Religious books of Mozes Schenker. Collection
Mozes Schenker was born in Belz, Poland, on 10 November 1896 as the son of Hersz Schenker and Have Fischer. On 28 February 1925, Mozes travelled to Lemberg to collect his passport at the local police prefecture. Two months later he visited Czechoslovakia. The Belgian delegation in Prague provided him with a visa valid for 15 days. Upon Mozes’ arrival in Brussels on 5 May 1925, he stated he was a travelling merchant in need of a permanent residence permit. Mozes also declared he migrated to Belgium to work in the leather workshop of his sister Sali Schenker (born in Belz on 3 November 1894) and his brother-in-law Mayer Leib Kunstler (born in Przegrzany, Poland, on 12 September 1888). Initially, Mozes moved in with his relatives at 258 Chaussée de Mons in Anderlecht, Brussels. However, he then quickly got a job in the leather factory of N. Eilenberg. In June 1926, Mozes relocated to Aarschot, but by the end of the year he settled in Borgerhout, Antwerp. The following years he moved quite a lot within the city perimeter while earning a living as a worker in the diamond industry. In 1931, Mozes travelled to Salford, United Kingdom, where on 4 June he married Rivka alias Rebecca Sufrin (born in Manchester, United Kingdom, on 23 January 1901 as the daughter of the Romanian couple Isidor Sufrin and Adela Apfelbaum). However, Rebecca had to await the arrival of her papers and was only able to join Mozes in Belgium in November 1933. Because of her marriage, she lost her British nationality and took on Mozes’ Polish nationality. The couple was very religious. Apart from working as a diamond clover, Mozes also became a private teacher in Hebrew languages. In 1934 the Schenker-Sufrin family moved to a rental apartment at Karel de Preterlei 168 in Borgerhout, Antwerp, where on 23 October 1934 their first child, a son named Naftali, was born. Rebecca gave birth to three more children: a daughter named Zelia on 13 June 1936, a second son named Israel Samuel on 2 June 1938 and a third son named Markus on 22 March 1940. On 10 May 1940, Nazi-Germany invaded Belgium. During the following two years the German authorities installed 17 anti-Jewish decrees. Mozes obeyed all these orders: he registered himself and his family in the municipal Jewish Register at the end of 1940, he had his ID card stamped with the words “Juif-Jood” in 1941, he became a member of the Association of Jews in Belgium in April 1942 and he bought the yellow star in June 1942 for himself, his wife and two oldest children. Meanwhile, the Schenker family tried to live a normal life. By 1942, oldest son Naftali attended first grade at the religious Jesode Hatora primary school. His sister Zelia had started attending the girls school there in September 1941, while Israel Samuel attended the kindergarten at the grounds as of June 1942. In the summer of 1942, the Belgian Arbeidsambt (National work bureau), in collaboration with the German Werbestelle, claimed Mozes as a forced labourer. It is possible that, around this time, Mozes hid his religious books underneath the attic floor of the neighbouring house. On 15 August 1942 Mozes was sent to northern France where he was forced to work on the Atlantic Wall, together with 2.251 other Jewish men from Belgium. The construction work was supervised by Organisation Todt and Mozes was first put to work by subcontractor Ph. Holzmann, later by subcontractor Leonhard Hanbuch und Sohne. During this time Mozes was detained at a work camp near Bologne sur Mer. During Mozes’ absence British born Rebecca was able to obtain boat tickets for England for herself and her four children. However, while queuing up to board the ship youngest child Markus went missing in the crowd. Having to look for him, Rebecca and her children missed the ship’s departure and were forced to remain in Antwerp. It is unclear if Mozes was still in the labour camp in France when Rebecca was arrested, or that he had been released or was able to escape the camp at Boulogne sur Mer before her arrest. Rebecca was apprehended during the third large anti-Jewish raid in Antwerp. This raid was organised in broad daylight on 11 and 12 September 1942. She was registered alone at the Dossin barracks on 11 September 1942 as person 732 on the deportation list of Transport IX. The children were not with her when she was arrested, but it is unclear where they were at the time. The train carrying Rebecca Sufrin left the Dossin barracks the day after her arrest, on 12 September 1942, and arrived at Auschwitz-Birkenau on 14 September 1942. Rebecca Sufrin did not survive. Mozes Schenker was able to return to Belgium, but the circumstances of his return are unclear. Perhaps he was released from the labour camp because of illness, perhaps he was able to escape or was sent back to Antwerp because his children were unattended after his wife’s arrest. On 9 October 1942 dozens of Jewish families were arrested all over Belgium. Men, women and children were loaded onto waiting trucks. Among those arrested were Mozes and his children. Naftali Schenker was 7 years old at the time, Zelia 6, Samuel 4 and Markus only 2. One of the neighbours recalls how youngest child Markus was taken, wearing only one shoe. The Schenker family was transferred to the Dossin barracks and registered on the deportation list of Transport XIII which left the Dossin barracks the following day, on 10 October 1942, and arrived at Auschwitz-Birkenau on 12 October 1942. Transport XIII stopped at Kosel, several dozen kilometres from Auschwitz, and all able-bodied men were forced out of the train there to be sent to the labour camps surrounding Auschwitz. It is possible that Mozes was separated from his children at Kosel. He might have succumbed in one of the labour camps, but if he stayed with his children he was probably sent together with them to the gas chamber upon arrival. None of the Schenker family members survived Contact Kazerne Dossin Documentation Centre: archives@kazernedossin.eu This collection consists of 9 religious books in Hebrew, with annotations made by owner Mozes Schenker.
- EHRI
- Archief
- be-002157-kd_00523
- Prewar Jewish life
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