1930 - 2014

Aisic Hirsch

Biography

Aisic Hirsch experienced more terror and loss than any innocent child should ever have to endure. In 1939, at the age of nine, Aisic witnessed German troops invade his small Polish town of Mogielnica. They set fire to both synagogues and, assisted by Poles, publicly shamed, shot, and hung the two Hassidic rabbis. Thousands stood by and watched.

In 1941, after more than year in a local ghetto, Aisic, his mother, five-year-old brother, and grandmother were herded into the Warsaw Ghetto, the largest ghetto in Poland. There, amidst “absolute misery,” where “rats and sickness were everywhere,” he watched helplessly while his brother and grandmother died of typhus, and his mother slid into madness. Although he did not want to leave his mother, she pushed him out of the ghetto under the auspices of “Save the Children,” a Jewish organization that paid off German and Polish guards. Upon his release, the little boy was on his own.

After several nights of walking, eleven-year-old Aisic was taken in by family friends who hid him briefly in their barn. Fearing German retaliation, he was told he had to leave. Aisic moved on to the village of Goszczyn, arriving on a Sunday morning. Where else does one go on Sunday mornings, but to the local church? Thanks to his blond hair and blue eyes, Aisic blended in with the congregation. It was here that he found the noblest of humanity. When Aisic knelt for confession, all he could do was cry.

The young priest, suspecting the child was a Jew, touched his head through the confessional window and said, “This world will not go on forever. It will end. One day you will find all your loved ones again.”

The clergyman gave Aisic a “real” Polish name and birth certificate and taught him Catholic prayers that would one day save his life. He helped Aisic find work on a Polish farm of a half-German woman whose two sons worked for the Gestapo. Before he got the job, he had to prove he could correctly recite his Catholic prayers. He was saved again. Aisic remained on the farm for three years until his liberation by the Russians in May 1945.

“That priest was my guardian angel. He saved my life. It is because of him that I am here today,” he says.

Aisic immigrated to Israel and in 1948 fought in the War of Independence. He met and married Riva Schuster in 1950.  In 1962, the family of four moved to New York, and in 1992, they moved to Birmingham to be nearer their two children and four grandchildren.

 

Addendum:  Aisic Hirsch passed away on March 7, 2014.

Darkness Into Life

Claritas est etiam processus dynamicus, qui sequitur mutationem consuetudium lectorum. Mirum est notare quam littera gothica, quam nunc putamus parum claram, anteposuerit litterarum formas humanitatis per seacula quarta decima et quinta decima. Eodem modo typi, qui nunc nobis videntur parum clari, fiant sollemnes in futurum.

Online Exhibit

More Information

Name in US
Aisic Hirsch
Name at Birth
Aizik Yitzkhak Hirsz (named after grandfather Ajzyk Hirsz)
Parents' Name

Rywka (Riva) Goldberg (1909-1942 in Warsaw Ghetto) and
Chaim Hirsz (1902-1938)

Date of Birth
August 15, 1930
Country of Birth
Poland
City of Birth
Mogielnica
Sibling(s) Name(s)

Shmuel Hirsz
(? 1934 – ? 1942 Warsaw Ghetto)

Spouse(s) Name(s)

Riva (Rivka) Schuster Hirsch
1933 (Novaseletz, Romania)
Married 1950 in Israel

Children's Names

Chaim (Harold) Hirsch (Felice)
(1955 Haifa – 2008 Charleston, SC)

Shulamit (Sheryl) Hirsch (Jay Perlstein)
Born 1958 in Haifa

Religious Identity (Prewar)
Jewish
Religious Identity (Postwar)
Jewish
Ghetto(s) / Year(s)

Mogielnica Ghetto
(established 1940 when Germans came in; there a few months)

Warsaw Ghetto
(until Fall 1942)

Hiding or Living under False Identity (Location/Year)
1942? Given the name Bronislav Porszskinsky by a Polish priest and placed as a worker on a the Frigges family farm outside of Goszczyn. He was there 2 1/2 years.
Location of Liberation

Frigges family farm outside of Goszczyn

Other Experiences

After war, traveled to Palestine (Haifa) on the French ship, Champollion.

Year / City / Ship to US
1967
Date Moved to Alabama
1990
Alabama City of Residence
Birmingham
Date of Death
March 7, 2014
City of Death
Birmingham, AL
City of Burial / Cemetery
Birmingham / Elmwood Cemetery
Dates Lived in Alabama
1990-2014

Resources