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DAVID SOHN
Who was the first Jew from Bialystok to arrive in America? I often discussed this matter with many older
landsleit, people who were in the United States for many years. When they reached these shores, they already found
a significant Bialystoker community going back to the 1880's.
In fact, Bialystoker Jews lived in America starting in the 1850's. We found a charter issued by the State of New
York dated 1864, to a "Bialystoker Unterstitzungs Verein," an aid society for Bialystoker landsleit that existed two
years and then fell apart because of conflicts among the members. I uncovered this document quite by accident,
when I was elected president of the "Bialystoker Somach Noflim" in 1925.
We realized that the "Somach Noflim", founded in 1886 and one of the oldest Bialystoker societies, operated
without a charter. As president, I sought to modernize the society, which had been neglected.
First I obtained a charter from the State of New York, legally recognizing the society. When we applied for the
charter, we found government records that revealed a "Bialystoker Unterstitzungs Verein" was incorporated in 1864.
The first Bialystoker Jew to arrive in America was Simcha Tzfas, who died in New York at the age of 103.
Several weeks after I came to the United States I met Simcha at a Bialystoker's house on Henry Street, where he
was a frequent guest. Someone pointed him out to me, indicating he was almost 100. I refused to believe it because
Simcha looked much younger and was full of life.
Later I heard many interesting tales about Simcha, including his frequent trips to distant lands and his numerous
adventures.
Simcha Tzfas first arrived in America in 1842, on a sailboat that embarked from London and sailed on the high seas
for several months. Once in New York, he did not find any other Jews from Bialystok. His first home was with a
Dutch family on Water Street, near the East River.
Simcha was twenty-eight years old then, a tall and brawny youth, a real he-man. His fearlessness amazed his gentile
neighbors, who did not let his Jewish manners interfere with their close friendship. Simcha worked as a
longshoreman for an export firm, loading cargo on ships and performing other strenuous labor. Apparently he
earned a satisfactory living at the time.
When the famous California gold rush began in 1848, Simcha was among the first to leave on this mad quest for
gold. For months he walked or traveled by horse and buggy along with some daring young people through the wilds
of America, fighting Indians and robbers who attacked them on their journeys. Simcha was wounded twice. Finally
he arrived in California, where he spent two years, failing to discover any gold.
* * *
As soon as Bialystoker Jews began arriving in the United States, they formed their own organizations and societies,
which united and strengthened the Bialystoker community, absorbing the larger Jewish population. These groups,
working separately and together, extended the Bialystoker landsmanschaft influence throughout America. As
mentioned earlier, the first organized society was the "Bialystoker Unterstitzungs Verein" established in 1864. What
follows is a list of almost fifty societies founded between 1868 and 1949. Although most of them no longer exist,
they made a major contribution to the development of the landsmanschaft, its relief work and other communal
activities that served Jews from Bialystok for almost a century:
Home
One of the vital organizations established by Bialystoker Jews in the United States in 1919 to assist needy landsleit
in Bialystok was the Bialystoker Relief Committee in America. David Sohn and others founded it to alleviate
hunger and poverty among Bialystoker Jews. Soon after World War I, when news of their difficult circumstances
reached the United States, landsleit in America raised $5 million, which they sent to their kinsmen in Bialystok.
Moreover, Jews in more than sixty towns around Bialystok also were granted financial support. Finally the
Bialystoker Relief Committee in New York sent half a million dollars to strengthen various institutions in Bialystok.
This relief committee grew out of the old Bikur Cholim that helped landsleit in need. The committee was housed
after World War I in a cellar at 246 East Broadway. In addition to relief work, it conducted various activities for the
landsleit and other Jews in New York. Indeed, the Bialystoker Center, which grew into a major Jewish organization
in the United States, evolved from the Bialystoker Relief Committee.
David Sohn expressed the committee's humanitar-ian ideals in the following way: "From the depths of the
'Bialystoker Cellar,' the noble ideal of an organized landsmanschaft that would serve as a model for Jews from other
origins who came to America emerged, unit-ing our diverse constituency from the strictly Orthodox to the radically
assimilated, from conservative to progressive, from first-generation immigrants to second-generation American-
born Jews. We seek to blend all of them within the melting pot of fraternal solidarity, mutual assistance and
philanthropy."
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Home
BIALYSTOKER CENTER
AND HOME — 50 YEARS
(Page 168-172)
Last year, 1981, Bialystoker landsleit in New York, all over America and throughout the world celebrated a most
important event: the fiftieth anniversary of the Bialystoker Center and Home for the Aged. During this half century,
our Home has developed into one of the finest geriatric facilities in the country, a model of modern, compassionate
care for the elderly. Moreover, our Center is the international headquarters of Bialystokers in many lands, among
them survivors of the Nazi Holocaust that annihilated one of the great centers of Eastern European Jewry.
This institution gives renewed life to the humani-tarian tradition that Bialystok taught. Indeed, its founders
translated into reality their desire to assist people in need generally and, in particular, the elderly. A small group of
dedicated Jews, determined to con-struct a home for the aged under Bialystoker auspices, launched a frenetic series
of meetings and festivities to draw support for their ambitious project. Their leader was the late David Sohn,
affectionately called "Mr. Bialystok." Despite the formidable obstacles facing them, these men and women pushed
on to achieve their goal.
These activists planned the nursing home and the landsmanschaft headquarters in June 1926. They confronted the
tragedy of elderly Bialystokers without proper care, all alone and in desperate straits, a problem affecting many aged
immigrants at that time. Imbued with a passion for assisting the elderly and the needy who would follow, the
committee assured that their desperate charges would be well treated.
