Background
Rabbi Bereck Kofman was born in Sobienie-Jeziory, located about 40 kilometers south of Warsaw, on October 10, 1900.
Rabbi Bereck Kofman was born in Sobienie-Jeziory, located about 40 kilometers south of Warsaw, on October 10, 1900.
The family settled in France in 1929 where they were granted French citizenship. On July 16, 1942, Kofman was arrested by the Vichy police during the rafle du Vélodrome d"Hiver, together with about 13,000 other Jews, and moved to Drancy internment camp to wait for deportation. He was arrested at four in the afternoon.
His family, who never saw him again, received a postcard, written by someone else, from the camp at Drancy.
He was deported to Auschwitz by the Convoi (Convoy) Number 12 on 29 July 1942. After the war, a death certificate was sent from Auschwitz.
According to the testimony of a survivor from Auschwitz during this time, Rabbi Kofman was at the camp for one year before his murder by a Kapo on a Shabbat because he refused to work. He was beaten up with a pickax and buried alive.
The perpetrator of the crime, a Jewish butcher, returned from deportation and reopened his shop, Rue des Rosiers, in the Pletzl.
Sarah Kofman has remarked that the only souvenir remaining from her father is a fountain pen and that this was the source of all her writings.