Belgická Orphanage

After liberation, members of the Boys spent months living in displaced persons (DP) camps.

Many of the Boys had been slave labourers in the Nazi concentration camp system.

DP camps were temporary housing established for displaced persons and former inmates of the Nazi concentration camps. The camps were set up in Germany, Austria and Italy after World War II by the Allied forces.

Members of the Boys were also cared for in children’s homes  set up and run by UNRAA, charitable organisations and the surviving Jewish community.

The Belgická Street Orphanage in Prague was one of these.

The Boys were teenage and child Holocaust survivors, who were brought to the UK after the war for rest and rehabilitation. 

Photograph of the former Belgická orphanage in Prague, Czechia.

The former Belgická orphanage in Prague, Czechia.

Overview

Over 500 members of the Boys passed through the doors of the Home for Jewish Orphans on Belgická Street, in the Vinogrady district of Prague.

The orphanage played a significant role in the majority of the Boys’ immediate post-war experiences.

Background

Belgická was originally established in 1898 as an orphanage for Jewish boys from across the Austro-Hungarian Empire.

Both Czech and German were spoken in the home, allowing boys from diverse backgrounds to communicate. Girls were cared for at a separate orphanage nearby.

Before World War II, Vinohrady was a thriving centre of Jewish life in Prague. The area was home to the city’s largest synagogue, which was later destroyed during a bombing raid. The orphanage was an integral part of this vibrant community.

Wartime

Following the Nazi occupation of Czechoslovakia, more and more Jewish children arrived at the orphanage. It also became a hub for underground education, as Jewish schooling was banned.

In 1940, the girls’ orphanage was relocated to Belgická Street, bringing both under one roof.

The Nazi authorities closed the orphanage in 1943, and it was then used by the German security services.

Between 1942 and 1944, 429 children from the orphanage were deported on 40 transports, mostly to the Theresienstadt Ghetto. Only 63 survived and returned.

Photograph of Renate Strauss and friends in the Belgicka Orphanage 1945.

Renate Strauss and friends in the Belgicka Orphanage in 1945.

It was at the orphanage that the children’s opera Brundibar or The Bumblebee was first performed in German- occupied Prague before the mass transportations of the Bohemian and Moravian Jews to the Theresienstadt Ghetto.

The musical score was then smuggled into the camp, where it was staged in the Magdeburg Barracks in September 1943. It was a performance that some of the younger members of the Boys, who spent years in Theresienstadt, may well have seen.

The opera became a symbol of hope in Theresienstadt.

Photograph of a street sign.

Prague, Czechia.

Liberation

After the war, the Belgická orphanage was reopened as a shelter for Jewish children. Survivors were brought there from concentration camps, hiding places, and other temporary shelters.

Some of the Boys stayed briefly in August 1945, while others remained longer before being brought to the UK in waves between 1946 and 1948.

The Violinist

The orphanage was run by Halm Frantisek, the former lead violinist of the Prague Philharmonic Orchestra. He was at in his late fifties and wore thick rimmed glasses. He would entertain the children by playing the violin.

Photograph of David Herman London, c. 1946.

David Herman London, c. 1946.

One of the Boys, David Herman, spent the first Yom Kippur after the liberation at the orphanage and remembered how Frantisek had “played one melancholic piece of music that made my lost childhood come rushing back to me. It was from the Kol Nidre service, and one of the most recognisable and holy songs of the Jewish faith.”

Herman’s father had sung it to his children.

“When Helm Frantisek played this sad, slow and soulful tune, it brought back overwhelming images from my childhood,” he recalled. “Halm Frantisek’s baleful violin was humbling to listen to and left me in floods of tears as painful memories of my family and our life together back home flashed through my mind.”

David Herman, David’s Story (Herman Press, 2016).

Daily Life and Rehabilitation

At full capacity, the orphanage could house around 70 children, with six boys typically sharing a room.

During the initial post-war period, when over 200 children were accommodated, extra camp beds were set up in classrooms.

The orphanage had a large dining room with several long tables, multiple kitchens and a library.

For those who spent longer in the orphanage, education played an important role in their rehabilitation, as it was crucial to help the young people to stand on their own feet and to return to a normal life post war.

Photograph of members of the Boys in Prague 1945.

Members of the Boys in Prague 1945.

Aftermath

From the end of war until 1950, 637 youngsters lived in the orphanage.

Under the post-war communist regime, the building was nationalised. It remained out of Jewish communal hands for decades.

Following the Velvet Revolution and the fall of communism in 1989, the building was eventually restored to the Jewish community.

Today, the historic site of the Belgická orphanage is home to the Lauder School, a Jewish educational institution supported by the Ronald S. Lauder Foundation.

