75 Years Ago, This Jewish Boy Was the Sole Survivor of a Disastrous Plane Crash in Norway

The son of Itzhak El Al, one of 28 Jewish Tunisian children who were on the plane that crashed in Norway in 1949, reflects back on his father's good fortune. 'The Norwegians even built my family's home on the moshav,' he says.

Published in Haaretz: https://www.haaretz.com/jewish/2024-11-26/ty-article-magazine/.premium/75-years-ago-this-jewish-boy-was-the-sole-survivor-of-a-disastrous-plane-crash-in-norway/00000193-5e4a-d68e-a1db-fe4ec66f0000

STOCKHOLM – Seventy-five years ago, on November 20, 1949, a Dutch Douglas DC-3 aircraft was approaching Oslo on its way to Fornebu, Norway's main international airport at the time.

Confronting bad weather conditions, the pilot lowered the plane, apparently not aware of the exact height of the mountainous terrain. Its wing hit a tree not far from Hurum, a small community southwest of Oslo, and disaster followed: The plane crashed into a mountain, igniting the fuel tank. Except for one 12-year-old child, Itzhak Allal, all other 30 passengers on board – 27 of them children – and four crew members were killed.

Although the tragedy happened in Norway, it was very Jewish. The plane had been chartered by the Youth Aliyah organization (Aliyat Hano'ar) to transport Jewish children from Tunisia to a recovery center in Norway, before their planned immigration to Israel.

They were heading to a sanitarium for tuberculosis patients made available by the Norwegian government for Jewish children from North Africa. In April 1949, 200 Jewish children from Morocco were hosted there for the first time, and the Jewish children from Tunisia were the next group in line.

Haim El Al and his son Itzhak, named after his grandfather, visit the 1949 Hurum air disaster site in Norway.

Haim El Al and his son Itzhak, named after his grandfather, visit the 1949 Hurum air disaster site in Norway. Credit: Rami Kafarov.

It took two days until the wreckage was discovered by two hunters, who also found the dead bodies of the passengers and crew as well as the only survivor. Allal was handed over to the Norwegian authorities and aroused so much sympathy in the country that King Haakon VII offered to adopt him.

The bodies of the other children were flown back to Tunisia where they were buried.

Allal was taken to Israel where he was eventually united with his family who immigrated to Israel and settled in Yanuv, a moshav near Netanya. This agricultural community had been partly built with Norwegian funds, following the air disaster. Allal changed his last name to El Al, and he and his wife Lilian would eventually have six children. He died of cancer when he was 48.

One of the couple's children, Haim, now 51, visited Norway for the first time last week. He came with his 15-year-old son Itzhak, named after his grandfather and born, coincidentally, on the 60th anniversary of the tragedy.

The two family members of the sole survivor of the accident were invited to attend a series of events to mark the 75th anniversary of the crash, organized by the Israeli embassy in Norway and the Friends of Israel in the Norwegian Labor Movement association (Venner av Israel i Norsk Arbeiderbevegelse).

"I've felt a strong connection to Norway my whole life," Haim El Al said in an interview after visiting the site of the disaster, "so it's really emotional for me to be here for the first time."

When you were a child, did your father tell you about the accident and the tragedy he was part of as a 12-year-old boy?

"My dad died young, when I was only 13. But we heard plenty of stories at home. My father talked about the two planes which took him and the other Jewish children from Tunisia to Norway. He remembered the story well – one aircraft arrived safely and the other, the one he was on, made a stop in Belgium because of a faulty radio. As we know, that was the plane that crashed in the Norwegian forest outside Hurum.

"He talked about being discovered two days later by the two Norwegian hunters and about how he survived in the cold and the darkness – drinking water from a nearby stream, eating apples from the bags and boxes that the children had on the plane and warming himself by the warm parts of the engine and the motor oil that kept on burning. He said that one of the people who found him gave him his coat. I was at the site just now with my son and we were freezing after just 30 minutes. He was there for two whole days."

Do you think your father was traumatized? As a boy, did you feel he was still under the influence of this tragic event?

"No, the Norwegians took care of his rehabilitation very well. They treated him in a wonderful way. They gave him presents and even the king of Norway, who was very touched by his story, gave him a bicycle. When dad came to Israel, he became famous, everybody knew him and his story. When his parents, my grandparents, immigrated to Israel, the Norwegians even built them a home, which is where I grew up."

Rest of the article: https://www.haaretz.com/jewish/2024-11-26/ty-article-magazine/.premium/75-years-ago-this-jewish-boy-was-the-sole-survivor-of-a-disastrous-plane-crash-in-norway/00000193-5e4a-d68e-a1db-fe4ec66f0000

Israel Is Learning How Quickly Democracy Gives Way to Dictatorship

in a global context, the demonstrations in Israel are not only about the reasonableness standard, the standing of the attorney general, or legal advisers in government ministries. They’re an eruption triggered by the actual grave dangers: ignorance, racism, ultranationalism, and unfettered governmental power. They’re about liberalism and solidarity, education and culture, and the Israeli Declaration of Independence’s “freedom, justice and peace” and “complete equality of social and political rights to all its inhabitants.”

