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Eliezer Eisenshmidt (b. Lunna 1921); Was on the transport that left
Kelbasin on Dec. 5, 1942; worked in the Sonderkommando; escaped from
the "death march" on Jan. 19, 1945, arrived in Israel in 1946; resides
in Givatayim.
Eliezer Welbel (b. Lunna 1916, d. Chicago 2006); Served in the Polish
army and was taken prisoner at Biala Podlaska when WW2 began; escaped
and returned to Lunna, which was then under Soviet rule; was sent by
the Soviets to prison in Minsk; returned to Lunna when Minsk was
overrun by the Germans in June 1941; was on the transport that left
Kelbasin on Dec. 5, 1942; worked in the Sonderkomando; was on the
"death march" that left Auschwitz on Jan. 18, 1945; arrived in
Mauthausen Jan. 25, 1945; liberated from camp Gusen 2 (a branch of
Mauthausen) on May 5, 1945; in 1947 arrived in Israel and a few years
later moved to Chicago.
Nathan-Nisel Lewin (b. Lunna 1914, d. Argentina during 1970s); Was on
the transport that left Kelbasin on Dec. 5, 1942; worked in the
Sonderkommando; was on the "death march" that left Auschwitz on Jan.
18, 1945; arrived in Mauthausen Jan. 25, 1945; liberated from camp
Ebensee (a branch of Mauthausen) on May 6, 1945; after the war moved
to Argentina.
Aizik Nowik (b. Lunna 1918, d. Argentina ca. 1980); Was on the
transport that left Kelbasin on Dec. 5, 1942; worked in the
Sonderkommando; was on the "death march" that left Auschwitz on Jan.
18, 1945; arrived in Mauthausen Jan. 25, 1945; liberated from camp
Ebensee on May 6, 1945; after the war moved to Argentina.
Berl Becker (b. Lunna 1896, d. US, year?); Was on the transport that
left Kelbasin on Dec. 5, 1942; worked in the Sonderkommando; was on
the "death march" that left Auschwitz on Jan. 18, 1945; arrived in
Mauthausen Jan. 25, 1945; liberated from camp Ebensee on May 6, 1945;
after the war moved to the United States.
Aron Leibowicz (b. Wolpa 1899, d. Canada, year?); Resided in Lunna
before the war; was on the transport that left Kelbasin on Dec. 5,
1942; worked in the Sonderkommando; was on the "death march" that left
Auschwitz on Jan. 18, 1945; arrived in Mauthausen Jan. 25, 1945;
liberated from camp Ebensee on May 6, 1945; after the war moved to
Israel and resided in Bnei Brak; later moved to Canada.
Tewel Gisser (b. Wolpa ca.1920, d. US ca. 1950?); Resided in Lunna
before the war; was on the transport that left Kelbasin on Dec. 5,
1942; worked in the Sonderkommando; was on the "death march" that left
Auschwitz on Jan. 18, 1945; arrived in Mauthausen Jan. 25, 1945;
liberated from camp Ebensee on May 6, 1945; after the war apparently
moved to the United States. All traces of him were lost after he
arrived in the United States.
Aron Welbel (b. Lunna 1924); Eliezer Welbel's brother; was on the
transport that left Kelbasin on Dec. 5, 1942; worked in Auschwitz,
among other things, digging holes and sewage canals; was on the "death
march" that left Auschwitz on Jan. 18, 1945; arrived in Sachsenhausen
Concentration Camp and then sent to Dachau (Germany); liberated April
29, 1945; after the war moved to Chicago.
Moni Berenhaus (b. Lunna 1916, d. US 1995); Was on the transport that
left Kelbasin on Dec. 5, 1942; worked in Canada Unit; was on the
"death march" that left Auschwitz on Jan. 18, 1945; arrived in
Mauthausen Jan. 25, 1945; liberated May 6, 1945; after the war moved
to the United States and resided in New York.
Gerszon Gisser (b. Lunna 1912-14, d. US Nov. 9, 2002); Son of Yudel
Gisser and Doba nee Yellinovitch (who was born in Volpa). Brother of
Motel Gisser. Sole survivor of his family; served in the Polish army
when the war began, stationed near Suwalki; was taken prisoner in
Sept. 1939 and was in, among other camps, Stalag 1B near Koenigsberg,
then taken, with other Jewish war prisoners, to Konska Wola, Biala
Podlask, Budzyn (near Maidanek), Plaszow?, Flossenburg, and possibly
other camps; was liberated on May 8 or 9, 1945 from Litomerice (Leitneritz)
near Teresenstadt, Czechoslovakia, after a forced march. After the
war, spent a year in 1945-46 in Poland, and then was in Displaced
Persons (DP) camps, including Deggendorf and Amberg, and emigrated to
the United States in 1949.
