Saved for a Reason

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December 28, 2025

5 min read

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Lida lost almost everything in the Holocaust—and built a family that answered destruction with life.

Before the war gave her a new name, Lida Zhivalyuk was Rivka. She was a child growing up near Odessa, surrounded by family and the ordinary rhythms of life, when history tore that world apart.

At eight years old, she did not yet understand war, only how quickly a sense of safety could vanish. Her father, a tailor, was sent away to work in Odessa. Rivka remained with her mother, who quickly understood what danger meant for Jewish families. With instinct and courage, her mother hid her again and again, moving from village to village, sleeping in barns, begging for bread and water. Hunger became a constant part of life, and fear for her safety was familiar.

Lida and Isaac

At one point, Jews were told they could return home if they registered for labor. Rivka and her mother went, hopeful. Her mother sensed something was wrong. She hid Rivka in a haystack and ran. That night, Rivka heard gunshots. Even as a child, she understood that her mother had saved her life.

Eventually, her mother made the most painful decision imaginable. She placed Rivka with a Ukrainian woman she had known before the war. To protect the child, the woman gave her a new name. From that moment on, Rivka was known as Lida, a name she carried for the rest of her life out of gratitude to the woman who took her in and saved her.

Though her name changed, her identity did not. She remained a Jew.

Lida survived ghettos, near executions, freezing nights hidden in haystacks, and moments when death felt unavoidable. There were nights that could have been her last. Once, a soldier unexpectedly ordered children to run moments before they were to be shot. Another time, a young boy stayed awake beside her through a deadly winter night, waking her repeatedly so she would not freeze to death.

Miracles were familiar to Lida. The woman who opened her door to a gravely ill child was a natural healer, and for months she nursed Lida back to health. Human kindness shone during the darkest times.

After years of separation, Lida reunited with her father and brother. The war eventually ended, but her mother and sisters never returned. With nothing but torn clothes and grief, Lida chose life.

In the years that followed, Lida married Isaac, a boy she met right after the war at the age of thirteen. Together they chose to build a future not defined by what had been taken from them. When Lida became a mother, her healing began. Caring for new life allowed her to slowly reclaim what had been broken. Healing came through loving.

Years later, Lida and her husband immigrated to the United States. Having grown up in the Soviet Union, she knew little about Jewish observance. Yet when she sat at a Shabbat table for the first time, something deep inside her stirred. It felt like a missing piece of her soul had returned. Slowly and intentionally, she reclaimed the Jewish life that had nearly been taken from her.

Every morning and night, Lida expresses gratitude to God. She thanks Him for saving her life and for the family that grew from that miracle. She never imagined that from her background, after everything that was lost, she would one day see generations of Jewish life continuing forward.

Lida often speaks to her children, grandchildren, and great grandchildren about unity. She urges them to love one another, to help one another, and to care not only within the family but also for the people around them. Responsibility, she believes, does not end at the front door.

Her favorite words carry her entire life story and belief: "God saved me for a reason".

Lida’s Life Lessons

Lida doesn’t tell her story to dwell on pain. She shares it so future generations can live better, wiser, and more grateful lives. Here are the key insights she wants to convey.

Gratitude

Her friends know that Lida doesn’t tolerate complaining. When someone mentions discomfort, she responds with simple questions: Do you have a home? Are you warm? Did you eat today? She reminds people that gratitude begins with perspective.

Remembering these basics keeps life grounded. For Lida, gratitude isn’t about big moments. It’s about noticing ordinary blessings and treating them with respect every day.

A Positive Perspective

Perspective comes from knowing the difference between hardship and inconvenience. Having lived through real fear and loss, she learned not to give small annoyances too much power. Pause to discern the difference.

Mindfulness

Life is lived one moment at a time. When things feel overwhelming, she reminds people to focus on what is right in front of them. Take the next step. Do what you can today. Peace comes from staying present instead of worrying about what might happen next.

Kindness

Kindness is made of small, simple choices. Lida is alive because people chose to care when it was risky and inconvenient. She reminds her family that kindness can be as simple as a smile, a kind word, a phone call, or noticing someone who needs help. It does not have to be dramatic to matter.

Live with Purpose

Life isn’t about comfort. Shouldering the burden of responsibility – building a family, caring for others, volunteering – is how you create a life brimming with meaning. True wealth is measured by what we build through hardship.

Lida considers herself a wealthy woman, not because of material possessions, but because she is surrounded by children, grandchildren, and many great grandchildren. For her, this is the greatest response to the devastation of the Holocaust.

After 70 years together, she lost her beloved husband. The grief was deep but she continues to live with joy, gratefully celebrating with her family every day she is blessed with.

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Eva Trieger
Eva Trieger
3 months ago

Beautiful, inspiring and well written story. Thank you

Carol
Carol
3 months ago

Wow. What a story. Thank you.

Sarah
Sarah
3 months ago

Beautiful. Just beautiful. Thank you, Lida, for choosing life. Thank you to your mom, A”H, for helping you survive. Thank you for your strength and wisdom. Thank you, Sofya Tamarkin, for writing this.

Sarah
Sarah
3 months ago
Reply to  Sarah

And one more huge thank you: to the non-Jewish Ukrainian woman who took you in.

Sofya tamarkin
Sofya tamarkin
3 months ago
Reply to  Sarah

It is an absolute honor to write about heroes like Lida. A true royalty.

Janice
Janice
3 months ago

It’s a beautiful as well as a very sad story that ends but hopefully and tragically. It’s people like Rivka that serve as an inspiration to people like me to go on living life to the fullest after losing a daughter at a relatively young age. We all know people who completely shut down after such a tragedy. Holocaust survivors are my inspiration.

But I have a question - if Rivka was saved for a reason, then what was the reason that millions of others were butchered? If there was a reason for her survival, then there must be a reason for the opposite.

Sofya tamarkin
Sofya tamarkin
3 months ago
Reply to  Janice

Perhaps this might open a little door to healing...https://aish.com/the-holocaust-why/

Leah Kalichman
Leah Kalichman
3 months ago

Very special neshama-soul. Read this and will try to print out whole article of this very wise and sensitive woman. She has taught me a lot. Will look at this article as a reminder of how to think and act. I am the youngest child of 2 Holocaust survivors. One was a sole survivor : Yoske Kalichman of the Polish shtetl Yizofov. They murdered my entire father’s family. I am named Leah Kalichman after my father’s oldest sister. She was a mere 22 years old, when the German Nazi beasts and my father’s Polish classmate a collaborator slaughtered her in the outskirts of Yizofov . My middle aunt Faigy Kalichman was 16 years old. My youngest aunt Kayla Kalichman was 8 years old. My grandmother Chana Kalichman was in her 40s. My grandfather Moshe Kalichman was murdered later while davening .

Sofya tamarkin
Sofya tamarkin
3 months ago
Reply to  Leah Kalichman

May their memory be a blessing!

René
René
3 months ago

Amazing, it really talks about the purpose of life, difficult to imitate.

Shoshana
Shoshana
3 months ago

Beautiful and inspiring story, so simply and beautifully told! Yasher koach, Sofya!

Sofya tamarkin
Sofya tamarkin
3 months ago
Reply to  Shoshana

Thank you for your kind words

Rivka Orlin
Rivka Orlin
3 months ago

She chose life! Am Yisrael chai!

Deborah Litwack
Deborah Litwack
3 months ago

Beautiful woman and story. 🙏🏻til 120!

Barbara S
Barbara S
3 months ago

So inspiring; her story (and others like it) should keep on being told.
Just as a little light dispels a measure of darkness, each truth quashes bold-faced lies and denial.

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