The Sokolow immigrants in Chicago were a strong group that ran charitable campaigns to help relatives in Poland. Here are the names of the first Sokolowers in Chicago. Do you know any of them?
2/5/23
2/4/23
Talmud-Torah school
Talmud-Torah school in the interwar period. A group of Sokolowers from Chicago came to Sokolow to give children new clothes (and take this picture).
The economic crisis that broke out in the USA in 1929 spread to other European countries in the following years. The 1930s meant great poverty and hunger for many families. Some emigrated, others stayed in Poland, hoping that their fate would improve.
1/27/23
International Holocaust Remembrance Day
A group of survivors returned to Sokołów after the war to find that they were not welcome here. Other people lived in their houses, other people ran their shops, and the mayor of the town told the Jews who had survived the war to move to Węgrów.
They still managed to visit familiar places - cemeteries, houses of prayer, a bathhouse - and take photos documenting the emptiness left in the town.
Today is the International Holocaust Remembrance Day. 78 years after the end of the war in Sokołów, this emptiness has still not been filled.
1/5/23
Polish daily about Sokołów
If you happen to be in Warsaw today, you can read about Sokołów in the largest daily - "Gazeta Wyborcza". The article concerns the translation of memorial books from Yiddish into Polish and the challenges in the study of Polish-Jewish history (especially when it comes to the current town authorities).
1/1/23
Hanukkah 1928
"People attending a Hanukkah ball for the benefit of the community.
Sokolow 5689 [December 1928]"
I understand it was a charity event, right? Do you know any of these people?
12/15/22
Thank you!
Dear Friends,
I am writing to you to thank you for your help and support so far in commemorating the history of Sokołów Jews. I've been doing this since 2010, and while it seems like a long time, I think there's still a lot to discover.
This year we have completed the translation from Yiddish into Polish of the fifth book about Sokołów - the 815-page Memorial Book https://sokolow.jewish.pl/ksiega-pamieci/ksiega-pamieci/. Together with the other books: two by Simcha Polakiewicz and two by Perec Granatsztejn, it is available online for free for anyone who would like to read it. It has always been important to me that children and young people from schools in Sokołów have access to this history and now it is possible.
I wanted to thank you for a lot of advice, for your help, for sending family photos and documents. All this allowed me to get to know our common history better and learn much more about it. I am very grateful for our personal meetings or e-mail exchanges. Thanks to this, together we changed the world for the better, because we brought back the names of Sokołów Jews to the awareness of the current inhabitants of the town.
They say that a man lives as long as his memory lives on. In Sokołów, the Jews were forgotten for many many years. Now we have turned the tables - their names and stories are known here, local school students read our translation, and researchers quote them in their articles and books.
Of course, there is still a lot to do, but this step was huge and extremely important.
Since I would like to publish books by Simche Polakiewicz and Perec Granatsztejn, I wonder if you have photos of these two writers?
Thank you again for everything we've been able to do together!
Kasia
11/18/22
Sokolow tombstone
Any chance any of you know where this tombstone is? What city, what place?
It's a picture from the Yizkor Book, but there's no caption.