An emotional reunion between a World War II veteran from Colorado and the Holocaust survivor he liberated from Dachau concentration camp seven decades ago was captured on camera.
Sid Shafner, 94, went on an eight-day trip to Israel and Poland last week. He was honored at a Holocaust remembrance ceremony for helping liberate some 30,000 prisoners from Dachau in southern Germany in 1945.
Marcel Levy, who was 19 at the time and is now 90, was one of those prisoners.
“Sid tells the story that his convoy was stopped by a Jew named Marcel,” Peter Weintraub, president of Friends of the Israel Defense Forces, who sponsored the trip, told ABC News. “Marcel tells him in Yiddish that ‘You have to leave your route and divert to help us,’ which he did.”
Shafner and Levy, who were reunited earlier this month, had established a close friendship and hadn’t seen each other in two decades.
They were reunited May 10 at an Israeli military base and it was all captured on video. Shafner and Levy can be seen greeting each other with hugs, kisses and tears, with loved ones looking on.


“Everything I have today, all of my children, grandchildren and great grandchildren, is due to you, Sid,” Levy told Shafner, according to Weintraub.
“Sid is crying tears of joy,” Weintraub added. “We have done this trip several times but never have we reunited survivors and liberators.”
Friends of the IDF sponsored the trip as part of its “From Holocaust to Independence” delegation to Poland and Israel.
Watch the men reunite here: