The Itzhak Katzenelson Collection

http://lod.ehri-project-test.eu/instantiations/il-002806-katz_col-eng an entity of type: Instantiation

The Itzhak Katzenelson Collection 
Brief biography of Itzhak Katzenelson
Poet, author, playwright, teacher, and educator, Itzhak-Yechiel Katzenelson was born in 1885 or 1886 in Karelicze, Minsk district, Belorussia. In 1887 his family relocated to Lodz. Katzenelson’s literary, dramatic, and pedagogical talents were recognized at an early age, he wrote plays, poems, and stories for children. In Lodz in 1912, he founded the “Hebrew Stage” theatre. He opened and directed a network of secular Hebrew day schools for kindergarten through high school. A member of the Dror Zionist movement, he was active in its “Borochov” pioneering training commune and was a guiding force in its social and cultural life. Katzenelson visited Mandate Palestine in 1924 and 1934. Three months after Lodz was conquered, Itzhak Katzenelson left for Warsaw, and soon was joined there by his wife and their three sons. In Nazi-occupied Warsaw, Katzenelson wrote for the Jewish underground press and took part in clandestine educational and cultural activities. He taught in the clandestine high school and led seminar studies for Dror members. During the Great Aktion of Summer 1942, he and his eldest son worked in the “shop” of German industrialist K.G. Schultz, while his wife and two younger sons were deported to the Treblinka extermination camp. Itzhak Katzenelson’s strong support for active Jewish resistance to the German occupation is expressed in his elegy, “The Song of the Murdered Jewish People” [Yiddish: Dos Lid funem Oysgehargetn Yidishn Folk].
On 20 April 1943, the second day of the Warsaw ghetto uprising, Katzenelson was taken to the city’s “Aryan” side and went into hiding. In May he was deported as a foreign national to the Vittel detention camp in France. There he continued his writing until 29 April 1944, when he and his son were deported to the Birkenau extermination camp, where both perished. Katzenelson’s last works were written in Vittel; some were published posthumously as his “Vittel Diary.” Beit Lohamei Haghetaot –The Ghetto Fighters’ House Museum of the Holocaust and Jewish Resistance Heritage bears his name. 
The Itzhak Katzenelson Collection 

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