

The following is the text of an interview with Jimmy Kolker conducted by Selma Neubauer via email in 2000.
A Trip to Kolki by Jimmy Kolker
I (Selma) recently found Jimmy KOLKER on JGFF-- below are my questions and his answers. He asked that I post his story about the trip to Kolki with his father, Leon.
JK: Thanks for writing. Answers to your questions below
SN: I just saw your name on
JewishGen Family Finder researching KOLKER from Kolk. Are
you from the Baltimore Kolkers? If not, which Kolker family
are you from?
JK: I am originally from St. Louis.
SN: Do you know anything
about Kolk?
JK: My father Leon Kolker (now 83) and I
visited Kolki in 1994. His father Max Kolker was born there
in the 1890's and always said he was from "Kolk". Our name
in Europe was ZUKIN. The place we visited, Kolki, on the
Styr River, between Lutsk and Kovel in what is now western
Ukraine, is definitely the same "Kolk". We showed our
pictures to the only then-surviving relative who was old
enough to remember Kolk, my great uncle Ben Kolker, born in
1900. Uncle Ben immediately recognized some of the landmarks
from the photos. Other than a memorial (which lists no
names) near the mass grave of Jews killed by roving death
squads in 1942, there is no Jewish cemetery in Kolki and no
evidence, such as a synagogue or archive, of the lively
Jewish life which was there prior to World War II. We did
talk to some current residents who had memories of Jewish
families between the wars (when it was part of Poland). The
visit was both thrilling and sad. Kolki is in an attractive,
wooded area, with some small town dignity and charm. People
there had no idea that anyone was carrying the name of the
town around the world as a last name! We were joyfully
received and invited home by some total strangers for long
discussions (through a translator). But no Jews survived the
war there. Life is now quite poor, and clearly efforts were
made by both the Nazis and the communists to erase signs of
Jewish heritage. The lumber industry was very depressed when
we visited, and the two state factories in town had closed.
We left some money for the maintenance of the memorial, but
found no ties to the town my ancestors left 1904-1912. We
did not even know of any relatives still there at the time
of the war, and any traces of them would have been
obliterated.
Jimmy Kolker
Copyright © 2004 Andrew Blumberg
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