The plenary meeting of Bialystoker landsleit held in June 1926 investigated the feasibility of building a nurs-ing
home. It appointed a special committee to formu-late an appropriate plan. The committee worked for almost a year
before it delivered its final report in May 1927 at a general meeting of the Bialystoker Center and Bikur Cholim. It
reviewed the possibilities of going ahead with the project and the numerous anticipated difficulties. Nonetheless,
everyone was optimistic. Mr. Sohn wrote, "One thing is clear: we will build a home for our elderly people sooner or
later."
Leafing through the pages of the Bialystoker Stimme, one notices the love and devotion with which the landsleit
built the Bialystoker Home, one of the finest in the country. In a moving article in the September 1927 issue, the
author linked the new Home with prayers chanted on the High Holidays. "We recite the prayer, 'Cast us not away in
our old age.' To lessen the isolation and loneliness of old age, the directors of the Bia-lystoker Center and Bikur
Cholim decided to establish their own nursing home for elderly people, where they can spend their remaining years
in comfortable rooms among their own friends."
Much effort went into erecting the Home. Fund-raising activities proceeded; donations poured in, swell-ing the
Home's coffers. In July 1928, more than $40,000 was raised, a substantial sum at that time. As the Stimme
proclaimed, "The plans for the old age home are complete and we contemplate more than an institu-tion for the
elderly. Our Home will combine modernity with compassion — 'A Home with a Heart' that will stand as a
monument for succeeding generations of our landsmanschaft."
On Monday, September 16, 1929, the contract to build the Home was signed. One week later, the corner-stone was
laid. Bialystoker landsleit all over America contributed in many ways. Several condemned buildings were
demolished along East Broadway to make room for the new structure. Festivities to launch the building campaign
were held on September 22, 1929. Thousands of Bialystoker Jews, friends, and official representatives of numerous
organizations joined in laying the cornerstone. The building committee estimated the cost of erecting the Home at
around $400,000. The Bialystoker Ladies Auxiliary undertook to raise $20,000, donating $5,000 right away.
The Home was completed in 22 months. Finally, the day arrived for moving into the handsome new building. In the
balmy days of May 1931, the Bialystoker Home officially opened and regular meetings of the landsmanschaft were
held in the new quarters amid much celebration.
The ten-story building of the Bialystoker Center and Home for the Aged at 228-230 East Broadway, New York,
which serves as the world headquarters for Bialystoker landsleit.
The dedication festivities extended from Saturday night, June 20, to Sunday, June 28, 1931. A committee of one
hundred Bialystoker Jews planned the proceedings. Each landsmanschaft organization selected a par-ticular evening
during that week to mark the joyous occasion. The public at large was invited to participate in each party.
Thousands of people came to visit the Home to admire the tireless efforts of Bialystokers.
A parade swelled the Lower East Side on Sunday, June 21, 1931, the Home's grand opening. Almost ev-eryone
connected with Bialystok participated, as well as Jews from other places of origin. The closing banquet was held at
Beethoven Hall, 210 East 5th Street in New York. More than five hundred people attended, includ-ing all the
directors of the Bialystoker Center, represen-tatives of Bialystoker organizations and leading Jewish figures.
Many political and Jewish community leaders sent congratulatory telegrams to the Bialystoker Home, including
Governor Franklin D. Roosevelt, Lieutenant Governor Herbert Lehman, New York Mayor James Walker,
Manhattan Borough President Samuel Levy, and B. Vladek, Manager of the Jewish Daily Forward.
Mr. Sohn, in honor of the grand opening, wrote in the Stimme that the new facility would care not only for the
elderly population at the time of its construction but would serve future generations of old and infirm people. His
words were prophetic. Toward the end of his life, he was admitted as a resident of the Home, where he died on
February 10, 1968. Many years ear-lier, he exhorted his followers to support the Home, for no one could know when
he or she might need its services.
The first fifty residents of the Home were admitted shortly after it opened in September 1931. The Rosh Hashanah
http://www.zchor.org/bialystok/yizkor13.htm (9 of 24)5/30/08 8:49 PM
The Bialystoker Memorial Book, Part XIII: Bialystokers in the United States
issue of the Bialystoker Stimme of that year stated, "Several hundred men and women came to wor-ship in our new
synagogue on both days of Rosh Hashanah. Our cantors uplifted them with their inspir-ing services. On Yom
Kippur, a memorial service was held in our shul for deceased members and landsleit.
The Home's operating costs increased, because the directors were determined to provide excellent care for the
residents and admit additional people. At first there was a waiting list of twenty; several months later it grew to
seventy-five. More people, hearing how wonderful the Bialystoker Home was, applied for admission. Many
thousands of visitors passed through the corri-dors of the Home and went away greatly impressed.
Devoted people who invested their energies and con-cern have ensured the Home's continued excellence. Our
organization will exist for many more years because we enjoy the support of new members prepared to carry on the
work of their predecessors.
The Bialystoker Home is a traditional kosher insti-tution dedicated to bringing comfort and dignity to the lives of
Jewish senior citizens. It has a fully staffed medical and nursing department, as well as modern food services,
chaplaincy, recreation, rehabilitation and maintenance departments. Our Health Related Facility serves people
requiring some medical supervision but able to carry out their activities of daily living with min-imal assistance. For
those needing complete care around the clock, there is a dedicated staff of professionals in all relevant disciplines.
Our Bialystoker landsleit can be proud of what they and their forefathers accomplished — a geriatric facility that
can compete most favorably with similar institutions. The Bialystoker Center, the governing body of the Home, will
continue shepherding it to even greater accomplishments after we round out our first half century.
