Jerusalem, Israel - July 26, 2021 - A striking image of a man dressed in a black cap and jacket, holding a bouquet of red flowers, is on display in Jerusalem, Israel's Municipal Plaza, Kikar Safra. One rolled-up sleeve reveals the numbers stamped on his arm. Moshe Haelyon was born in Greece in 1925, and with his family was transported in a packed freight wagon to Auschwitz.

Haelyon is one of 360 survivors, from 35 countries whose portraits are included in the Lonka Project now on display in Jerusalem. Each unique brilliantly done image is accompanied by a short biography. For example, we learn after being imprisoned by the British in Altit for a year, Haelyon joined the IDF, retiring in 1976, and serves on the board of Yad Vashem. 

Born in Konigsberg, Dorothy Israelit Bohm was sent to English at the age of 14 with her father's Leica camera and became a renowned British photographer. 

I started to read the bio from the next image place around the corner. Nat Shaffir was born in Iasi, Romania in 1936. "Never give up" were his father's words in 1944, which the young boy never forgot. Shaffir immigrated to the United States in 1961. The short bio tells of his marathon successes and climbing Mount Kilimanjaro. 

The Shaffirs were our neighbors in Silver Spring, MD where their four children attended the Hebrew Academy of Greater Washington. Finding the larger-than-life image of a person you know from the US displayed in Jerusalem was a surprise.

Each story is more shocking, impressive, and mesmerizing than the one before. Doctors, academics, the personalities are varied. Dov Landau was featured in Leon Uris's Exodus. David Marks and his sons have a cabinetry business in Brooklyn.

Rav Menachem Mendel Taub of the Kaliv is shown surrounded by his Chasidim at a tish. The bio informs that he died on April 28th, at the age of 96.

The photographs are excellent, done by 270 internationally acclaimed photographers. 

However, the impressive stories of too many of the survivors, if you read closely, end telling the viewer, they passed away within the last year. 

Safra Square is being set up for an annual Basketball event to be held July 27 and 28, 2021, hopefully, visitors will take time to read some of the stories, printed in English, Arabic, and Hebrew.