ushmm.org
What are you looking for?
Search
United States Holocaust Memorial Museum
Museum Education Research History Remembrance Conscience Join & donate
Find ID cards FIND ID CARDS
FIND ARTICLES Find articles
Holocaust Encyclopedia
CONTENTS COMMENTS PRINT E-MAIL THIS PAGE
   
YIVO Institute for Jewish Research, New York
  On September 23, 1941, on the occasion of the Jewish New Year (Rosh Hashanah), the Lodz ghetto schoolchildren presented Jewish Council chairman Rumkowski with an album of hand-drawn New Year's greetings from 43 of the schools. Included were ...
See photograph

CHAIM BENZION CALE
RELATED ARTICLESRELATED LINKS

 

“We were scared of all of it. We were scared of Jewish policemen. We were scared of Biebow. We were scared of Rumkowski. We were scared of Sonderkommando. We were scared -- always we were scared.”
Chaim Cale, age 13

I wanted to go to school not so much to learn, but to eat the soup and not be frozen.”
Chaim Cale, age 13

 

 

Poland 1933, Lodz indicated
See maps

Chaim Benzion Cale was born in October 1927. His stepmother Bajla loved him like her own son. Chaim's family was quite well off. The father and his family were in the meat delivery business.

After the German invasion of Poland, Chaim's grandfather was severely beaten by soldiers and died soon after. Chaim was 12 years old.

 

 

Chaim's father insisted on keeping the Jewish tradition and made sure that Chaim had a Bar Mitzvah in October 1940. Chaim attended elementary school number 13B in the Lodz ghetto. In the fall of 1941 he was asked by the teacher to help out and draw the greeting page for the Rosh Ha'shana album for the Chairman of the Jewish Council, Mordechai Chaim Rumkowski. He remembers drawing the shadowed Stars of David.

 

 

A year later, during the Gehsperre Aktion, Chaim was hidden behind a huge wardrobe together with other people, including a young couple with a small baby. During the search of the building by the Germans, they all kept very quiet and the young parents kept a blanket over the baby's mouth. After the search was over they discovered that the baby was dead. The next day the couple gave themselves up for deportation.

After the schools were closed, Chaim worked in a metal workshop in the ghetto. In August 1944, Chaim and his parents were deported to Auschwitz-Birkenau. His mother was killed on arrival. Chaim and his father were tattooed and put to slave labor. After some time they were transferred to two other concentration camps. A few weeks before liberation, a Kapo murdered Chaim's father. Chaim was liberated in Flossenbürg. He was 17 years old. He later changed his name to Aleksander Laks and immigrated to Brazil.

 


Related Links
"Give Me Your Children": Voices from the Lodz Ghetto (online exhibition)
USC Shoah Foundation Institute online exhibition -- Voices of the Holocaust: Children Speak
Related Articles
Children during the Holocaust
Children: ID Cards




Copyright © United States Holocaust Memorial Museum, Washington, D.C.
Encyclopedia Last Updated: October 7, 2008

Citations

About the Museum    |    Accessibility    |    Legal    |    Contact Us