Sigmund Sobolewski

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Sigmund Sobolewski (Polish pronunciation: [ˈɕiɡmunt sɔbɔˈlɛfskʲi]) (born May 11, 1923)[1] is a Polish Catholic who was the 88th prisoner to enter Auschwitz on the very first transport to the concentration camp on June 14, 1940, and remained a prisoner for four and a half years during World War II. Now residing in Canada, he is an opponent of Holocaust denial and is notable for having confronted modern neo-Nazis, anti-Semites and Holocaust deniers.

Auschwitz, 1940-44

Sobolewski, the son of the mayor of a small Polish town, who was also an officer in the Polish army, was detained at Auschwitz at the age of 17 as a result of the anti-Nazi activities of his father.[2] Fluent in German, Sobolewski was pressed into service as a translator.

"I survived also because I was young," said Sobolewski. "I didn't realize the seriousness of what was going on. Most of the people who survived were simple people; workers, peasants from Polish villages who couldn't read and write, but who were used to the hard work. Lawyers, doctors, technicians, university graduates: many of them after three or four weeks in Auschwitz had committed suicide because they realized their chances of surviving were very, very slim."[3]

He is the sole surviving witness of the October 7, 1944 revolt at Auschwitz-Birkenau, when a group of Jewish prisoners blew up Crematorium Number 4 and attempted to escape. Sobolewski was on the fire brigade and was ordered to put out the fire. He witnessed the execution of 450 Jewish Sonderkommandos in retaliation.[4]

In a 1999 interview, he said, "I survived only to live with the nagging question, 'What distinguished me from [the Jews]?'"[5]

Holocaust activism

Sobolewski (who was also known in Canada as Sigmund Sherwood or Sigmund Sherwood-Sobolewski) traveled the world following the war and settled in Canada in 1949.[6] In 1967, he was engaged as an activist opposed to neo-Nazism. While living in Toronto, he was among the demonstrators at an event attended by 6,000 people at the Toronto Coliseum to "denounce the rise of neo-Nazi forces in Germany."[7] He went on a 7,000-mile trip across Europe to demand that West Germany compensate members of his Former Prisoners Association, all of whom had been in Nazi camps.[8] He also initiated his activity protesting against neo-Nazism by donning a facsimile of his Auschwitz prison uniform and picketing the appearance of a German neo-Nazi leader on Canadian television.

In 1983, while a hotel owner in Fort Macleod, Alberta, he offered to pay for a trip to Auschwitz for Jim Keegstra, the Alberta teacher who taught the myth of a Jewish world-conspiracy and was a Holocaust denier. Keegstra declined the offer.[9] In 1989, then living in Fort Assiniboine, Alberta, he organized the first-ever Remembrance Service at Edmonton's Holy Rosary Polish Catholic Church attended by local Jewish representatives. He told a reporter after that program that while it was bad to be a Catholic in Auschwitz, "to be a Jew there was hopeless," and that he was concerned that the "Nazi crimes against humanity will be forgotten and swept under the carpet." He noted that he had advertised in a local newspaper for an assistant to help him with his memoirs, and received 43 responses. Only four of the respondents, he said, had heard of Auschwitz.[10]

In 1990, he retraced the route he travelled unwillingly 50 years earlier from Tarnów to Auschwitz-Birkenau to campaign for the creation of four "meditation gardens" at that death camp.[11] That same year, he organized a picket of Aryan Fest, a neo-Nazi festival organized by Terry Long in Alberta.[12] In 1991, he was among those in Chicago to accuse Polish Cardinal Józef Glemp, during his trip there, of being insensitive to Holocaust survivors.[13]

Later life

Sobolewski works as a realtor in Alberta,[citation needed] and also travels the world lecturing audiences on his experiences in Auschwitz and warning against Holocaust denial,[3] including a speaking engagement as recently as 2009 to high school students in Alabama.[14]

His life is the subject of the biography Prisoner 88: The Man in Stripes by Rabbi Roy Tanenbaum.[15]

References

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  2. Magan Crane, "A prisoner in World War II," The Capital, April 13, 1999.
  3. 3.0 3.1 Andrew Tomlison, "Living through the Holocaust: One concentration camp survivor remembers Auschwitz", Gauntlet, November 1, 2001.
  4. "The only organized revolt at Auschwitz: The sole surviving witness marks the 50th anniversary of the historical rebellion." CBC News, October 6, 1994 (audio).
  5. Ramon Gonzalez, "Auschwitz survivor tells his story", Western Catholic Reporter, April 26, 1999.
  6. "Toronto businessman pilgrim to Auschwitz," Saskatoon Star-Phoenix, April 14, 1967, p. 37.
  7. Peter Lust, "Rally in Toronto Flails Nazi Revival," Canadian Jewish Chronicle Review, February 3, 1967.
  8. "Auschwitz Group Offered 'Bribe'," Calgary Herald, April 13, 1967, p. 2.
  9. "Keegstra offered trip to Auschwitz," Calgary Herald, May 17, 1983, p. E10.
  10. Carol Ritch, "Catholics, Jews Recall Auschwitz Anniversary," The Jewish Star (Edmonton Edition), February 1989, Vol. IX, p. 1.
  11. Carol Ritch, "'Oasis' Project at Auschwitz Moves Slowly," The Jewish Star (Edmonton Edition), March 1990, Vol. X, p. 1.
  12. "Auschwitz: Protesting hatred. An Auschwitz survivor comes face to face with neo-Nazis in rural Alberta." CBC News, September 9, 1990 (audio).
  13. Scott Fornek, "Prayer, pride, protest mark Glemp's visit," Chicago Sun-Times, September 30, 1991.
  14. Andy Powell, "Survivor tells students about Auschwitz," The Gadsden Times, March 31, 2009.
  15. Prisoner 88: The Man In Stripes book listing at University of Calgary Press (accessed 2012-05-18).