Published in Haaretz: https://www.haaretz.com/opinion/2023-08-01/ty-article-opinion/.premium/how-quickly-democracy-gives-way-to-dictatorship/00000189-ada1-db6d-ad9b-fdf91c740000

Over the past several months, numerous essays comparing Israel with other countries have appeared in this newspaper. It started with the obvious comparison to the illiberal democracies in Europe, voicing fears that the country is turning into Hungary or Poland. The comparisons then moved on to Turkey; some interesting exegeses followed about similarities to Afghanistan, Tunisia, the United Arab Emirates, and even Margaret Atwood’s fictional Republic of Gilead. Comparing Israel to other countries always leads to criticism because there is not – and cannot be – absolute congruity. It is a valuable thought experiment, however. Even if Israel doesn’t become a dictatorship, looking outward broadens and expands the debate.

I’ve written in recent years about human rights violations, murderous dictatorships, and ethnic cleansing contain good examples of countries for comparison. They illustrate what can happen in countries without a separation of powers, freedom of the press, and independent courts. I had one conversation with Sviatlana Tsikhanouskaya, who challenged Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko in the country’s last election. Our talk showed that the mere existence of elections does not guarantee democracy.

Although Lukashenko officially defeated her, the world knew the election was fraudulent. After Tsikhanouskaya filed a complaint with the country’s central election commission, the authorities detained her for several hours. She told me the security services then escorted her to the Lithuanian border. After she crossed it, footage reminiscent of a hostage video was released, in which she asked Belarusians to stop demonstrating and accept Lukashenko’s victory.

The stories of three demonstrators who managed to leave reflect what happened to those who defied the request. Valery was viciously beaten, his wrists restrained so tightly he couldn’t feel his hands. Vyacheslav was stripped to his underwear, stuffed into a holding cell with dozens of people, and starved for four days until his trial, which lasted six minutes. Alexey saw people with broken ribs and guards beating a man to death. None of the three men was a political activist. They were a software engineer, an art professor, and the owner of a technology company. They never imagined that they would end up in this kind of situation.

The brutality of the Belarusian police is one example of what happens when the criminal justice system is not answerable to an independent civil authority committed to protecting human rights. There are some citizens in China whom its government wants to eliminate. A network of “psychiatric prisons” has been established for this purpose, where people without mental illness are forcibly admitted after being abducted and having their phones confiscated.

They’re locked in rooms with mentally ill patients, where they’re given psychiatric drugs and electroshock “therapy” while fully conscious. If they resist, they’re tied to a bed, sometimes for an entire night. This is nothing compared to what’s happening in the remote northwestern Xinjiang region, where various ethnic minorities live. Reeducation camps established there combine indoctrination, torture, and medical experiments.

I haven’t mentioned these examples because of any similarity to Israel. I’ve mentioned them because conversations with people who survived and escaped these hells reveal a notable point: how quickly things turned upside down. The survivors were once teachers, physicians, and civil servants who lived entirely everyday lives. Then began the riots, terror attacks, and “lack of governance” – and with them, accusations of extremism, factionalism, and terrorism. Next came the arrival of someone who could “create order,” and order was indeed created.

First, the textbooks were replaced, and newspapers were closed. Afterward came the checkpoints, the facial recognition cameras, and restrictions on technology. Finally, passports were seized, and the borders were closed. The camps appeared then, too. Solely for reeducation, of course. It’s unlikely that Israel would act with such determination and efficiency even against the Palestinians, but this is an important lesson about a government with no oversight – and how quickly the water heats around unaware frogs.

There’s another element that must be considered: dehumanization. Last year, a young Yazidi woman named Leila told me about how she was bought and sold several times by members of ISIS, who abused her for months. She was just one victim of the trafficking of women and organized rape that became a feature of the Syrian Civil War. A few months before that, a young Kurdish man named Bejan told me about a Turkish attack on civilians in northern Syria, the product of decades of dehumanizing the Kurds.

He said he saw many dead and wounded, most full of shrapnel or missing limbs. “The thing that’s hardest to forget,” he said, “was a girl, about 8 years old, who was sitting by her dead brother, trying to wake him up.” Testimonies from Ethiopia’s Tigray Province and the mass slaughter of the Rohingya in Myanmar show to what depths it’s possible to descend: gang rape, execution by gunfire or machete, drowning babies, setting villages on fire along with their inhabitants. These occurred in the second decade of the 21st century. Nothing even close is happening in Israel, but the processes of dehumanization begin long before the overt violence in those countries.

Horrifically enough, the murderers in Myanmar, Ethiopia, and Syria don’t see themselves as grim reapers. On the contrary: in many cases, they’re ordinary people who have convinced themselves they’re the victims. Society disintegrated and descended into violent chaos with the help of racist and ultranationalist ideologies, narratives based on political interests, and social media algorithms.

Some will argue that these are examples from countries that lack a democratic tradition, and no comparison can be made – but the truth is that Israel also lacks a centuries-old parliament or generations of a democratic culture. While it’s neither a Soviet republic nor a failed state in Africa, it’s a young and vulnerable democracy possessing a formidable military, a significant minority population, and the occupation of another nation. These are not starting conditions that provide strong resilience.

That’s why, when looking at the demonstrations in Israel in a global context, you can see that they’re not about the reasonableness standard, the standing of the attorney general, or legal advisers in government ministries. They’re an eruption triggered by the actual grave dangers: ignorance, racism, ultranationalism, and unfettered governmental power. They’re about liberalism and solidarity, education and culture, and the Israeli Declaration of Independence’s “freedom, justice and peace” and “complete equality of social and political rights to all its inhabitants.” The demonstrations are against a choice to break from the enlightened world and walk with eyes wide shut toward countries to which only Israel is willing to sell arms, cyber technology, and “security consulting.” If Israel doesn’t come to its senses, it could follow in their footsteps very soon.