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Jewish family learns they are related to Scarlett Johansson

By Curt Schleier

(JTA) – Turns out you don’t actually have to be a guest on Henry Louis Gates’ PBS show “Finding Your Roots” to, well, find your roots.

Gili Rozenfeld, 29, a video editor who lives in Tel Aviv, caught a glimpse of the episode that ran Tuesday on Israeli TV showing actress Scarlett Johansson tearing up when she learns of ancestors who died in the Warsaw Ghetto. Rozenfeld was shocked when she recognized the names of Johansson’s relatives, particularly Zlata Szlamberg, who was 15 at the time she died, and Mandil Szlamberg, who was 17. Those children were siblings of her grandmother, Sara – whose father, Moishe, also perished in the Holocaust.

Rozenfeld immediately dialed her mom, Dina, in California and her big sister, Michal, in New Jersey and told them to watch the episode. They did. “We were overwhelmed that we had any relatives at all,” Michal Rozenfeld told JTA.

On the phone Michal, 42, who lives in Hoboken, said her grandmother told the entire family how she missed everybody and would like to have had family for the holidays. “We knew that they [Zlata and Mandil] existed. We knew that they died in the ghetto.” However, “We didn’t know [for sure] that there was any other family,” she added. “We vaguely knew there was a great-grand-uncle who moved to the United States, but we didn’t have any more information.”

It turns out, however, that the great-grand-uncle was Saul Szlamberg – brother to Michal’s great-grandpa, Moishe, and Johansson’s great-grandfather.

Even before this unexpected brush with fame, the family had an interesting history. Grandma Sara Szlamberg Klopot was the second youngest of 10 siblings in Grojec, Poland. She was in love but and it wasn’t her “turn” to get married. So at age 16 or 17 – Michal isn’t certain – she was sent to Palestine to stay with her sister, Miriam. The move ended the romance – Klopot’s true love died in the war – but ultimately saved her life.

She married Michal’s grandfather, a merchant. The family lived in the Sinai, but was forced to give up its melon farm when Israel signed the peace accord with Egypt. They moved to the Dominican Republic, operating a large farm there, but returned to Israel when it was time for their children to serve in the army. The extended family is now divided between the United States and Israel – and, apparently, Hollywood.

Though their great-grandfathers were brothers, Michal and her family have no plans to contact their A-list cousin. “We don’t want to impose,” she said.

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