This was my favorite of all the yizkor books I've read, mainly because it continues onward until she makes it to Israel and has a family there, so it is a very happy ending. In her memoir, Peninah recalls how no one had any idea in 1940 and even 1941 what was in store--it was generally thought that there would be pogroms and killings here and there, but no one at the time imagined the scale of slaughter that was coming. Peninah arrived to Czenstochowa at the end of 1941, about a year and a half after my grandpa's family. She says that Czenstochowa had a population of about 28,000 in 1939, of which one in five were Jewish. When she arrived, the Judenrat was already up and running, and the ghetto was still physically open to the rest of the city, and while it was forbidden for Poles to stop and shop at Jewish stores in the ghetto, that rule was often broken.
Like my grandfather, Peninah attributes so much of her reason for survival on luck. In one case, she was at selection on September 22nd, 1942, when she was un-selected as "not needed," Yet moments later, Degenhart, the commander of the "action," called her back and said to the SS man that perhaps they would need her. It was impossible for Jews to understand what was real and what wasn't. Around the time of her selection, Peninah recalls that the Jewish intelligentsia were gathered and told that a deal had been reached to send them to Israel. Instead, they were taken to the Jewish cemetery and shot.
The most amazing part of the book for me was Peninah's description of an event I already knew about from my grandfather. He had told us about how he had been digging a tunnel through a bunker to reach outside the walls of the ghetto. But that while he was at work with his brothers, the Germans surrounded the Jews in the bunker, who tried to use the tunnel. The Germans knew about it and were waiting at the other end, where they massacred the Jews as they came through the tunnel. Peninah provides a date for that event: June 25, 1945, as the ghetto was liquidated. She even writes the address of the bunker: Nadzhechna 88. Apparently, Avraham Zilberstein told Peninah that 40 people had gathered in the bunker and planned to throw a grenade at the Nazis while others escaped through the tunnel to the Polish side of town that connected into a deserted shop near a German sentry post, which they would then attack, taking the sentries' guns and break into the ghetto and set everything on fire. But at about mid-day, after the day shift and the night shift switched, the Germans came and killed nearly everyone involved in the plan. This is detailed on pages 88-90 and 137. On the earlier pages, she writes:
On June 25, 1943, Germans surrounded the ghetto. This was preceded by two weeks of tension, alarms and standbys in the underground. On that morning a standby and call up of the members had also been declared. About 40 people gathered in the central bunker at Nadzhechna No 88. The plan, according to Avraham Zilberstein ... was that in case of an Action or detection of the bunker, the Germans were to be stopped by throwing a grenade at them. At the same time we were to get into the passage and crawl through the tunnel to its exit at the Polish side of the town that was camouflaged in a deserted shop of light drinks near the house of the German sentry post. We were to then attach the post by taking the sentries guns, and breaking through into the ghetto from the outside, setting fire to everything possible and urging the ghetto population to escape....
Suddenly, at about 10:00 AM, we heard footsteps and knocks at the door above. It was clear the Germans were looking for the entrance to the bunker. Tenson was great and we waited to see what the Germans' next step would be, but then at 11:00 AM it became quiet. Our guards reported that the workers from the nightshift had entered the ghetto, the dayshift went out to work, and that the Germans had left. We were relieved and waited until 1:30 PM, at which time the standby state was cancelled."
At that point, Peninah describes hearing the outcry from her point of view, and picks it up from the action in the bunker on page 137 from the point of view of Avraham Silberstein:
He said that on June 25th and 26th of 1943, the day of the liquidation of the Small Ghetto, one group of underground members went to the bunker at Garncharska St. 40. Their plan was to leave through the tunnel in this bunker, to the polish side, and then continue on to the partisans in Konitspol. Avraham was in that group. When, after crawling to the outside, he suddenly heard shots. At that moment he realized they had been betrayed and that the Germans knew all about the exit of the tunnel and were waiting for them. Since he was last in line, he stayed put, clinging to the wall beneath the exit, so that the Germans could not see him. They also lit up the tunnel and shot into it, but fortunately Avraham was not hurt.
Outside a battle raged with unequal forces with most of the underground members killed. In that battle one German was killed and a few wounded. Only one member of the group managed to escape to Konitspol under a smoke screen from a grenade he threw. Avraham stayed in the tunnel until he was sure that the Germans had left and then went out to the Polish side and continued to Zharky."
My grandfather said the following about the same tunnels:
... so me and my brothers and some other people were very seriously considering to dig in a big tunnel, and this was a long tunnel, so went into another house where the other people lived, and went in downstairs, in the cellar, and we started to dig a tunnel. We had no--we're not prepared to dig tunnels. We needed materials to support the earth, and that they're done. And we dug pail by pail of sand every time we came home from work, at first, we went to HASAG every day to work until they made it permanent. So whenever we came home from work, after an afternoon, we went into the--or Sunday or Saturday, dig the tunnel. We dig the tunnel, and we hoped that when we have the tunnel finished, if something happens, we knew that sooner or later, they're going to liquidate it. They're going to liquidate that ghetto. So when we find out that they're going to liquidate the ghetto, we were going to start make use of that tunnel. That tunnel led us to what's more, called the manhole, you know, was covered with a [garbled].
So when we heard that they're going to liquidate together, we're going to do that. In the meantime, they got a hold of us, and they put us into the HASAG to work. But when they liquidated the ghetto later, after we were already at work, we heard from other people that came later, that other people made use of that tunnel, not us. But everyone that was in a tunnel, the Nazis were standing with a machine gun from the distance, and didn't say nothing, and they made everybody come out bang, like rats coming out from the tunnel everybody was killed. Had we not been stuck, put to work there first, maybe I wouldn't be talking to you today. You could never plan nothing you didn't know. So luck played for us in this way, you can call it.
The summer of 1943 would mean the end of the Jewish ghetto and the transfer of all Jews to concentration camps, including Hasag, also located in Czestochowa. On July 20, 1943, all the Jewish policemen and their families were taken to the Jewish cemetery and murdered.
Peninah was transferred to Hasag, where my grandfather was forced to work, and also described Director Luth as a more or less decent man. He apparently stopped the prisoners from being forced to wear striped pajamas like in other camps, and that conditions were bad, but better than in other camps. She describes different departments of the camp on pages 97-98. Unlike my grandfather, Peninah was lucky to be liberated from Czestochowa instead of deported into Germany. However, they both would have experienced the arrival of SS men weeks before liberation who took everyone out to run around the yard several times each morning, and generally escalated the mistreatment of the prisoners.