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Lewis Lax (Lutek Laks) Papers

Overview

Abstract

Detailed Description

RG-49.01, Israel Laks, postwar proof of incarceration

RG-49.02, Laks Lutek (Israel Laks), AEF DP Registration card

RG-49.03, Lax Lutek (Israel Laks, Lewis Lax) United States Lines Company Passenger Ticket

RG-49.04, Laks Israel (Lutek Laks, Lewis Lax) Educational record, school for dentistry laboratory personnel, Poland, 1941

RG-49.05, Sidonia Lewin, United States Lines Company Passenger Ticket

RG-49.06, Lewis Lax (Lutek Laks, Lewis Lax) postwar Tesitmony

RG-49.06.01, Lewis Lax (Lutek Laks, Lewis Lax) postwar Tesitmony



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Lewis Lax (Lutek Laks) Papers, 1939-1945 | Los Angeles Museum of the Holocaust

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Collection Overview

Title: Lewis Lax (Lutek Laks) Papers, 1939-1945Add to your cart.

Predominant Dates:1942 -- 1946

ID: RG-49/RG-49

Primary Creator: Lewis Lax (1939 -- 1945)

Extent: 1.0 Boxes

Subjects: Acquisition of gold and valuables by survivors, Acting under false identity, Jewish survivors, aid and rescue in Poland, 1939 -- 1945, Aid in the Holocaust in exchange for money, 19133 -- 1945, Armed forces, Polish, 1918 --1939, Assuming false identity, Jewish survivors, Auxiliary police in Nazi-German concentration camps, Business activity under false identity, Jewish survivors, Chelm (Poland), Chodel (Poland), Collaboration of Jewish order police with German police and security forces in the ghettos, Collaboration with German administration, Commercialization of survival experience, Communications through the Warsaw Sewers, 1939 -- 1945, Conducting clandestine businesses under the German occupation by Jewish survivors, Documents in English language, Documents in German language, Documents in Polish language, Emigration to United States, postwar, Germany invasion of Poland, September 1, 1939, Identification documents, German issued, 1933 -- 1945, Identification documents, Polish issued, 1939 -- 1945, Inconsistent and biased reflections on the Polish military resistance against the German invasion, Israel Laks (Lewis Lax), assumed false identity in Poland, Israel Laks (Lutek Laks, Lewis Lax), personal testimony, Life under false identity, Life under false identity in Warsaw, 1939 -- 1945, Life under German occupation--Poland (1939-1945), Lublin (Poland), Majdanek (Poland: Concentration Camp), Means of adaptation and survival in Nazi-German prisons, Means of adaptation and survival in the ghettos, Means of adaptation and survival in the Holocaust, Medical operations, camouflaging the feature of male Jewishness, Warsaw, 1939 -- 1945, Numerus Clausus, a quota reducing admission of Jewish students to Universities, Poland, Pawiak Prison (Warsaw, Poland), Personal survival skills, Personal testimonies, postwar, Poland (1939-1945), Polish - Jewish relations in the Holocaust, Polish collaborating police, money extortion, 1939 -- 1944, Polish Home Army (Armija Krajowa), Polish Resistance supplies the Jewish Resistance with ammunition in Warsaw ghetto, Prisoners of War, Polish, Reflection on a Polish character at wartime, Jewish, Rejection of Jewishness in the Holocaust for the sake of survival, Resistance, Polish, Role of money and connections in survival in the Holocaust, Soviet annexation of Eastern Poland, September 1939, Stereotypes with regard to Polish antisemitism, survival tactics, Survivors postwar views, biased, Testimonies, postwar, The role of money and connections in the survival during the Second World War, The Warsaw Sewer System as a hiding place, 1940 -- 1945, The Warsaw Sewer System as the clandestine paths, 1939 -- 1945, Untruthful stories, survivors, Warsaw (Poland), Warsaw (Poland: ghetto), Warsaw Polish Uprising, Warsaw sewage canals, means of underground communications, Will and energy for survival

Forms of Material: Personal memoirs and recollections, Personal testimonies

Languages: German, Polish, English

Abstract

This collection contains official documents, false identity papers, and a testimony of Lewis Lax. Lax was a Holocaust survivor from Poland who was also a partisan during the war, acting under false identity .

Collection Historical Note

Lewis Lax was born in Belrzice, a small village in Poland, into a family with five brothers, two daughters, and two others who had passed away. Lax was living in a small town when the Germans invaded. Captured by the SS, he was interned at Majadnek. His job there was sorting the prisoners’ clothing and possessions. Lax used the jewelry and gold he was sorting to bribe a Russian guard. In exchange for a bag of jewelry, the guard delivered a letter to Lax’s girlfriend and her mother. The girlfriend approached the government of Chodel about Lax’s internment and the government arranged his release. Lax is one of the few men to survive Majdanek.

Lax returned to Lublin and was unable to find his family. Eventually, he found his mother was in the hospital after being shot and the rest were hiding out in the city ruins. Lax’s girlfriend’s mother supplied him with enough money to escape, and they took the train to Pulway, between Warsaw and Lublin. They then moved to Warsaw where some gentiles hid Lewis’ older brother, his girlfriend and her mother.

