Book of the Jewish Community of Dabrowa Gornicza and Its Destruction: Volume II

Hardback Published on: 11/04/2026
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Synopsis

Dabrowa Górnicza in southern Poland was shaped by the coal mining that fueled industrial growth in the region. Coal permeates many of the book's chapters starting with one titled "The Eternally Gloomy Town." Residents would say that the sky was always covered in a layer of smoke, flames that rose from the smelting plants were reflected in the sky, and it was difficult to differentiate between night and day. Everything was sooty -- the walls, the houses, and the footpaths.

That was the environment in which the town's Jews lived but they were largely not engaged in working in the mines or the heavy industries. Instead, most made their living as shopkeepers, craftsmen and traders providing the commercial infrastructure of the town. The rhythms of Dabrowa are captured in a section of the book on "Ways of Life and Memories."

The Jewish community in Dabrowa developed relatively late in part due to legal restrictions on where Jews could live and work. It also had been a kind of satellite of nearby Bedzin where the established synagogues, cemeteries, and rabbinical courts were located. It did not gain the critical mass to form its own kehilla until the early 20th century. In 1921, there were 4,304 Jews out of a total population of 39,860. Just before World War II, there were about 30,000 inhabitants total, with some 5,600 Jews.

Among the sections of the book are "The Rabbis of Dabrowa Górnicza" which includes several vignettes about student life in the town's cheders, "Social and Political Life" which charts the Zionist movement and its various players, and a section on "Personalities" with about 140 short profiles of notable people.

"Destruction" details the hardships faced by Jews during the German occupation that began in September 1939 and culminated with the liquidation of the town's ghetto in June 1943. After those in the ghetto had been sent elsewhere - many of them to die -- there were no more Jews in Dabrowa. The book concludes with a list of victims.

Publisher information

  • Publisher: Jewishgen.Inc
  • ISBN: 9781954176959
  • Number of pages: 536
  • Dimensions: 279 x 216 x 30 mm
  • Languages: English