The world’s officially oldest man is to finally have his bar mitzvah at the age of 113 – a century after he missed it due to the outbreak of World War One.
Yisrael Kristal, who lives in Israel, will celebrate the Jewish coming-of-age ceremony with family and friends in a synagogue in Haifa, his daughter said.
Shulamit Kuperstoch said it would be a “corrective experience”.
Mr Kristal was born in Poland in 1903 and survived being in the Auschwitz death camp during World War Two.
He was recognised by Guinness World Record as the world’s oldest man in March this year.
Mr Kristal turned 113 on Thursday, according to the Gregorian calendar. He will mark his bar mitzvah in two weeks’ time, coinciding with his birthday according to the Hebrew date.
Ms Kuperstoch told the BBC her father would perform the traditional bar mitzvah rituals, including putting on phylacteries (small boxes containing biblical verses worn on the head and arm) and saying blessings over the Torah (Jewish holy book).
Mr Kristal should have had his bar mitzvah in 1916, but his mother had died three years earlier and his father had been drafted into the Russian army.
He was cared for by an uncle and after WW1 moved to the Polish city of Lodz to work in the family confectionery business.
After the invasion of Poland by Nazi Germany in 1939, Mr Kristal and his family were moved into the Lodz ghetto.
His two children died there and Mr Kristal and his wife Chaja Feige Frucht were sent to Auschwitz in 1944, where his wife was murdered.
Mr Kristal survived and emigrated to Israel in 1950 with his second wife and their son.