Struma disaster
The Struma disaster was the sinking on 24 February 1942 of the ship which had been trying to take nearly 800 Jewish refugees from the Axis member Romania to Mandatory Palestine. She was a small iron-hulled ship of only and had been built in 1867 as a steam-powered schooner but had recently been re-engined with an unreliable second-hand diesel engine. Struma was only long, had a beam of only and a draught of only but an estimated 781 refugees and 10 crew were crammed into her.
Strumas diesel engine failed several times between her departure from Constanța on the Black Sea on 12 December 1941 and her arrival in Istanbul on 15 December. She had to be towed by a tug boat to leave Constanța and to enter Istanbul. On 23 February 1942, with her engine still inoperative and her refugee passengers aboard, Turkish authorities towed Struma from Istanbul through the Bosporus out to the coast of Şile, in North Istanbul. Within hours, on the morning of 24 February, the torpedoed her, killing 781 refugees and 10 crew, which made it the Black Sea's largest exclusively-civilian naval disaster of World War II. Until recently, the number of victims had been estimated at 768, but the current figure is the result of a recent study of six different passenger lists. Only one person aboard, the 19-year-old David Stoliar, survived.
Voyage and detention
Struma had been built as a luxury yacht but was 74 years old. In the 1930s, she had been relegated to carrying cattle on the Danube River under the flag of convenience of Panama. The Mossad LeAliyah Bet intended to use her as a refugee ship to sail to British-controlled Palestine but shelved the plan after German forces entered Bulgaria. Her Greek owner, Jean D. Pandelis, instead contacted Revisionist Zionists in Romania. The New Zionist Organization and a Zionist youth movement, Betar, began to make arrangements, but an argument over the choice of passengers left the planning in the hands of Betar.Apart from the crew and 60 Betar youth, there were over 700 passengers, who had paid large fees to board the ship. The exact number is not certain, but a collation of six separate lists produced a total of 791 passengers and 10 crew. Passengers were told they would be sailing on a renovated boat with a short stop in Istanbul to collect their Palestinian immigration visas. Romanian Prime Minister Ion Antonescu's government approved of the voyage.
Each refugee was allowed to take of luggage. Romanian customs officers took many of the refugees' valuables and other possessions, along with food that they had brought with them. The passengers were not permitted to see the vessel before the day of the voyage. They found that she was a wreck with only two lifeboats. Below decks, Struma had dormitories with bunks for 40 to 120 people in each. The berths were bunks on which passengers were to sleep four abreast, with a width of for each person.
On 12 December 1941, the day of her sailing, Strumas engine failed and so a tug towed her out of the port of Constanța. Since the waters off Constanța were mined, a Romanian vessel escorted her clear of the minefield. She then drifted overnight while her crew tried vainly to start her engine. She transmitted distress signals, and on 13 December, the Romanian tug returned. The tug's crew said they would not repair Strumas engine unless they were paid. The refugees had no money after they had bought their tickets and leaving Romania and so they gave all their wedding rings to the tugboatmen, who then repaired the engine. Struma then got under way, but by 15 December, her engine had failed again and so she was towed into the port of Istanbul, Turkey.
There, she remained at anchor, while British diplomats and Turkish officials negotiated over the fate of the passengers. The Turkish government of Prime Minister Refik Saydam refused to accept Jewish refugees into Turkey, with Saydam once stating that his country "would not accept masses of Jews, nor individual Jews who were oppressed in other countries." Turkish officials informed their British counterparts that they would not allow Strumas passengers to land unless Britain permitted them to emigrate to Palestine. As the passengers were attempting to illegally immigrate to Palestine in violation of the restrictions laid out in the White Paper of 1939, British diplomats informed the Turkish government no such permission would be given. While she was detained in Istanbul, Struma ran short of food. Soup was cooked twice a week, and supper was typically an orange and some peanuts for each person. At night, each child was issued a serving of milk.
Following weeks of negotiation, the British agreed to honour the expired Palestinian immigration visas that a few passengers possessed, allowing them to travel to Palestine overland. With the help of several sympathetic residents of Istanbul, a few passengers managed to escape into Turkey. One woman, Madeea Solomonovici, was admitted to an Istanbul hospital after she had miscarried. On 12 February, British officials agreed that passengers aged between 11 and 16 would be given Palestinian visas, but a dispute occurred over their transportation to Palestine. According to some researchers, a total of 9 passengers disembarked, and the remaining 782 and 10 crew stayed on the ship. Others believe that there had only been 782 passengers initially, with only Solomonovici being allowed to leave the ship.
