According to the author of the letter, he was born in 1928 in Poland. Shelomo was 14 years old when they, together with his father, were deported to concentration camps in Germany.

“I lost the whole family, my father was killed three months after the deportation. So at the age of 14, I was left alone in the hell of concentration camps. I went through nine of them, survived hard labor, torture, hunger and illness, ”he wrote.

Selinger said that he survived two death marches and at the age of 17 he was thrown onto a mountain of corpses in the camp of Theresienstadt in Czechoslovakia, since he was considered dead.

“The Red Army entered Prague and Theresienstadt by May 10, 1945. A military doctor, an officer of the Red Army, examining the same mountain of corpses, saw that I was still breathing, maybe I moved. He pulled me out from under a pile of bodies and placed me in a field military hospital. This doctor looked after me for several weeks and did everything to bring me back to life, ”he wrote.

According to Selinger, he is now a world-famous sculptor. He created a series of memorials dedicated to the victims of the Holocaust and World War II in France, Germany, Israel and Luxembourg.

The author of the letter noted that several books about him are being prepared. In these books, he would like to express his appreciation to the Red Army, which liberated the Theresienstadt concentration camp.

“And I would very much like to be able to pay my memory debt to the doctor who brought me back to life and to name his name in books. I appeal to you, the journalists of the project #Post-Victory, asking you to try to find his name. As I was told, only you can contact all organizations and authorities for the necessary information, ”Selinger asked.

Earlier, in the framework of the project #Post-Victory, a letter arrived to Zoya Romanenko, a resident of the besieged Leningrad.

The project #Posta-Victory contains the stories of those who survived the siege of Leningrad, signed on the walls of the Reichstag, covered Soviet soldiers escaping from concentration camps.

With the help of the project #Post-Victory, anyone can write letters to veterans, their stories of wars and victories will be told over the next months.

Letters sent to the editorial office of the channel will be handed over to veterans.