Every day, he visits Holocaust survivors' homes, brings them food and medications, and just listens. Adam Mahdi, who escaped the horrors of war in Sudan, sees his work with survivors as a real mission.

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Mahdi, a refugee from Darfur, got acquainted with Holocaust survivors when he began working at a delicatessen in Kfar Shmaryahu.
"As part of my job, I would make deliveries, and that's when I found out that the owner, Shlomo Roded, regularly sends food to the survivors," he says. "Then, after watching a film about them on television, I decided to join an association for Holocaust survivors myself."
He has been active in the association for several months now. After losing several of his family members in war, he sees his work with the survivors as a real mission.
Well done to you, sir.
- 5 votes
Antisemitic drivel from a frustrated, soon-to-be-banned-again-rereg, deleted.
Shabbat Shalom to one and all.
- 3 votes
In some ways, the Jews and the South Sudanese have much in common.
- 4 votes
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