‘Deep joy and strength’: 96-year-old Holocaust survivor is Israel’s newest immigrant
Eight decades after surviving the Auschwitz death camp during the Holocaust, 96-year-old Charlotte Roth officially became an Israeli citizen this week.
After building her life in Cleveland, Ohio, ever since she arrived in the United States as a refugee shortly after the war, the matriarch of four children, nine grandchildren, 26 great-grandchildren, and 11 great-great-grandchildren is now based in Israel’s coastal city of Netanya.
“I usually come twice a year to visit my family,” Roth told The Times of Israel. “Now, I decided to stay here to be with them.”
After she arrived in September for the Rosh Hashanah holiday, Roth began the immigration process through the Nefesh B’Nefesh organization, aided by her granddaughter. The paperwork was finished in about three months, and on Wednesday, Roth celebrated her aliya (Hebrew for immigration) with her family at the Nefesh B’Nefesh office in Tel Aviv.
Roth first visited Israel in 1988, and she recalls climbing Masada, the mountain fortress in Israel’s Negev, at age 81 on foot. So far, she has had five great-grandchildren serve in the IDF.
“After what I’ve been through, I was always afraid of seeing soldiers carrying guns,” Roth said. “But in Israel, I’m proud to see them.”
Roth was born in Czechoslovakia into a large and close-knit family, where “family was everything.” But in 1944, when she was 14, her world was shattered.
That Passover, her family was forced into a ghetto, and weeks later, right before the Shavuot holiday, they were deported to Auschwitz in a cattle car. Upon arrival on the second day of Shavuot, Roth was separated from her mother and siblings during the selection process. It was the last time she saw them.
Roth was selected for forced labor due to her skill at sewing, a talent that likely saved her life. She survived Auschwitz, a death march, and imprisonment in another camp before the war ended in 1945. But when she returned to her childhood village after the liberation, she learned that none of her immediate family were alive. She was also devastated to hear that her father, who had also survived the war, had taken his life just days earlier after hearing, falsely, that no one else in the family had survived the atrocities.
From the remnants of her former life, Roth kept just one possession: a ring engraved with the initials “IS,” for Ilanka Shvartz, the name she was born with before the war. She continues to wear it to this day.
In the years that followed, Roth rebuilt her life from nothing. As a teenager in a Displaced Persons camp, she met her future husband. They married there and welcomed their first child before immigrating to the United States, where restrictive immigration policies required her to take a new passport, a new name, and in many ways, a new identity.
Roth still has her home in Cleveland, and some of her children still live there. She has plenty more family celebrations to look forward to.
“I have a nine-year-old great-grandson whose family remains in Cleveland, and he says we are going to celebrate his bar mitzva and my 100th birthday together here,” she smiled.
In Israel, Roth spends most of her time as she was taught growing up, with her family. She currently has two children, two grandchildren, 15 great-grandchildren, and nine great-great-grandchildren in the country — with one more on the way. She exercises regularly and likes to walk, but insists that she eats whatever she wants.
“It is a truly wonderful moment in my life to be able to call myself Israeli, a citizen of our Jewish state,” Roth said. “Walking these streets with five generations of my family fills my heart with deep joy and strength, especially when I see Israeli soldiers and feel safety and pride where there was once fear.”
If so, we have a request.
Every day during the past two years of war and rising global anti-Zionism and antisemitism, our journalists kept you abreast of the most important developments that merit your attention. Millions of people rely on ToI for fact-based coverage of Israel and the Jewish world.
We care about Israel - and we know you do too. So we have an ask for this new year of 2026: express your values by joining The Times of Israel Community, an exclusive group for readers like you who appreciate and financially support our work.
We’re really pleased that you’ve read X Times of Israel articles in the past month.
You clearly find our careful reporting valuable, in a time when facts are often distorted and news coverage often lacks context.
Your support is essential to continue our work. We want to continue delivering the professional journalism you value, even as the demands on our newsroom have grown dramatically since October 7.
So today, please consider joining our reader support group, The Times of Israel Community. For as little as $6 a month you'll become our partners while enjoying The Times of Israel AD-FREE, as well as accessing exclusive content available only to Times of Israel Community members.
Thank you,David Horovitz, Founding Editor of The Times of Israel
1 Netanyahu: If Iran attacks Israel, it will face ‘a response they can’t even imagine’
2 Iran insists on ‘right’ to enrichment as US builds biggest Mideast force since 2003
3 Jerusalem rabbi gets 20 months for using fake ID to dupe 12 women into sleeping with him
4 In freewheeling Board of Peace address, Trump reaffirms preference for strongmen, young women
5 Hamas tightens grip in Gaza, increasing skepticism of Trump’s peace plan
6 Starmer said unwilling to grant US permission to use UK military bases for Iran strike
7 Trump warns Iran of ‘bad things’ if no deal made, sets deadline of 10-15 days
8 Trump announces $17 billion in pledges for Gaza at inaugural Board of Peace confab
immigration to Israel