Lax went to the Catholic Church and his name was changed to Joseph Laskowski. He then joined the A.K (Armia Krajowa) also known as the Anderson Army, an underground, nationalistic party. The Gestapo eventually found Lax in his apartment and he was sent to Pawiak, an infamous political jail. He was interrogated and beaten for over three weeks. Lewis, along with a plumber and several men organized and built an escape route. After six weeks, they managed to escape through the pipes and water ducts. After escaping, Lax rejoined the underground and returned to Warsaw with the AK to fight the Nazis.

Organization: Documents, certificates

Language, German, Polish, English

Subject/Index Terms

Acquisition of gold and valuables by survivors
Acting under false identity, Jewish survivors
aid and rescue in Poland, 1939 -- 1945
Aid in the Holocaust in exchange for money, 19133 -- 1945
Armed forces, Polish, 1918 --1939
Assuming false identity, Jewish survivors
Auxiliary police in Nazi-German concentration camps
Business activity under false identity, Jewish survivors
Chelm (Poland)
Chodel (Poland)
Collaboration of Jewish order police with German police and security forces in the ghettos
Collaboration with German administration
Commercialization of survival experience
Communications through the Warsaw Sewers, 1939 -- 1945
Conducting clandestine businesses under the German occupation by Jewish survivors
Documents in English language
Documents in German language
Documents in Polish language
Emigration to United States, postwar
Germany invasion of Poland, September 1, 1939
Identification documents, German issued, 1933 -- 1945
Identification documents, Polish issued, 1939 -- 1945
Inconsistent and biased reflections on the Polish military resistance against the German invasion
Israel Laks (Lewis Lax), assumed false identity in Poland
Israel Laks (Lutek Laks, Lewis Lax), personal testimony
Life under false identity
Life under false identity in Warsaw, 1939 -- 1945
Life under German occupation--Poland (1939-1945)
Lublin (Poland)
Majdanek (Poland: Concentration Camp)
Means of adaptation and survival in Nazi-German prisons
Means of adaptation and survival in the ghettos
Means of adaptation and survival in the Holocaust
Medical operations, camouflaging the feature of male Jewishness, Warsaw, 1939 -- 1945
Numerus Clausus, a quota reducing admission of Jewish students to Universities, Poland
Pawiak Prison (Warsaw, Poland)
Personal survival skills
Personal testimonies, postwar
Poland (1939-1945)
Polish - Jewish relations in the Holocaust
Polish collaborating police, money extortion, 1939 -- 1944
Polish Home Army (Armija Krajowa)
Polish Resistance supplies the Jewish Resistance with ammunition in Warsaw ghetto
Prisoners of War, Polish
Reflection on a Polish character at wartime, Jewish
Rejection of Jewishness in the Holocaust for the sake of survival
Resistance, Polish
Role of money and connections in survival in the Holocaust
Soviet annexation of Eastern Poland, September 1939
Stereotypes with regard to Polish antisemitism
survival tactics
Survivors postwar views, biased
Testimonies, postwar
The role of money and connections in the survival during the Second World War
The Warsaw Sewer System as a hiding place, 1940 -- 1945
The Warsaw Sewer System as the clandestine paths, 1939 -- 1945
Untruthful stories, survivors
Warsaw (Poland)
Warsaw (Poland: ghetto)
Warsaw Polish Uprising
Warsaw sewage canals, means of underground communications
Will and energy for survival


Box and Folder Listing


Browse by Document/Artifact of Item-Level:

[Document/Artifact of Item-Level 1: RG-49.01, Israel Laks, postwar proof of incarceration, August 1945],
[Document/Artifact of Item-Level 2: RG-49.02, Laks Lutek (Israel Laks), AEF DP Registration card, September 1945],
[Document/Artifact of Item-Level 3: RG-49.03, Lax Lutek (Israel Laks, Lewis Lax) United States Lines Company Passenger Ticket, June 1946],
[Document/Artifact of Item-Level 4: RG-49.04, Laks Israel (Lutek Laks, Lewis Lax) Educational record, school for dentistry laboratory personnel, Poland, 1941, January 1941],
[Document/Artifact of Item-Level 5: RG-49.05, Sidonia Lewin, United States Lines Company Passenger Ticket, February 1947],
[Document/Artifact of Item-Level 6: RG-49.06, Lewis Lax (Lutek Laks, Lewis Lax) postwar Tesitmony, Postwar],
[Document/Artifact of Item-Level 7: RG-49.06.01, Lewis Lax (Lutek Laks, Lewis Lax) postwar Tesitmony, Postwar],
[All]

Document/Artifact of Item-Level 3: RG-49.03, Lax Lutek (Israel Laks, Lewis Lax) United States Lines Company Passenger Ticket, June 1946Add to your cart.
Israel Laks (Lutek Laks, Lewis Lax) emigrates to th United States, June 1946
Subject/Index Terms:
Israel Laks (Lewis Lax), assumed false identity in Poland
Emigration to the United States
Emigration from postwar Germany to the United States
Bremen (Germany)
New York (New York, United States)
Germany (1945 -- 1949)
United States (1945 -- 1960)
Sea-line passenger documents, American
Sea-line passenger tickets, American
Sea-line passenger documents
Documents in English language
Creators:
United States Lines Company (June 1946)


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