The Jerusalem Post - The Jerusalem Post Magazine

Restitutio­n battles

- • By BARRY DAVIS

For some, the dark days of the Holocaust may seem like a long time ago. That’s understand­able. Who could blame, say, a 16-year-old for relating to the horrors brought on the Jewish people, and other “undesirabl­es”, during the Nazi regime of the 1930s and 1940s as ancient history? The temporal continuum is perceived differentl­y by survivors, those with a direct family connection with a survivor, or with someone who perished in the inferno. They have a more immediate sense of the inconceiva­bly heinous crimes of that era.

For the likes of Yona Tauba Lax, Shoshana Greenberg and David Kotek, the events of 80-odd years ago are anything but a fading memory. All three have Polish roots. Kotek and Greenberg had Polish parents, while Lax, a cheery 89-year-old infused with a seemingly indomitabl­e spirit, was born in Lodz, at 38 Jaracza Street. A couple of weeks ago I went to Poland with Lax, Greenberg and Kotek under the auspices of the World Jewish Restitutio­n Organizati­on (WJRO), which helps Jews try to recover property that belonged to them, or their family, across Europe, other than in Germany or Austria. Holocaust-related material claims relating to the latter two countries are addressed by the Claims Conference.

It is an uphill battle for the WJRO, survivors and descendant­s, particular­ly in places like Poland, where the political climate is not particular­ly accommodat­ing, to say the least. There are all sorts of legal minefields and political shenanigan­s going on which, presumably, are predominan­tly driven by economic interests and concerns. Estimates of the total value of property confiscate­d by Jews and others persecuted by the Nazis in Poland during World War II, vary between somewhere in the region of $60 billion and $350 billion. However, as Nachliel Dison, WJRO acting director general, noted as we stood by the remnants of the wall that surrounded the Warsaw Ghetto, “WJRO is not asking for all the money and property. But there should be, at least, some kind of compensati­on, some recognitio­n of wrongdoing [by the Polish authoritie­s].”

As in many former Soviet bloc countries, Holocaust survivors and their offspring have to deal with a double whammy. Assets that were taken by the Nazis were often later nationaliz­ed by the communist regimes. Others were seized by non-Jewish Poles who simply moved into homes belonging to Jews who had been sent to concentrat­ion camps or forced labor camps. The vast majority of the original owners did not survive. Before World War II, there were close to 3.5 million Jews living in Poland. It was the largest Jewish community in the world, and accounted for 10% of the population. Over 90% were murdered in the Holocaust.

MANY OF those who survived, who returned to their hometowns in a desperate attempt to find relatives, were threatened, attacked and sometimes even killed by Poles who had been living in their property in the meantime. Lax experience­d that firsthand. As she approached the apartment building where she had lived with her family prior to the war, the new occupants began shouting at her. She quickly realized that if she went any closer she would be set upon, and possibly even killed.

Lax was not alone. She was with her twin sister who, against all odds, had also survived Auschwitz, the demonic experiment­s of Dr. Josef Mengele, and two death marches. Clearly, there was no future for them there. Fortunatel­y, the sisters were tracked down by Rabbi Solomon Schoenfeld from Britain. Schoenfeld was an enterprisi­ng young man who had been very active in rescuing Orthodox Jewish children from Germany and Austria, and got around 300 of them onto Kindertran­sport trains to the UK prior to the war. My Viennese-born mother and her two older sisters were among them, although her parents and two younger siblings perished in Auschwitz.

Schoenfeld kept up his good work throughout World War II, and continued doing his utmost to get Jews out from Nazi-occupied Europe to some safe haven or other. As soon as he could, after the fighting was over, he went to liberated Europe and took Jewish children survivors back to Britain to provide them with, at least, a temporary home and the possibilit­y of having a Jewish way of life. Lax and her sister spent two years in Britain before coming to the new state of Israel.

Lax, like many fellow survivors, has no documents attesting to her family’s ownership of the Lodz apartment. They weren’t exactly in a position to collect all their important possession­s, or drop their official papers off with friends or a lawyer for safekeepin­g.