Nochum-Yossel Davidowicz (b. Lunna 1921); His elder brother Zebulon (Zavel),
who served in the Red Army, came back to Lunna before the Germans
occupied the town, warning him to flee. He was caught by the Nazis
while attempting to flee, and taken to the Grodno Ghetto; in 1942
(before the mass deportation of the Jews of Lunna to Auschwitz) was
sent to Auschwitz and was there until April 1945; worked for the
IG-Farben factory at Monowitz (Auschwitz III); was on a "death march"
to the North Sea; was liberated by the US Army on May 2, 1945.
Chana (Rochkin) Sedranski (b. Lunna ca. 1904, d. Israel 1970s.); Left
Lunna sometime before the war and arrived in Grodno; was in Grodno
Ghetto from November 1941 to March 1943; then in KZ Bialystok until
October 1943; then in Stutthof camp Nr. 201; eventually deported to
Auschwitz, and was in the women’s camp in Auschwitz; was on the "death
march" that left Auschwitz on Jan. 18, 1945; arrived in Ravensbruck
women's Concentration Camp, Germany; after war was in various DP
camps; arrived in Israel in 1950 and married to Sedranski from
Wolpa. |
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Record of Chana Rochkin
(source: Yad Vashem)
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Etel (Berachowicz) Kossowska-Zinger (b. Lunna ca. 1910, d.
Israel, year?); she married Aaron Kossowski, son of Shlomo and Elka,
and they had a son named Shlomo. Before WW2 they lived in Bialystok.
During the war they were in the Ghetto in Bialystok. Aaron and his son
Shlomo perished in the Holocaust. Etel was in the women’s camp in
Auschwitz; she was on the "death march" that left Auschwitz on Jan.
18, 1945, then in Bergen-Belsen camp, Germany, which was liberated by
the British on April 1945. After the war she was in various DP camps.
In 1949 she came to Israel and remarried to Zinger (first name
currently unknown).
Etel wrote (in Yiddish) an article "The Destruction of Lunna-Volie" (Grodner
Apklangen, 1949).
Fate of other Jews of Lunna
Nachman Replanski (b. Lunna ca. 1904, d. US 1980s) ; Served in the Red
Army; Shortly after the war ended returned to Lunna in Russian uniform
and met a gentile man (name currently unknown) from Zaleski (near Wola)
whom he knew who had collected photos left by Jewish families after
they had been expelled from the Wola Ghetto; he received several
photos from this gentile man; after discharge from the Russian Army,
he moved to the US and resided in New York; Later he moved to Miami,
Florida.
Rivka Lev (b. ca. 1922 Lunna); Daughter of M. Lev, a cap-maker
from Lunna; during the war she was in Russia, and in this way
survived; after the war she moved to Warsaw and married to a Christian
man. It could be
that she is still alive in Poland (current family-name unknown).
Benjamin ("Yomke") Win (b. Lunna ca. 1896, d. Israel year?); before
the war he moved with his wife to Shchuchin (Scucyn); during the war
he was in Russia and in this way survived; after the war moved to
Brazil and then to Argentina where a brother of his resided; in the
late 1960s emigrated to Israel.
Abraham Friedman Ajzikovich (b. 1902 Lunna, d. Moscow); Executed
sometime from the 1930s to the early 1950s in Moscow during Stalin's
reign of terror.
Aba Suchowlanski (b. Skidel 1897); Resided in Lunna before the war;
was on the transport that left Kelbasin on Dec. 5, 1942; worked in the
Sonderkommando; was on the "death march" that left Auschwitz on Jan.
18, 1945; arrived in Mauthausen Jan.25, 1945; one day in March 1945,
he went to the medical clinic in Mauthausen and did not come back to
the block; his fate is unknown.
Zebulon (Zavel) Davidowicz (b. Lunna ca. 1918); Served in the Red
Army; all traces of him were lost.
Israel Friedman (b. Wola ca. 1915), son of Aron and Golda Friedman and
his cousin Israel Friedman (b. Lunna ca. 1916), son of Chaykel and
Chana Friedman; Both cousins left Lunna sometime during the 1930s and
went to Russia for the purpose of either studying or looking for work.
Before the outbreak of the war, they sent letters to their family in
Lunna-Wola from Magnitogorsk, Chelybinsk Oblast. According to
Eisenshmidt, they were not in the Wola Ghetto and therefore it is
likely that they did not return to Poland but stayed in Russia during
the war. All traces of the two cousins were lost in Russia. Pictured
below is a photo taken in 1938 showing Israel, son of Aron Friedman.
It is likely that one of the two unidentified young men is Israel, son
of Chaykel Friedman. If anyone has any idea how to find out the fate
of these two persons, please contact us.
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Israel, son of Aron Friedman (standing), & two unidentified young men (1938, Magnitogorsk, Soviet Union).
(From the collection of Libe Friedman-Ahuva Glick)
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Compiled by
Ruth Marcus & Aliza Yonovsky Created
May 2007
Updated by rLb, March 2020
Copyright © 2007 Ruth Marcus
All the photos are presented
by courtesy of the families and are not allowed to be reproduced
without their permission. |
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