* * *
The first issue appeared on a trial basis in November 1921. Whether succeeding issues were pub-lished depended on
the response of landsleit in America, which was positive. Afterward, the magazine appeared every three months. In
the thirties, it became a monthly. Some of those early issues varied in size and content. Some were scanty, from
eight to sixteen pages, and others contained about one hundred pages. The Passover and Rosh Hashanah issues were
consistently large and rich in content. Several special issues, con-taining about one hundred pages, honored
milestones of the Bialystoker Young Men's Association, Bialy-stoker Somach Noflim, Bialystoker Ladies Auxiliary,
Relief Society of Paterson, and Club of Bialystoker Friends, among others.
Among the early writers for the Stimme were:
Jakow Krepliak, Herman Frank, Sam Kosel, Jechiel Wajntrojb, Louis Grynhojz, Pejsach Kaplan, Nojach
Zabludowski, Awrom Kotik, Isroel Lipski, L. Fejgin, M. Goldman, J.J. Indicki and Litman Rozental.
When one leafs through more than three hundred editions of the Stimme, comprising many thousands of pages, one
discovers a treasury of materials.
Every subject of consequence to Bialystokers found recognition in the Stimme. The magazine reaches all
geographical locations where landsleit live - Canada, Mexico, Argentina, Australia, Israel, Paris and Bialystok. The
Stimme served as a monument to the 60,000 martyrs of Bialystok, as well as a beacon of hope that its ideals and
traditions will live on long after the city's destruction. This publication contains thousands of documents, articles
and pictures that cannot be found anywhere else. The Stimme must be regarded as a worthy archive and everlasting
tribute to everything Bialystokers loved and lost.
* * *
While the Stimme has done much to enshrine the past, it also helps the Bialystoker landsmanschaft in America
expand. Who can adequately assess the work of the Bialystoker Relief Committee, after World War I, which sent
millions of dollars to save Bialystok's institutions? Moreover, the Stimme popularized the Bialystoker Center and
Home for the Aged in New York, the international headquarters of the landsmanschaft. It encouraged Bialystoker
Jews in America and elsewhere to send assistance to our unfortunate brothers and sis-ters in Bialystok during World
War II. The magazine has also helped reunite relatives who had been out of touch for many years.
The Stimme encouraged Bialystokers to appreciate culture. It also faithfully recorded births, bar mitzvahs, bas
mitzvahs, engagements, weddings, anniversaries, and deaths of landsleit. The Stimme has enabled all Bia-lystokers
to feel like one extended family, sharing good times and bad.
* * *
Let us hope the Bialystoker Stimme will continue to fulfill its mission: uniting our beloved landsleit throughout the
world despite great distances separating them.
The Bialystoker Ladies Auxiliary helped develop the Bialystoker Center and Home for the Aged. Founded in
February 1923, the auxiliary invigorated people active in the Center and launched many social and fund-raising
events.
From a small group, the Ladies Auxiliary grew into a strong affiliate of the Center. Its members served with
supreme devotion, raising large sums of money to help needy landsleit and, especially, the elderly residents of the
Bialystoker Home.
These women always brought beauty and festivity to the Center's activities. The auxiliary involved itself in three
areas: visiting and arranging medical treatment for the sick, implementing social and cultural activities for its
members and friends, and fund-raising for the Home. Whenever the Home was financially strapped, the Ladies
Auxiliary was the first to secure loans to rescue it. In fact, in 1930-31, when the Home was built, during the Great
Depression, members of the auxiliary borrowed $50,000 to promote the building project. Later these loans were
repaid with gratitude to each woman.
The founders and top officers of the Ladies Auxiliary were: Ida Aidak, President; Rose Lipman, Treasurer; and
Sophie Cohen, Financial Secretary. They served for more than ten years. The auxiliary organized sub-groups that
was active in New York and other cit-ies in America and Canada. It exemplified humanitar-ian work. Fortunately,
the present officers and active members of the Ladies Auxiliary continue its hallowed traditions.
One of the few Bialystoker societies founded at the start of the twentieth century still in existence is the Bia-
lystoker Young Men's Benevolent Association. Its longevity may be credited to a handful of active officers and
members who are elderly, but insist on carrying on the important work of the organization, despite chang-ing
circumstances and the passage of time. The "Young Men's" significantly assisted the Bialystoker Center in New
York, as well as the State of Israel and other causes dear to the hearts of American Jews.
The society was founded October 21, 1906. Its present officers are Charles Koss, Manuel Grodnick, Emily
Grodnick, Herman Schwartz, David Fine and others. Mr. Fine is the current president. Charles Koss, the driving
force behind the society, was honored sev-eral years ago at a banquet given by the group in recog-nition of his many
years of devoted service.
When the Bialystoker Home was built, the members of the "Young Men's" made generous dona-tions and raised
funds from other sources. The society also aided in establishing Kiryat Bialystok, a village near Tel Aviv (see page
187) in Israel. The year 1981 marked the seventy-fifth anniversary of this worthy organization.
brought from Paris, containing songs and pictures from the Bialystok ghetto. The club also estab-lished annual
memorial assemblies in tribute to the 60,000 martyrs of Bialystok and immediate vicinity who perished during the
Holocaust. This custom has continued. Furthermore, when the State of Israel was proclaimed in May 1948, our
members were among its first enthusi-astic supporters, purchasing Israel bonds and contributing to the United
Jewish Appeal. In 1949, at the world conference of Bialystoker landsleit held in New York, the club made a
generous contribution to establishing Kiryat Bialystok.
As we review the one-hundred-year experience of Bialystoker Jews in the United States, we can be proud of their
achievements and the prestige they brought to Bialystok, their birthplace and spiritual cradle.
Despite the difficult economic and social circum-stances the early immigrants from Bialystok found in America,
their drive, courage and boundless optimism permitted them to overcome all obstacles.