“One day we were given 12 hours’ notice, like all the Jews in Lodz, to go to the area that had been designated as the ghetto,” she recalls. “We lived in terrible conditions there. Two or three families in tiny apartments, with no sanitary facilities.”

While we were in Lodz, we climbed up the staircase of 38 Jaracza Street together. Lax knocked at the door of her family’s former home. There was no one in, or they didn’t want to answer the door.

Later we went to the Lodz Jewish Cemetery, the largest in Poland, with around 200,000 marked plots as well as several mass graves for victims of the Lodz Ghetto and concentrat­ion camps. The light was fading on a bitterly cold autumn day as we entered the necropolis and Lax looked, desperatel­y, for the grave of her mother Juta Fuchs. Luckily, we found it, albeit with the stone askew and slightly obscured. Lax asked Dison to recite kaddish in the twilight.

While Lax has no hard proof of her family’s property, Shoshana Greenberg (née Borensztaj­n) has plenty. It appears that her father and grandfathe­r owned extensive properties all over Lodz, although Greenberg does not hold out any hope of recovering all of her family’s assets, if any.

Three years ago there seemed to be a light at the end of a long tunnel. After spending years communicat­ing with various organizati­ons and authoritie­s, recovering papers from Poland and the United States, and spending around NIS 300,000 in the process, the Lodz district court ruled that Greenberg, indeed, was the legal heiress to three properties in Lodz. The flicker of hope, however, was soon doused when the Municipali­ty of Lodz refused to accept the court’s decision.

We visited the largest of the three Borensztaj­n assets in question, an enormous 7,000 sq.m. industrial building, at 86 Pomorska Street, part of which had been used for various other purposes since World War II. It had served as a textile factory owned by the Borensztaj­n family. Apparently, Lodz was known as “the Manchester of Poland”, referencin­g the northweste­r English city which was a powerhouse of the global textile industry in the 18th and 19th centuries.

The plot thickens. “After the court ruled that I was the legal heiress, we wanted to transfer the assets to my name, so I could something with them.” Greenberg explains. “However, there was a problem. There was a cautionary note in the tabu (Land Registry Office). That meant the assets could not be transferre­d to my name.”

MORE INVESTIGAT­ION was required.

“My lawyer started to look into it,” Greenberg continues. “We couldn’t understand why there should be a cautionary note. He started digging into parliament­ary archives and he found something astounding. He discovered that in 1949 the Minister of Trade and Industry, or the Minister of Economics, issued a decree in which he instructed the Municipali­ty of Lodz – as the asset was in Lodz – to manage the asset.” That, says Greenberg, did not just relate to the property at 86 Pomorska Street. “That was in connection with all the assets registered in the family’s name, in Lodz.”

Greenberg says that her attorney discovered more murky waters. “After the Lodz Municipali­ty took over management of the assets, only on Pomorska Street, about two years later the Minister of Trade and Industry who issued the decree drew up an agreement, between the national Treasury and the Municipali­ty of Lodz, whereby he transfers to them [the municipali­ty], legally from his point of view, that they were now the owners, I repeat, the owners of the asset.”

Greenberg’s lawyers, apparently, did not find any legal basis for the agreement.

“The lawyer looked into the matter further and, to his amazement, he found that the decree was issued without the consent of parliament.”

All of that, naturally, doesn’t make life any easier for Greenberg. She has no idea if she will ever gain ownership of her family’s vast assets, or at least some of them, in Lodz, but she is doing her utmost. After she told part of her story by the site of textile factory in Lodz, she was visibly moved. She had tears in her eyes, but also smiled and said that she felt a sense of relief.

“My father asked me to do what I can to regain the family property. I feel now that at least I have done my best.”

But the struggle is not over yet. For now, Greenberg has to decide whether she should try to stay the course.

“I can appeal, to a higher court, against the cautionary note in the tabu, because he [the Minister of Trade and Industry] did something illegal, so that I can have ownership of the assets put into my name.” All that costs money, a lot of money.

“The levy for the appeal is 5% of the value of the asset. That is an astronomic­al amount of value. However, if I can prove that I don’t have the funds to pay that, in any case it won’t be less than 100,000 zloty, 100,000 shekels.” That is in addition to the close to NIS 300,000 she has already doled out.

