These letters reveal the secret exchanges between Charles Kotkowski and a resistance group in the Warsaw ghetto. The four letters were written by Ignac Samsonowicz, Charles’ Yiddish teacher before the war. Signed using the pseudonym of Henryk Wiktorsky, they were received between 1943 and 1944. Three letters are written in Yiddish and one is in Polish.
Jewish Resistance in the Ghettos
Charles Kotkowsky was selected for forced labour in the Piotrkow ghetto glass factory. When the Nazis began deporting Jews to the Auschwitz and Treblinka camps, Charles received his first letters from Ignac Samsonowicz.
Charles received these letters through guards, who received them from a courier from the Warsaw ghetto. Sometimes, Charles was also given money, which he distributed to young ghetto inhabitants so they could buy food. This exchange had to be done in secret, or else Charles and others could have been killed.
Listen to Charles Kotkowsky explain how he received these letters.
A testimony of Jewish Resistance and Solidarity
After reading the letters, Charles hid them in jars buried under the ground. He believed they would one day become an important testament to Jewish solidarity during the Holocaust. Charles survived his deportation to various concentration camps and returned to Lodz after the war to recover his letters. Only four of the letters remained.
Charles Kotkowsky immigrated to Canada in 1951. He married Sally Blum and they had two children. He passed away in 2003 in Toronto.
Charles donated these letters to the Montreal Holocaust Museum in 1997.
This project is part of the implementation of the Plan culturel numérique du Québec.