Difference between revisions of "Kovno Boys"

From 4 Enoch: : The Online Encyclopedia of Second Temple Judaism, and Christian and Islamic Origins
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[[Moshe Kravitz]], [[Daniel Chanoch]], [[Moshe Shoham]], [[Dan Labanovski]], [[Meir Gecht]], [[Yaakov Viz]], [[Zundel Gordon]], [[Shlomo Levin]], [[Kalman Arieli]]
#REDIRECT [[Category:Kovno Boys (subject)]]
 
 
File:Kovno Children.jpg|500px
 
 
In July 1944 the Kovno Ghetto was liquidated. All remaining inhabitans, including children were sent by train to Stutthof, Poland. There the women (and girls and smaller children) were separated from the men (and older boys). While the women were taken off, the men remained on the train and were transported to Landsberg, Germany.
 
At Landsberg, a group of 130 boys (age 7 to 14) was separated from the adults. They were joined by one of the boys' older brother, the 17th-year-old [[Wolf Galperin]]. They were sent to Dachau and after seven days they  to Auschwitz.
 
Throughout the entire trip from Landsberg to Auschwitz, the children consolidated into an orderly group. The children attributed this consolidation to Wolf Galperin. From Dachau on everyone related to Galperin as the leader of the group.
 
The group of 131 children arrived in Auschwitz on August 1, 1944. They were not immediately sent to the gas chambers. Consequently they were sent to have a number tattooed on their arms with sequential numbers B-2774 to B-2902 (129) and then they were taken to Lager [camp] A, the transit camp at Birkenau. Two selections were carried out in September 1944, one on the eve of Rosh Hashanah and the second on Yom Kippur. 90 members of the original group were removed from the camp and never seen again. Wolf Galperin himself was also taken away, surviving in forced labor and death marches until he was liberated on May 2, 1945. Thirty-nine boys were left alive after the selections, and were sent to forced labor in Lager D, another section of Birkenau.
 
Then, on January 18, 1945 the Death March began.
 
Thirty-seven of the boys in the group arrived at Mauthausen near the end of January 1945. In contrast to the other camp inmates, the children of the group were not put to work. During their time there they were transferred to several places within the camp. They remained there until the middle of April 1945; at that time they were taken on another march to Gunskirchen, where they remained until Liberation.
 
* See [https://collections.ushmm.org/search/catalog/pa1142980 USHMM picture]

Latest revision as of 10:52, 15 September 2020