Laborers, craftsmen, manufacturers, builders, industrialists — the Jews of Bialystok helped to enrich life in America
with their energy, enthusiasm and talent. Many assisted in building homes and hotels. Others developed large
clothing, furniture, cigar and cigarette, gold and diamond, leather, publishing, bookbinding and upholstery
businesses. Bialystoker Jews expanded American commerce, on both a large and small scale. Bialystokers excelled
in medicine, science, research, literature, music, entertainment, the press and many other areas. These men and
women often proudly disclose their Bialy-stoker origins.
Generations of Bialystoker Jews have also played an important role within the Jewish community in the United
States. We can find Bialystokers in Jewish organizations, institutions, clubs and religious life. They occupy
important places in the Yiddish press, literature, theater, music, art, and liturgical music. They have brought honor to
the Bialystoker community in America.
The great losses we sustained during World War II can never be replaced. But I believe we can draw some comfort
that Bialystoker survivors and immigrants in America insisted on continuing the wonderful traditions of our
hometown. The Bialystoker Center in New York is promoting solidarity between landsleit and their children.
Let us never ignore our Bialystoker legacy. We are obliged to imbue our successors with determination to remember
their past and do their heritage proud by carrying on in our footsteps. This memorial volume will help in this effort.
In 1951, the Bialystoker Center in New York published a large album containing 1,200 pictures, with a Yiddish and
English text, compiled by the late David Sohn. This album, which reviews three hundred years of Jewish life in
Bialystok and activities of landsleit throughout the world, has 386 pages and is titled: Bialystok Picture Album — A
Famous City and Its Jews Throughout the World. The Bialystoker Center in New York is proud of this important
pictorial record.
Home
One of the oldest synagogues on New York's Lower East Side, Bet Haknesset Anshei Bialystok, located at 7 Willet
Street, was founded more than one hundred years ago by Jews from Bialystok. In 1868, two Bialystoker societies,
the Anshei Chesed and the Adath Jeshurun, whose members included carpenters, shoe-makers, tailors, painters and
other tradesmen, formed small prayer groups. Later on, they merged and, pool-ing their resources and making
generous donations, built the impressive edifice in 1868 known today as the Bialystoker Synagogue.
A prominent Orthodox house of worship, the Bialystoker Shul is one of the few remaining synagogues on the Lower
East Side. Its interior — the Holy Ark, paintings and massive wooden pews — was designed to resemble the Great
Synagogue in Bialystok, burned by the Nazis in 1941. In 1978, the Bialystoker Synagogue in New York celebrated
its one hundredth anniversary and, at the same time, was designated an historic land-mark by the City and State of
New York. For many years, its spiritual leader was Rabbi Jacob Eskolsky, who died in 1931. His son, Rabbi
Michael Eskolsky, succeeded him until his death in 1951.
Many founders and leaders of the Bialystoker Shul in its early years subsequently helped build the Bialy-stoker
Center and Home for the Aged.
Home
SZMUEL IZCHAKI
One's background inevitably influences the course one's life will take, regardless of changing circumstances. This
holds true for those who rarely give any thought to their origins. But how much more does one's past guide his
behavior when he often reminisces about it?
One such man is Max Ratner of Cleveland, a most distinguished Bialystoker, a prosperous industrialist and leading
philanthropist on the American Jewish scene. Living in America for six decades has not weak-ened Mr. Ratner's
Jewish spirit, which was nurtured in his youth in that magnificent Bialystok that exists no more.
Ratner's humanitarianism is not mere inclination; he translates it into concrete action. His contact with the
Bialystoker Center in New York is frequent and regular. Routinely he inquires how he can help, always available to
render guidance, generate ideas, and encourage the completion of goals the institution has set for itself — all this
despite numerous demands upon his time and the fact that he lives in Cleveland. On several occasions in the recent
past, Ratner has visited the Center while on business in New York, finding a small slot in his frenetic schedule to
devote to Bialystoker interests.
Max Ratner has won, over his long and fruitful career, the respect of colleagues in business, as well as the gratitude
of those who have benefited from his lar-gesse. Bialystoker landsleit, however, developed a special love and warmth
for this man who is one of their own and profoundly committed to their well-being. Notwithstanding his importance,
Ratner impresses one as humble. No airs or pretense exist in this man who holds the position of President of the
American-Israel Chamber of Commerce and Industry, a major catalyst for enhanced trade between the two
countries. Mention Bialystok to him and Mr. Ratner will share at length memories and anecdotes of his childhood
there. He also enjoys talking about how his star rose in the face of difficult times once he came to the United States.
His family lived at the corner of Polna and Czysta streets in Bialystok. His parents, Mojsze and Pesze Ratowcer,
owned weaving looms and were textile manufacturers. In 1921, the entire family left Bialystok and came to
America. There were eight children, four brothers and four sisters.
His oldest brother, Charles (Kalman), had come to America in 1905. In Bialystok, his brother, as a young lad, was
active in the local revolutionary movement. The Czarist police tracked him down and almost exiled him to Siberia.
But when Charles was only thirteen years old, he fled Bialystok and came to the United States. In those days life for
immigrants in America was very hard. Charles was forced, because he could find no lodging, to sleep for three
weeks in Hester Park on the Lower East Side in New York. In the street he would sing Yiddish songs, such as A
Brievele der Mamen, to earn a little money.
When the other members of the Ratner family came to the United States in 1921, they immediately settled in
Cleveland. One of their cousins, George Sogg, had a lumber business. Max Ratner's two brothers, Charles and
Leonard (Lazar), went to work for their cousin. Later on, Leonard opened a grocery store and Charles a lumber
yard. Meir, later known as Max Ratner, assisted Charles and at the same time went to school, graduating as an
attorney in 1929. After finishing his studies, Max became Charles' partner in the wood business. Leonard sold his
grocery and founded his own lumber company. In 1929, the four Ratner brothers merged their businesses and
established "Forest City Enterprises." This firm became very successful. Max Ratner was selected president of
Forest City Enterprises in 1929, and more recently has served as chairman of the Board of Directors. His nephew,
Albert, Leonard's son, is currently president.
