Members of the Boys were imprisoned in the Suchedniów Ghetto.
The Suchedniów Ghetto was one of a network of ghettos set up by Nazi Germany in which Jews were forced to live in occupied Poland. As with other ghettos in Czechoslovakia, Latvia, Lithuania and Poland, the Suchedniów Ghetto was established to contain the region’s Jews and isolate them from the rest of the population until the Nazi leadership could decide on an answer to the so-called “Jewish Question.”
The Boys and their families spent years living in dire conditions. The ghettos were not designed for the vast numbers of people forced to find space to live within them. As a result, multiple families shared cramped and insanitary accommodation.
The Boys were teenage and child-Holocaust survivors, who were brought to the UK after the war for rest and rehabilitation.

Suchedniów c 1920.
Overview
The Suchedniów Ghetto was established in occupied Poland. At its peak, the ghetto held an estimated 1,500 Jews. To find out more about the region were the ghetto was located and the Boys who grew up there click here.
Layout
The Suchedniów Ghetto was concentrated in the eastern part of the town, primarily along Mickiewicza and Kielecka streets, where many Jewish families had lived before the war. German and Polish police units patrolled the perimeter, and curfews were strictly enforced.
Daily Life
Conditions in the Suchedniów Ghetto were dire. Families were crammed into small wooden houses, with multiple families occupying each building. Sanitation was almost non-existent, leading to frequent outbreaks of typhus and dysentery. The Judenrat (Jewish Council) attempted to organise medical aid, but the lack of medicine and overcrowded conditions made disease nearly impossible to control.
Food rations were inadequate, so many people turned to trade or smuggling to survive. Hunger was widespread, and deaths from malnutrition became a daily reality. Still, some managed to keep religious and cultural traditions alive, holding secret prayer meetings and lessons for children.
Most able-bodied men and boys were forced into labour at nearby industrial sites, including ammunition factories in Skarżysko-Kamienna and railway projects, while women were put to work in sewing workshops or in agriculture.
Deportations

Treblinka Memorial, Poland.
The first major deportation from the Suchedniów Ghetto occurred in late 1942. Approximately 500 people were forced onto freight wagons and transported to Treblinka extermination camp. Many elderly and sick were shot.
Subsequent deportations followed in January 1943, with nearly the entire remaining Jewish population being sent to Treblinka. A small number of individuals, mostly skilled labourers, were sent to the Skarżysko-Kamienna forced labour camp.
Liquidation
The final liquidation of the Suchedniów Ghetto took place in January 1943. Nazi and support police units stormed the ghetto at dawn. Those who resisted or attempted to hide were executed in the streets or in mass graves on the outskirts of the town.
Jewish Resistance
While there was no organised uprising in the Suchedniów Ghetto, individuals and small groups engaged in acts of resistance. Some Jews managed to flee into the forests, where they joined partisan groups fighting against the Germans. However, many of these escapees were later captured and killed by German forces or local collaborators. Others hid children with Polish families or attempted to smuggle food and supplies into the ghetto.
One notable act of defiance took place during the final liquidation, when a small group of young men armed with knives and improvised weapons attacked German and Polish police forces, although the uprising was quickly crushed.
Memorialisation
Today, Suchedniów’s Jewish history is commemorated by a small memorial near the site of the ghetto. The town’s Jewish cemetery, though largely destroyed during the war, contains a few surviving gravestones. Remembrance ceremonies are occasionally held by local historians and Jewish heritage organisations. To find out more about visiting the region click here.