Location:
Prague, Czechoslovakia
Present day location:
Prague, Czechia
Date of operation:
1898-1943/1945-1950
Population:
70+ but over 350 of the Boys passed through the orphanage
Resident group:
Jews
Run by:
Prague Jewish community
Memorialisation:
The building is still owned by the Jewish community and is the Jewish community school
Associated Boys:
These are the members of the Boys that have so far been identified as spending time in the Belgická orphanage
Jacob Bajer
Joshua Segal
Samuel Lichtenberg
Elias Kadysiewicz
David Wiernik
Heniek ‘Henry’ Golde
Alec Walters
Moshe Rosenberg
David Turek
Avrom Dichter
Abraham Wolreich
Michael Novice
Sidney Finkel
Sam Freiman
Perez Lev
Harry Olmer
Joseph Neumark
Minia Jay
Moniek Goldberg
Renate Lossau
Isadore Light
Jan Kurtz
Abraham Kirszberg
Jerzy Herszberg
Isaac Pomerance
Sala Newton-Katz
Rela Hausman
Pinchas Gutter
Harry Fox
Gerson Frydman
Jakob Fersztand
Abraham Beil
Martin Baumel
Jacob Banach
Artek Poznanski
Harry Suskin
Julek Zylberger
Perec Zylberberg
Hersch Zamel
Simon Zaks
Henry Saks
Bluma Urbas
Berek Wurzel
Rafael Winogrodzki
Emil Winkler
Krulik Wilder
Michael Weiner
Hersch Arek Warsznitzer
Menachem Waksztok
Harry Chandler
Howard Chandler
Sevek Wajcenblit
Chaskiel Rosenblum
Zelig Rosenblatt
Leon Rosenberg
Leiser Richter
Baruch Rayber
Joe Rents
Yitzhak Rajzman
Alexander Riseman
Julius Hamburger
Pinkus Grossman
Jerry Parka
Mendel Pretter
Szaja Popiel
Abraham Grabia
Abraham Goldstein
Lola Tarko
Harold Gold
Sam Gardner
Josef Gerstein
Nachman Frydman
Laib Frydenberg
Berek ‘Bernie’ Frydenberg
Hedi Friedman
Fritz Friedmann
Hedvika Friedmann
Mendel Frajkorn
Lydia Tischler
Eric Fish
Mayer Perlmutter
Abraham Pawlowski
Isaac Ferstendig
Motek Kamionka
Motek Kaminski
Simon Kalmowicz
Maurice Diamond
Chaim Judkiewicz
Solly Irving
David Jonisz
John Fox
Jan Goldberger
Zlata Jakubovic
Sultan Jacob
Judith Jacob
Agnes Jacob
Samuel Hilton
Martin Hoffman
Martin Hochman
David Hirschfeld
Wolf Himmelfarb
Chaim Mordka Hilf
David Herszkowicz
Benek Englard
Fajwel Dzialowski
Mayer Herschlikowicz
Samuel Dresner
Samuel Diament
David Herman
Kopel ‘Max’ Dessau
Moshe Nurtman
Nathan Wald
Naftali Rosenweig
Michael Preston
Majer Cornell
Szlamek Cwajgenbaum
Moses Malinicky
Chaim Lewkowicz
Waltraut Butvenick
Joseph Cederbaum
Max Lossau
Joachim Lossau
Moniek Burgerman
Ingrid Traute Lossau
Moniek Buki
Herman Rosenblat
Liliana Bucci
Andra Bucci
Victor Breitburg
Henry Brown
Hanka Traub
Zvi Dagan
Majer Bomstyk
Ervin Bogner
Abraham Elkienbaum
Schlomo Binke
Simche Lieberman
Sala Kaye
Alfred Liberman
Motek Lewenstein
Dadek Lenczner
Simon Lecker
Jakob Moncarz
Moniek Hirschfeld
Abraham Morgenstern
Hersch Bergmann
Fischel ‘Felix’ Berger
Ben Helfgott
Benek Binenstock
Isaac Baumelgruen
Schmul Laskier
Salomon Pantoffelmacher
Isek Kutner
Szlama Kuszerman
Binem Kuszer
Pinkas Kurnedz
Jacob Kura
Jacob Krowicki
Moniek Koziwoda
Bernard Kornfeld
Chaim Korman
Blanche Lipski
Kopel Kendall
Renata Strauss
Jacob Strobecki
Moniek Shannon
Charles Shane
Michael Stern
Motek Tabacznik
Edita Moscovicova
Jadwiga  Kaufman
Israel Kolacz
Josef Kohn
Chaim Kohn
Lola Alexandrowicz
Emil Stein
Harry Spiro
Gisela Beamen
Bella Schwitzer
Zisha Schwimmer
Chemia Klajnman
Abraham Schulsinger
Moniek Schottland
Elias Schoenberger
Joe Carver
Max Schindler
Alfred Schindler
Abraham Salomon
Jacob Fajngcesycht
Moses ‘Michael’ Etkind
Henry Rose
Salomon Erreich
Kopel Rudzinski
Abraham Erreich
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