World’s oldest man dead in Israel at 113: media

August 12, 2017 05:00 pm | Updated 05:00 pm IST - Jerusalem:

This file photo taken on January 21, 2016 shows Yisrael Kristal, the world's oldest man, sitting in his home in the Israeli city of Haifa.
Kristal, who survived the holocaust, turned 113 years old on September 15, 2016. His family say he was born in Poland on September 15, 1903, three months before the Wright brothers took the first aeroplane flight.

This file photo taken on January 21, 2016 shows Yisrael Kristal, the world's oldest man, sitting in his home in the Israeli city of Haifa. Kristal, who survived the holocaust, turned 113 years old on September 15, 2016. His family say he was born in Poland on September 15, 1903, three months before the Wright brothers took the first aeroplane flight.

Israeli Holocaust survivor Yisrael Kristal, certified last year by Guinness World Records as the world’s oldest man, died today aged 113, Israeli media reported.

Since he was an observant Jew, his family could not be reached this evening, the onset of the Jewish sabbath.

“Yisrael Kristal... died on Friday a month before his 114th birthday,” Haaretz daily reported in its online edition.

News site Ynet said he was survived by two children, 9 grandchildren and 32 great-grandchildren.

Kristal, originally from Zarnow in what is now Poland, was born on September 15, 1903 — three months before the Wright brothers’ first successful powered airplane flight.

Guinness World Records recognised him as the world’s oldest man in March 2016.

In September he celebrated his Bar Mitzvah after a century-long delay.

Usually marked at 13 for boys and 12 or 13 for girls — a Bat Mitzvah in that case — it marks the transition into someone responsible for his or her actions.

Kristal was unable to celebrate his Bar Mitzvah in 1916 because his mother had died three months earlier and his father was a soldier in the Russian army at the time of World War I.

“My father is religious and has prayed every morning for 100 years, but he has never had his Bar Mitzvah,” his daughter Shula Koperstoch told AFP last year.

After World War I, Kristal moved to Lodz where he worked in the family confectionary factory, married and had two children.

But his life was disrupted when the Jewish quarter of the city became a ghetto under Nazi occupation during World War II and Kristal was sent to the infamous Nazi death camp Auschwitz—Birkenau.

Around 1.1 million people, most of them European Jews, perished in the camp between 1940 and 1945 before it was liberated by Soviet forces.

His wife and two children died but Kristal survived, weighing just 37 kilos at the end of the war.

He then moved to Israel, where he remarried and opened a sweet shop.

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