One Man's Story...
Isadore Frenkiel
Born: Gabin, Poland 1898
Isadore and his wife, Sossia, had seven sons. The Frenkiels, a religious
Jewish family, lived in a one-room apartment in a town near Warsaw called Gabin.
Like most Jewish families in Gabin, they lived in the town's center, near the
synagogue. Isadore was a self-employed cap maker, selling his caps at the town's
weekly market. He also fashioned caps for the police and military.
1933-39: Isadore felt the pinch of the Depression, but although business was
poor, he was able to provide for his family. Shortly after the Germans invaded
Poland on September 1, 1939, they occupied Gabin. Ten people were shot in the
street; others, such as doctors and teachers, were taken away. The Germans
rounded up the Jewish men and held them in the marketplace while soldiers doused
the synagogue with gasoline and set it on fire.
1940-42: In 1941 the Frenkiels heard rumors that the Germans were evacuating
some towns and deporting the Jews to a death camp. A cousin visited the family
after escaping from a transport and said the rumors were true. "They put you in
trucks, gas you, then throw your body into a burning pit," he said. Isadore's
3-year-old son ran to his mother crying, "Will they burn me, too?" Isadore urged
his cousin to tell the Jewish elders. He met with them, but they did not believe
his story and told him to leave town.
In May 1942 Gabin's Jews were deported to the Chelmno death camp. Isadore,
Sossia and four of their sons were placed in a sealed van and asphyxiated with
exhaust fumes.
*Story courtesy of ushmm.org
Born: Gabin, Poland 1898
Isadore and his wife, Sossia, had seven sons. The Frenkiels, a religious
Jewish family, lived in a one-room apartment in a town near Warsaw called Gabin.
Like most Jewish families in Gabin, they lived in the town's center, near the
synagogue. Isadore was a self-employed cap maker, selling his caps at the town's
weekly market. He also fashioned caps for the police and military.
1933-39: Isadore felt the pinch of the Depression, but although business was
poor, he was able to provide for his family. Shortly after the Germans invaded
Poland on September 1, 1939, they occupied Gabin. Ten people were shot in the
street; others, such as doctors and teachers, were taken away. The Germans
rounded up the Jewish men and held them in the marketplace while soldiers doused
the synagogue with gasoline and set it on fire.
1940-42: In 1941 the Frenkiels heard rumors that the Germans were evacuating
some towns and deporting the Jews to a death camp. A cousin visited the family
after escaping from a transport and said the rumors were true. "They put you in
trucks, gas you, then throw your body into a burning pit," he said. Isadore's
3-year-old son ran to his mother crying, "Will they burn me, too?" Isadore urged
his cousin to tell the Jewish elders. He met with them, but they did not believe
his story and told him to leave town.
In May 1942 Gabin's Jews were deported to the Chelmno death camp. Isadore,
Sossia and four of their sons were placed in a sealed van and asphyxiated with
exhaust fumes.
*Story courtesy of ushmm.org