Current:Home > NewsRome buses recount story of a Jewish boy who rode a tram to avoid deportation by Nazis. He’s now 92 -消息
Rome buses recount story of a Jewish boy who rode a tram to avoid deportation by Nazis. He’s now 92
View
Date:2025-04-16 20:20:33
ROME (AP) — Residents and visitors in Italy’s capital can ride a city bus this month that recounts how a 12-year-old boy escaped Nazi deportation from Rome’s Jewish neighborhood 80 years ago thanks to sympathetic tram drivers.
The traveling exhibit is a highlight of events commemorating the 80th anniversary of when German soldiers rounded up some 1,200 members of the city’s tiny Jewish community during the Nazi occupation in the latter years of World War II.
The bus takes the No. 23 route that skirts Rome’s main synagogue, just like that life-saving tram did,
Emanuele Di Porto, 92, was inaugurating the bus exhibit Tuesday. As a child, boy, was one of the people rounded up at dawn on Oct. 16, 1943 in the Rome neighborhood known as the Old Ghetto.
His mother pushed him off one of the trucks deporting Jews to Nazi death camps in northern Europe. He has recounted how he ran to a nearby tram stop — right near where the No. 23 stops today — and hopped aboard.
Di Porto told the ticket-taker about the round-up. For two days, he rode the tram, sleeping on board. Sympathetic drivers took turns bringing him food.
That the anniversary events coincide with the war that began Saturday when Hamas militants stormed into Israel added poignancy to the commemorations, organizers said Tuesday at Rome’s City Hall.
The Oct. 16 anniversary in Italy marks “one of the most tragic events of of the history of this city, of the history of Italy,″ Rome Mayor Roberto Gualtieri said. “This date is sculpted in the memory and the heart of everyone.”
Eventually, someone on the tram recognized the young Di Porto, and he was reunited with his father, who escaped deportation because he was at work in another part of Rome that morning, and his siblings. The last time he saw his mother alive is when she pushed off the truck.
Only 16 of the deportees from Rome survived the Nazi death camps.
Di Porto is one of the last people who lived through that hellish morning in Rome 80 years ago. Deportations followed in other Italian cities. Among the few still living survivors of deportations in the north is Liliana Segre, now 93, who was named a senator-for-life to honor her work speaking to Italian children about the 1938 anti-Jewish laws of Benito Mussolini’s Fascist dictatorship.
While the 1943 roundups were carried out under German occupation, many Italians were complicit, noted Victor Fadlun, president of the Rome Jewish Community.
German soldiers drove the trucks crammed with deportees, and employees at the Italian police headquarters were printing fliers telling Jews to bring all their necessities with them, Fadlun said at a City Hall news conference to detail the commemorations.
veryGood! (4)
Related
- Tarte Shape Tape Concealer Sells Once Every 4 Seconds: Get 50% Off Before It's Gone
- Browns TE David Njoku questionable for Ravens game after sustaining burn injuries
- Borrowers are reassessing their budgets as student loan payments resume after pandemic pause
- Pennsylvania governor noncommittal on greenhouse gas strategy as climate task force finishes work
- Highlights from Trump’s interview with Time magazine
- Things to know about the Nobel Prizes
- SpaceX to launch 22 Starlink satellites today. How to watch the Falcon 9 liftoff.
- Backers of North Dakota congressional age limits sue over out-of-state petitioner ban
- Taylor Swift Eras Archive site launches on singer's 35th birthday. What is it?
- Dad who won appeal in college admissions bribery case gets 6 months home confinement for tax offense
Ranking
- Rolling Loud 2024: Lineup, how to stream the world's largest hip hop music festival
- Baltimore Archdiocese says it will file for bankruptcy before new law on abuse lawsuits takes effect
- Disney Plus announces crackdown on password sharing in Canada
- 2 Indianapolis officers indicted for shooting Black man who was sleeping in his car, prosecutor says
- Former longtime South Carolina congressman John Spratt dies at 82
- What was the longest government shutdown in U.S. history?
- AP PHOTOS: As Alpine glaciers slowly disappear, new landscapes are appearing in their place
- California governor signs law to bolster eviction protections for renters
Recommendation
Trump wants to turn the clock on daylight saving time
Things to know about the Nobel Prizes
Ryder Cup: Team USA’s problem used to be acrimony. Now it's apathy.
What Top 25 upsets are coming this weekend? Bold predictions for Week 5 in college football
$73.5M beach replenishment project starts in January at Jersey Shore
New York flooding live updates: Heavy rains create chaos, bring state of emergency to NYC
Anti-abortion groups are at odds on strategies ahead of Ohio vote. It could be a preview for 2024
Unbeaten Syracuse has chance to get off to 5-0 start in hosting slumping ACC rival Clemson