The Ratner family did not spare themselves work, and thanks to their industriousness their firm grew very large.
Forest City Enterprises in Cleveland now employs 3,000 workers. It has branches in Chicago, Detroit, Portland and
elsewhere. Not only does this firm produce all kinds of wooden articles, but also builds shopping centers, hotels,
motels and similar developments in many different places. Furthermore, it features a patented high-rise-building
system sold in many foreign countries.
Max Ratner's wife, Betty, was born in Cleveland. They have four sons, all married. The family is greatly involved
in the business. Three of Max and Betty's sons — Charles, a lawyer; James, a Harvard University business school
graduate; and Ronnie, an architect - work for the company. The fourth son, Mark, is a physics professor at
Northwestern University.
Max Ratner is celebrated in the Cleveland Jewish community as an activist in numerous philanthropic and social
organizations. He occupies important posi-tions in many Jewish institutions. He was the president of the Park
Synagogue in Cleveland, one of the largest Conservative synagogues in America.
THE RATNER BROTHERS (r. to 1:) The distinguished industrialist and philanthropist, Jewish community leader,
and our devoted landsman, Max Ratner; Leonard, who passed away in 1975; Harry (passed away in 1961), father of
Bruce Ratner, former Commissioner of the New York City Department of Consumer Affairs; and Charles, who
passed away in 1939.
Needless to say, this warm, loving human being firmly supports the State of Israel. Not only has he helped raise
large sums of money for the Jewish state, giving generous, personal donations, but he also has had close connections
with Israeli businesses since 1951, three years after the State's establishment. Mr. Ratner has been to Israel more
than a hundred times, visiting his various enterprises there, one of them an electro-chemical production company in
Haifa and Acco.
As the president of the American-Israel Chamber of Commerce, Mr. Ratner tries to strengthen trade and industrial
cooperation between the United States and Israel. He has successfully urged many Americans to invest in various
Israeli projects. "This helps Israel in its development," Mr. Ratner said a few years ago. "This also opens up new
jobs for its population. We have to assist one another, not only philanthropically, but also with timely, practical acts.
We, the Jews of this generation, must do everything possible to bolster Israeli industry so the Jewish state will in
time be able to sustain itself and not depend upon outside help. We must do this now, because for coming Jewish
genera-tions, this self-sufficiency will be more difficult to achieve."
In 1917, when Ratner was eight years old, Britain issued its Balfour Declaration and Bialystok's response was
enthusiastic. He still remembers how his beloved mother gave away her golden earrings to a fund for those wishing
to become pioneers in Palestine. Mr. Ratner studied in the Hebrew Gymnasium in Bialystok, where Hebrew was
the language of instruction.
At the beginning of 1976, Max Ratner visited contemporary Bialystok. He took with him his son, Charles, 16
members of his family; Leonard's son Albert and wife, Harry's son Bruce and wife, Harry's daughter Ellen,
Ambassador Milt Woof and wife (children of his sister Irene and grandchildren), several cousins and a few other
relatives from America. He wanted to show them his old home, so they would appreciate his origins, what Jewish
Bialystok meant many years ago.
"Arriving in Bialystok fifty-five years after I left as a young boy," Mr. Ratner recounted, "I met a handful of Jews,
all old and sick, all requiring help. I was reminded of my youth. When I walked through streets where Jews lived,
where there had been a sophisticated, vibrant, Jewish life, I could not comprehend how today everything has
vanished. How is this possible? Every street has been rebuilt, with a new appearance and name. Nothing Jewish
remains…"
Mr. Ratner showed his relatives the house where he spent his childhood, on 4 Czysta, corner Polna Street. While in
Bialystok, he still remembered all his child-hood experiences, as if seeing everything once again. Here his mother
occasionally bought fish; not far from his house was a synagogue. There he used to play with other children. "I
looked at these places," Mr. Ratner said. "I used to think about them once in a while, but all that is left of Bialystok
is memories..."
While in Poland, Mr. Ratner also visited Warsaw. There it is the same as regards Jewish life. Everything vanished.
Mr. Ratner went to the Nozyk Shul on Twarda Street, where he found a few elderly Jews. The tables in the
synagogue, the chairs, prayer books and religious tomes were covered with dust from disuse.
Max Ratner brought his relatives to Auschwitz. "A visit to Auschwitz," Mr. Ratner said, "leaves a horren-dous
impression. It is as though you were surrounded by the ghosts of the millions liquidated. No matter how much you
read and hear about the Nazi atrocities, it is impossible to grasp fully their import, unless you see Auschwitz with
your own eyes. Only then can you comprehend how Hitler and his henchmen planned and executed with great
premeditation the terrible crimes against our people. This we must never forget."
Thus it is with tremendous loyalty that Mr. Ratner relates to his Bialystoker origins, even after so many years. His
example cannot fail but inspire other landsleit who feel the same way toward their beloved hometown.
Home
IRVING I. STONE
MY BIALYSTOK CONNECTION
(Page 175)
My father, Jacob Sapirstein, was born in Bialystok and later lived in Grajewo, a nearby village. In 1905, the
Cossacks came and burned it down. At that time the Russo-Japanese War was being fought, and my father decided
to leave rather than go into the army, because he had seen his friends coming back as cripples. He watched
despairingly as straw-filled wagons pulled up, disgorging maimed soldiers with no concern for their welfare.
Families and friends had to take care of them as best they could. My father vowed to leave home to escape the
Czarist oppression.
