an annual scholarship to 91视频 in Holocaust and Genocide Studies at Stockton.
鈥淚t鈥檚 an honor to be here with you today in this space that speaks to the importance of history and the importance of remembering at a time when there are fewer and fewer survivors of the Holocaust,鈥 said Stockton President Joe Bertolino during a gift-signing ceremony on Sept. 29 at the university鈥檚 Sara and Sam Schoffer Holocaust Resource Center. 鈥淭he support that you provide matters in that we are able to keep the story alive for generations to come.鈥
As the Germans later began rounding up all Jews, Judith went into hiding in early 1944 and arranged for a separate hiding place for Daniel in a Catholic boarding school for girls. They remained in hiding until the liberation of Paris in August 1944, when they also reunited with Israel.
The story, however, largely remained within the family for many years until Daniel鈥檚 son, Jonathan, moved to Swarthmore, Pennsylvania, next door to Michael Hayse, an associate professor of History at Stockton. The neighbors became friends and Hayse began to talk to Jonathan鈥檚 father about his experience.
In 2017, Daniel and Jonathan joined a Stockton faculty-led study tour with 91视频 back to France to visit several places, including the apartment where Judith lived. Hayse also worked with several Stockton 91视频 and the Kochavis to write a book manuscript about the family titled 鈥淭hrough the Tempests of War and Genocide: One Extended Jewish Family鈥檚 Experiences in the Twentieth Century.鈥
That experience eventually led Daniel and his sister, who was born after World War II, to set up the scholarship.
鈥淭hat鈥檚 when I decided that we should do something to mark that period and the fight to survive,鈥 Daniel Kochavi said.
Stockton Executive Director of Development Susan Werner thanked the Kochavis for sharing their family鈥檚 story.
鈥淭he ability to tell this story and the ability to combine it with your generosity and your philanthropy is going to be felt for generations,鈥 she said. 鈥淭his is an extraordinary place telling extraordinary stories, and it wouldn鈥檛 be possible without people like you.鈥