In 1926 Shlomo Chanoch Rabinowicz announced his plan for a network of Radomsker yeshivas.
eight yeshivas were opened in Będzin, Podgórze, Chrzanów, Wolbrom, Oświęcim, Częstochowa, Łódź and Kraków.
On the eve of World War II there were 36 Keser Torah yeshivas enrolling over 4,000 students in Poland.
[1][5] Shlomo Rabinowicz and his family, including his only daughter and son-in-law and their infant son, were murdered by Nazis who shot them to death on 1 August 1942.
[1][6] In 1965 they asked Menachem Shlomo Bornsztain, son of the Sochatchover rebbe and a nephew of David Moshe Rabinowicz, to head the kollel.