He went to Szczecin, then crossed the border into Germany. The Jewish community there put him in a hospital for
six weeks to build him up because of malnutrition.
The Joint Distribution Committee brought him to America. He arrived in Boston in 1905 and then went to Chicago,
where HIAS secured a job for him as an apprentice tailor at Hart, Schaffner & Marx. He did not like this work and
contacted an uncle in Cleveland who owned a postcard store in the old Hollenden Hotel.
Coming to Cleveland in 1906, he became a clerk in his uncle's store. At that time stores sold a lot of post-cards.
Within a year his relatives announced they were closing the card shop because they could barely make a living
wage, and advised him to seek other employment.
Not knowing any other work, Jacob Sapirstein set up business for himself in his boardinghouse room. He bought
postcards and sold them out of a suitcase to drug stores, candy stores and novelty shops. Operating from a horse-
drawn wagon, he was buyer, salesman, order filler, delivery boy and bookkeeper.
Prior to World War I, most postcards were imported from Germany. When imports stopped, Jacob Sapirstein
bought the new "folder" cards made in America. As his sons Irving, Morris and Harry grew up, they joined the
business.
In the late 1920's the family published and manu-factured their own greeting cards, recognizing this was more
profitable. The Depression saw great growth in greeting cards, because people could not afford gifts and sent cards
instead. World War II brought further growth as families moved about the country and sent more cards to keep in
touch.
Today the company started by Jacob Sapirstein — American Greeting Corporation — has 19,000 employees
and does over $500 million worth of business a year. There are 24 plants in the United States, Mexico and Canada
and four plants in Europe.
Throughout his life, Jacob Sapirstein has observed the Sabbath and remained active in Jewish organizations. He
was one of the founders of the Hebrew Academy of Cleveland, a day school with over 800 students. He purchased
400 dunams of land in Israel and helped establish Kiryat Telshe -Stone, a growing city.
Irving I. Stone
American Greetings Corporation, founded by Jacob Sapirstein in 1906, celebrated its seventy-fifth year in 1981.
The company blossomed from a small one-man enterprise into a multinational, publicly owned corporation, the
largest of its kind in the world.
Despite the difficult economic climate it faced, American Greetings reported record achievement in both sales and
earnings. It is encouraged by a clear upward trend in greeting card sales, reflecting people's need to express their
sentiments on both joyous and sad occasions.
The company employs 19,000 staff, whose creative talents are demonstrated in American Greetings' product
diversity and design. Once again, Bialystoker enter-prise and ambition have been well demonstrated.
Home
I have known Izaak Rybal and worked closely with him on a daily basis for the past nine years. In that length of
time, you get to recognize another's total per-sonality, his ideals, joys, sorrows and hopes. I would like to share with
you some of my perceptions of Mr. Rybal.
He is totally devoted to the memory of Bialystok and anyone having any connection with Bialystok and its
provinces, including landsleit, friends, members of our Center and Home, the well-to-do and the needful. Whoever
utters the word Bialystok possesses the pass-key to Mr. Rybal's heart.
In pursuing his many humanitarian activities on behalf of these people, Mr. Rybal demonstrates remark-able
energy. Never running out of steam, he is con-stantly working, planning, arranging and relating to others. In the
office he is indefatigable; I have never seen him relax for a moment, whether physically or intellectually.
He values precision. He is a stickler for detail; everything must be just right, whether a letter, punctu-ality for an
appointment, or detailed planning of the many functions the Bialystoker Center and Home con-ducts throughout the
year. While he delegates responsi-bility, he always makes sure that those working with him give the same
painstaking attention to detail he does.
He will not tolerate any error that he perceives as diminishing the Center's prestige or threatening its har-monious
operations. Izaak Rybal is a fierce, skilled infighter for his principles, unaccustomed to defeat or to serious
challenge. He can also be, as many know, a warm, thoughtful and sentimental human being whose friendship can
prove valuable.
What I have described is a man whose total dedica-tion to his role as "Mr. Bialystok" was shaped by long devotion
to family and friends, reinforced by his expe-riences during the horrible years of World War II in which he lost his
entire family and beloved hometown — events that would have destroyed a lesser person.
Born in Bialystok to Dwejre and Meir Rybalowski, one of eight children, he grew up in an environment where you
helped other people in need, whether related or not, and where you valued friendship.
The Rybalowski family owned a kosher restaurant-catering hall in Bialystok, near the railroad station (Rybalowski
lebn Bahn), where many Jewish weddings took place. Open twenty-four hours a day except on the Sabbath, the
restaurant was founded about a hundred years ago by Mr. Rybal's grandmother, known as "Sarah of the
Railroad" (Sore fun Bahn). It was a place where travelers waited for the next train and ate a good meal before
continuing on to the next destination.
In 1941, when the Germans invaded Russian-administered Bialystok, Mr. Rybal was swiftly drafted into the
Russian Army because of his skills as a printer. He was taken away from his family, his friends and his beloved
hometown, never to be reunited with them. In fierce battle he was severely wounded and discharged from the army.
Good medical care restored him to sound health, however, and he spent the remainder of the war years first
traveling, then settling in Tashkent to rejoin landsleit there and, finally, along with other Pol-ish citizens, was exiled
to Siberia.
Throughout these years, he constantly sought out other people from Bialystok. Feeling lonely, he wished to contact
friends from his birthplace, whom he considered part of his extended family.
In Tashkent, placed in charge of a large restaurant for travelers who could obtain their meals only by pre-senting a
special card, Mr. Rybal arranged that Bialystoker landsleit and friends without this card receive wholesome meals.
Moreover, he assisted eight couples in leaving Tashkent for Lemberg (Lwow, Lviv) after the war ended. From there
they went to Poland and other countries.