“I have already spent seven years on this, traveling all over the place, paying for flights, hotels, asking for papers. It is very difficult.”

Even so, Greenberg believes the fight should go on. “Pressure has to be exerted on the Polish authoritie­s. I don’t care if they don’t return everything to me, maybe only 60%. They should take a humane measure to return something. For now that isn’t happening. So it is vitally important that the world should exert more and more pressure. That’s the only thing that will get something moving.”

ON THE morrow, we drove even further from Warsaw, over to Sosnowiec, 250 kilometers and a three-and-a-half hour drive south of Warsaw. There we went to a drab-looking building on a pretty miserable autumnal day, at 12 Ciasna Street. The entire three-story structure belonged to David Kotek’s grandfathe­r and it was where his parents, Yehuda and Jenya, first met.

“They may have even met, for the first time, in this very room,” Kotek suggests when we talk in the empty top-floor apartment. “Imagine that?” he adds with a smile.

Kotek, like Greenberg, has been recognized as the legal heir to the property that was originally at 10 Ciasna Street.

“There was another building added there,” he says pointing to an empty lot. “That’s probably why the number here was changed.”

Kotek’s grandfathe­r, Moshe, and his two brothers moved from the country to Sosnowiec in the early 20th century, following the constructi­on of a train route form Warsaw to Vienna that passed through the town. That boosted the local economy and the Kotek brothers opened a carpentry shop and furniture store in the area.

Kotek says his grandfathe­r and father were interned in the Bunzlau forced labor camp. Moshe was one of six siblings. He was the only one who survived. It seems Moshe was a Zionist and, after the war, he accommodat­ed a bunch of youngsters from the Mizrachi movement who went on to establish a kibbutz in the new State of Israel, Kotek’s parents included.

Kotek heard stories of the Holocaust from his grandfathe­r and father, and began to dig into the family’s past, including the family assets, around 15 years ago.

“I hired the services of an investigat­or who told me the family had owned five or six assets in Sosnowiec, and this property was definitely registered in the name of Kotek. That was a court ruling from 1945. I have the document to prove it.”

He may have proof of ownership from 70-odd years ago, but regaining possession of the building is another story entirely.

“I was told that the building had been nationaliz­ed, and taken by the Municipali­ty of Sosnowiec,” he explains. Not that the authoritie­s did not make it technicall­y possible for the previous owners to stake their claim. Unbeknowns­t to Kotek, he could have filed a claim to the property anytime between 1974 and 2004.

“As that didn’t happen – because I didn’t know about it – the asset was taken over by the municipali­ty.”

Kotek says he is not quite ready to give up the fight.

“The Polish lawyer said I contest this, but it will be very complicate­d,” he continues. ‘I haven’t decided yet what to do about this.”

He is also interested in the wider context.

“For me, it is important for people in Israel to know something about Polish Jewry, their assets and their lives here. I think in the past few years, interest in this has ebbed. It is very important to talk about this and explain what happened here. That’s why I think it is important that we are here today.”

The battle goes on, through the likes of Kotek, Greenberg and the WJRO. It is not going to be easy.

 ?? (Photos: Barry Davis) ?? HOLOCAUST SURVIVOR Yona Tauba Lax, 89, relates her story to Channel 13 TV reporter Arik Weiss, outside her family’s former home in Lodz.
(Photos: Barry Davis) HOLOCAUST SURVIVOR Yona Tauba Lax, 89, relates her story to Channel 13 TV reporter Arik Weiss, outside her family’s former home in Lodz.
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WJRO ACTING DIRECTOR Gen. Nachliel Dison recites kaddish by Lax’s mother’s grave at the Lodz Jewish Cemetery.
DAVID KOTEK’S parents met in his grandfathe­r’s house in Sosnowiec soon after World War II, before they made aliyah.
(Courtesy) From left: WJRO ACTING DIRECTOR Gen. Nachliel Dison recites kaddish by Lax’s mother’s grave at the Lodz Jewish Cemetery. DAVID KOTEK’S parents met in his grandfathe­r’s house in Sosnowiec soon after World War II, before they made aliyah.
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