Genealogical studies, DNA, and Facebook all helped bring them together.
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Morris Sana, 87 years old, and Simon Mairowitz, 85, were cousins and best friends in their childhood, until the day the Nazis, during World War II, separated them in their home country of Romania.
Morris believed that his beloved cousin had been killed by the Nazis. Simon thought the same about Morris. The cousins had completely lost track of each other in the chaos of World War II, during the persecution of Jews and the Holocaust; according to an article by Nidhi Singh on Good Morning America, the last time they remember seeing each other was in 1943 or 1944.
The GMA article explains that the reunion came about thanks to efforts by Carmela Ofer, Morris Sana’s daughter. She discovered through a cousin she’d contacted on Facebook, Carol Ritter Elbaz, that they had living relatives in England who were part of Mairowitz’s side of the family—a surprise, given that they were listed as victims of the Holocaust at Yad Vashem, the World Holocaust remembrance Center located in Israel. Through Elbaz’ genealogical investigations and a DNA test that Ofer had taken earlier, they confirmed their family connection with Gemma Brown and her mother, Alison O’Callaghan, in England. O’Callaghan is Mairowitz’s daughter.
It turns out that while Morris Sana had escaped with his mother and sister (his brothers had been killed by the Nazis) through Italy and Paris, and eventually had moved to Israel, Mairowitz had escaped with his sister and ended up in England.
Once the families had found each other, they made arrangements to meet in Israel. Leetal Ofer, Sana’s granddaughter, shared on Facebook a video of the moment the two cousins met for the first time in 75 years. She comments, “This is one of the most moving things I’ve ever seen and I’d love to share it with you.”
https://www.facebook.com/5320867/videos/10105609102520434/
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