Returning to Bialystok in 1945, at the end of the war, he was devastated on learning that none of his family survived
the Bialystok ghetto and the concentration camps. He was also deeply saddened that his beloved city was so utterly
destroyed by the war, including its once large and proud Jewish community. The joys of his youth were now just
memories, never to be recaptured. It was time to move on and make a new life for himself.
This was not easy. Six months in Prague and eleven months in Paris were agonizing steps toward that goal. While in
Paris, Mr. Rybal contacted the local Bia-lystoker community, made wonderful friends and joined a Bialystoker
relief committee, where he was able to assist other landsleit passing through Paris.
In 1947, he arrived in the United States and was introduced by his late brother, Leon Rubin, to David Sohn, the
founder of the Bialystoker landsmanschaft in New York. Mr. Rybal had earlier corresponded with Mr. Sohn from
Paris. The latter received him in New York with open arms, and from that time on, a strong bond existed between
the two. Sohn devoted his entire life to the Jews living in Bialystok before the war and to Bialystokers in other
countries. He imparted this pro-found sense of commitment to Mr. Rybal, often repeat-ing the desire that the
Bialystoker Center and Home remain a living monument to the war-torn Jewish com-munity of Bialystok.
Mr. Rybal met Molly Goldberg, whom he married a short time later. Molly, the daughter of the late Hyman and
Jean Goldberg, was also born in Bialystok. Her mother was fluent in several languages; her father was a manager
and accountant of a textile factory in Bialystok and later worked as an accountant in America. Molly received her
education at the Spoleczna Gymnasium, a private school for Jewish children, and in the Bialystok public schools.
She came to the United States in 1930, graduated from Thomas Jefferson High School in Brooklyn and attended
City College of New York. She became a full-fledged bookkeeper in 1941, working until she retired in 1977. She
held the position of bookkeeper at the Atalanta Trading Corporation from 1947 until 1968.
Things began looking up for Mr. Rybal. He got a job in the printing trade and within two years went to work for the
Jewish Daily Forward, where he remained for 24 years, the last fifteen as foreman.
Mr. Sohn asked him to take over the responsibility of preparing the Bialystoker Stimme and putting together the
historic Bialystok Photo Album issued in 1951. These two publications served to keep Bialystoker landsleit, in
whatever country they lived, informed about one another and united.
Since 1947, Mr. Rybal served on the Home's Board of Directors, later as its Vice-Chairman and, in 1967, shortly
before Mr. Sohn's death, succeeded him as General Secretary. In 1973, Izaak Rybal became the full-time General
Secretary of the Bialystoker Center, Home and Infirmary for the Aged.
In this position, which he assumed upon his retire-ment from the Forward, he has almost single-handedly kept the
worldwide Bialystoker landsmanschaft united in deed and spirit. Traveling to Israel, Argentina, Brazil, Venezuela,
Mexico, Uruguay, European coun-tries and various parts of the United States at his own expense, he has
strengthened the close ties between our Center and these landsleit, always bringing contributions back with him. As
the editor of the Bialystoker Stimme, he has prepared interesting and literary issues, inviting landsleit in distant parts
of the world to con-tribute articles about their communities' activities.
Mr. Rybal's many experiences and memories could fill a volume. The purpose of this article was to share with you
glimpses of the life and colorful character of an unusual man.
Home
LOUIS SILVER
DAVID SOHN
Writer and Jewish community leader, founder and Executive Director of the Bialystoker Center and Home for the
Aged in New York. Died February 10, 1968.
David Sohn was a leader, a distinguished personality that Bialystok produced. He dedicated his life to his landsleit
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The Bialystoker Memorial Book, Part XIII: Bialystokers in the United States
and to the American Jewish community. As a young man in Bialystok, and later in the United States, he devoted
himself to public service. He cared for Bialystokers wherever they lived. Despite the fact that he spent most of his
life in America, he never lost touch with Bialystok and its Jews all over the world.
For almost fifty years, David Sohn led the Bialy-stoker Center and Home in New York. He was the focal point of
landsleit everywhere, a charismatic and compassionate man. He struggled to alleviate the isola-tion of the elderly
and calm their fears with a friendly residence where they could feel at home. He personified Bialystoker creativity
and initiative to expand and enrich Jewish life everywhere.
His death in 1968 came as a blow to all who knew and loved him. Wherever Bialystokers lived, worked and
achieved, David Sohn was revered. Respected as a founder of a great institution, he was also loved as a warm friend
with roots among the people, who introduced a populist spirit to the Bialystoker landsmanschaft. His relations with
individuals were close and informal, his approach to the public sophisticated and forward looking. He loved
literature and was highly cultured; a man of the people, he was nevertheless an uncommon man.
In 1919, World War I came to an end. But Bialystok's troubles began, for it was caught in a conflict between Russia
and a resurgent Poland. At that time Mr. Sohn founded the Bialystoker Relief Committee in America and, despite
the carnage, he went to Bialystok as its delegate, ignoring his personal safety. From then on he was perceived by
Bialystokers and non-Bialystokers, Jews and gentiles, as a dedicated and profoundly humane man. He was the
driving force, the inspiration, behind the Bialystoker landsmanschaft's far-flung philanthropic efforts.
Bialystok disappeared in fire and smoke together with six million Jewish martyrs and thousands of other once-proud
communities. Such widespread devastation tends to leave many cynical, without faith in God or man. Under such
circumstances, we must have leaders who possess spirit, courage and vision. Our landsmanschaft was fortunate in
having such a leader in David Sohn.
Under his guidance, countless Bialystokers in desperate need received food and clothing packages, as well as many
thousands of dollars in financial aid. Furthermore, he maintained a large personal correspondence with these
unfortunates, encouraging and uplifting them.