Towing to sea and sinking
The Anglo-Turkish negotiations reached an impasse, as neither side would relent. On 23 February 1942, a small group of Turkish policemen tried to board the ship, but the refugees resisted their attempts to board. A larger force of about 80 police officers subsequently surrounded Struma with motor boats, and after about half an hour of resistance managed to board the ship. Despite weeks of work by Turkish engineers, the engine would not start, and Struma was unable to move without being towed. The police detached the ship's anchor and attached her to a tug, which towed her through the Bosporus and out into the Black Sea.As she was towed along the Bosporus, many passengers hung signs over the sides that read "SAVE US" in English and Hebrew that were visible to those who lived on the banks of the strait. The Turkish authorities abandoned the ship in the Black Sea, about north of the Bosporus, where she drifted helplessly. On the morning of 24 February there was a huge explosion, and the ship sank. Decades later, it was revealed that the ship had been torpedoed by the Soviet Navy submarine, which had also sunk the Turkish vessel Çankaya the evening before.
Struma sank quickly, and many people were trapped below decks and drowned. Many others aboard survived the sinking and clung to pieces of wreckage, but for hours, no rescue came, and all but one of them died from drowning or hypothermia. Of the estimated 791 people killed, more than 100 were children. Strumas First Officer Lazar Dikof and the 19-year-old refugee David Stoliar clung to a cabin door, which was floating in the sea. The First Officer died overnight, but Turks in a rowing boat rescued Stoliar the next day. He was the only survivor.
Turkey held Stoliar in custody for many weeks. Simon Brod, a Jewish businessman from Istanbul who during World War II helped rescue several Jewish refugees who reached Turkey, arranged for Stoliar to be fed during his two-month incarceration. Upon his release, Brod brought Stoliar home and provided him with fresh clothes, a suitcase and a train ticket to Aleppo after the British government had given him papers to go to Palestine. Stoiliar later joined the British Army and served in the Eighth Army during the North African campaign.
Aftermath
On 9 June 1942, Lord Wedgwood, a prominent Zionist, opened the debate in the House of Lords by alleging that the British government had reneged on its commitment towards the establishment of a Jewish homeland in Palestine and urged for the mandate over Palestine to be transferred to the United States. He stated during his speech: "I hope yet to live to see those who sent the Struma cargo back to the Nazis hung as high as Haman cheek by jowl with their prototype and Führer, Adolf Hitler". In response to the disaster, the Anglo-Jewish poet Emanuel Litvinoff, who was then serving in the Pioneer Corps, wrote a poem mourning the sinking of Struma, which included the lines:
Today my khaki is a badge of shame,
Its duty meaningless; my name
Is Moses and I summon plague to Pharaoh.
Today my mantle is Sorrow and O
My crown is Thorn. I sit darkly with the years
And centuries of years, bowed by my heritage of tears.
For many years, there were competing theories about the explosion that sank Struma. In 1964, a German historian discovered that Shch-213 had fired a torpedo, which sank the ship. That was later confirmed from several other Soviet sources. The submarine had been acting under secret orders to sink all neutral and enemy shipping entering the Black Sea to reduce the flow of strategic material to Nazi Germany. Frantz and Collins call the sinking of Struma the "largest naval civilian disaster of the war". Greater numbers of civilians perished in other maritime disasters of the war, including MV Wilhelm Gustloff, SS Cap Arcona and Jun'yō Maru, but there were also military personnel aboard those ships when they sunk.
On 26 January 2005, the Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon made a speech to the Knesset in which he stated:
Wrecks
Struma
In July 2000, a Turkish diving team found a wreck on the sea floor in about the right place and announced that it had found Struma. A team, led by a British technical diver and a grandson of one of the victims, Greg Buxton, later studied that and several other wrecks in the area but could not positively identify any as Struma since the wreck that had been found by the Turks was far too large.On 3 September 2000, a ceremony was held at the site to commemorate the tragedy. It was attended by 60 relatives of Struma victims, representatives of the Jewish community of Turkey, the Israeli ambassador and prime minister's envoy and British and American delegates, but David Stoliar chose to not attend for family reasons.