ZAKA divers at Danube River
ZAKA divers at Danube RiverZAKA

Nearly 75 years after tens of thousands of Hungarian Jews were shot at the banks of the River Danube in Budapest in 1944, ZAKA Search and Rescue divers are about to begin searching the river in an attempt to retrieve their bones for a full Jewish burial. This, after three years of protracted international negotiations by ZAKA representatives to receive permission for the historic search and recovery mission, including requests made at the highest level of government. The decision to allow ZAKA divers to commence work was announced following a meeting this week between Interior Minister Aryeh Deri in Budapest with his Hungarian counterpart.

Over the decades, there have been no attempts to locate and retrieve the bones of the Holocaust victims who fell in their thousands into the river as a result of the mass executions by the Arrow Cross party members.

The ZAKA Search and Rescue organization, known for its work around the world to bring victims of terror attacks and mass casualty incidents to full Jewish burial, took upon itself this historic task of retrieving and finally burying the bones in accordance with Jewish law. The movement of the water and boats, natural decay, and even repair work on the bridges over the Danube all add to the logistical challenge of the project.

The ZAKA divers will be assisted in their search by a recently-purchased sonar device that can descend to a depth of 150 meters and scan within 130 meters, quickly identifying objects and transferring the information and exact location to the device operator.

Hungarian Jewish Federation (EMIH) head Rabbi Shlomo Kovesh, appointed by the Hungarian government as project liaison, contacted ZAKA last week to advise that all necessary approvals were in place. As a result, an initial delegation of ZAKA divers headed by ZAKA Special Units commander Haim Outmezgine is currently in Budapest and plans to begin searching the river tomorrow with the help of the ZAKA sonar device.

Interior Minister Aryeh Deri, who met with the ZAKA divers on the banks of the Danube and expressed his gratitude for their initiative and the difficult logistical operation they are about to embark on, said: “I'm pleased that the Hungarian Interior Minister has promised assistance, support, and technological equipment for the benefit of this project. I hope the ZAKA divers will be able to bring these holy martyrs to full Jewish burial.”

ZAKA Chairman Yehuda Meshi-Zahav, who has personally been involved in this project over the last three years, said: “This is the final act of kindness we can do for these holy martyrs who were murdered sanctifying G-d. ZAKA sees this as a mission of the highest order and value, to do everything we can to finally bring them to burial in accordance with Jewish law.”

Danube River
Danube RiveriStock