Often leaders lose some of their humanity as they gain power. Not so with David Sohn. The more influen-tial he
became, the more his feelings for his fellow man deepened. He was blessed with personal magnetism, numerous
talents and leadership qualities. He endeared himself to the landsleit with his beautiful Yiddish articles published in
the magazine he founded, the Bialystoker Stimme. Many of his contemporaries became deeply involved in the
affairs of the Bialystoker Center and Home because of his example.
David Sohn will be remembered as long as people understand what Bialystok and its heritage mean.
Home
ZALMAN HELLER
Many Bialystokers are familiar with David Sohn the public man, but few know about his private life.
Sohn's maternal grandfather, Mojsze Dowid Bialostocki, and his grandmother, Szejne, the well-known Zalman
Kalisker's daughter, were respected in Bialystok for their charity and good nature. They raised four daughters and
one son in a traditional Jewish home. Their daughter, Nechome, David Sohn's mother, was unusually bright and
beautiful; all who knew her marveled at her intelligence. When she reached marriageable age, her father insisted she
wed a Torah scholar. Mojsze Dowid Bialostocki offered the winning candi-date, financial support and a generous
dowry.
Nechome found such a man in Mojsze Sohn, erudite in religious studies, an expert in Hebrew and sev-eral
European languages. Although ordained a rabbi at 17, he never practiced. His father, Mendel, came from one of the
oldest, most honored Bialystok families. Mendel was well educated and one of the first silk manufacturers in
Bialystok, starting his in 1842. With such a background, Mojsze Sohn was chosen Nechome's bridegroom.
After they wed, Nechome, not satisfied to stay at home, started a wholesale-retail meat supply business; the military
was her main customer. She became one of the most successful businesswomen in Bialystok. The Sohns, who lived
on Jurowcer Street, were unusually generous to the poor. Mojkze Sohn spent more of his time in the bet midrash
than at the store and increasingly was honored for his scholarship and piety. Years later in New York, he became
one of the pillars of the Norfolk Street shul, and was greatly esteemed by the community.
David Sohn, the youngest of Nechome's and Mojsze's eight children, studied Torah in cheder and received
instruction in Hebrew, Russian and German from private tutors. He read many books in these lan-guages and, as a
young boy, developed a knack for writing. Various journals published his poems and short stories. He came to
America in 1911, and became deeply interested in Jewish communal matters.
In 1916, Sohn married Vera Epstein in New York. They had three children, Sylvia, Naomi and Mildred. Sylvia
died in 1946.
He inherited diverse talents and a sharp mind from his father, a kind heart from his mother. Alternately working as a
furrier, reporter, raincoat maker and painter, none of Mr. Sohn's jobs satisfied him. He preferred serving the Jewish
community, and after World War I he became active in relief work — helping Jewish war victims in Bialystok and
vicinity rebuild their lives. With his organizational prowess and dedication, he inspired hundreds to join him in these
efforts.
But Sohn was not content with these achievements. Thus he conceived the idea of creating a Bialystoker Center that
would represent landsleit throughout the world, and a home for the aged that would translate their humanitarian
strivings into concrete action.
He spent several years persuading Bialystokers all over the United States to finance building the Home. The
institution opened in 1931, thanks to his tireless efforts. He encouraged the Bialystoker Ladies Auxiliary to expand,
for he believed women could play a vital role in the Home's development. In 1932, the Auxiliary numbered 1300
members. Over the years, the Center and Ladies Auxiliary trained many landsleit in communal service.
Mr. Sohn was Executive Director of the Bialystoker Center and Home until shortly before his death in February
1968. At the time of his death, he was a resident of the facility he built. To this day we remember him with respect
and affection.
Home
Our father, David Sohn, taught us that Judaism requires helping others; getting rich is not what brings joy.
As youngsters, we could not understand why Papa spent less time with us than other fathers did. We couldn't even
spend a summer vacation with him, because he worked endlessly to establish the Bialystoker Center and Home for
the Aged.
When we complained about his absences, he handled us cleverly. Describing in detail the wonderful time he was
going to give us at the ballet or Radio City Music Hall on our annual outing, he succeeded in quieting us for weeks
at a time. These treats usually took place during Passover. Anticipating a whole day with father made it easier to
tolerate not having him around on Sundays and holidays.
Friday nights were special in our house because Papa ate with us. Mama was a wonderful cook, but everything
smelled and tasted better than usual on Friday nights.
After the Sabbath meal, he took us into the living room and told us Bible stories that always had a moral, or tales of
Bialystok when he was a boy. Nostalgia crept into his voice as he reminisced about his house on Jurowcer Street and
the walks he and Mama took in the forest with their friends. Nobody told a story like Papa.
When we grew up and had our own children, we realized what a great man our father was in placing the landsleit's
interests above his and his family's. This could not have been easy for him, but he felt a duty to personify Bialystok's
compassionate traditions.
The Presidium of the First National Bialystoker Convention convoked by the Bialystoker Center in August, 1934.
Seated right to left: Louis Davis, Treasurer of the Bialystoker Home for the Aged; Philip Schneider, Comptroller;
Sam Babier, Director; Louis Cohn, Vice-Chairman of the Center; Benjamin Tabachinsky, Representative of the
Yiddish Schools in Poland; Jacob Krepliak, Chairman of the Center Board of Directors; William Abramson, Vice-
Chairman of the Convention; Alexander Kahn, General Manager of the Jewish Daily Forward; Chaim Weintraub,
"Ort"; Rabbi Mordechai Kirshblum, Mizrachi Organization of America.
Standing: Philip Rosenthal, President of the Home for the Aged; Sam Kassel, Auditor; David Sohn, General
Secretary of the Center; and Joseph Lipnik, Chairman of the Home for the Aged.
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