Przedbórz

Przedbórz [ˈpʂɛdbuʂ] is a town in Radomsko County, Łódź Voivodeship, Poland, with 3,458 inhabitants (2020).

[1] Przedbórz is situated on the Pilica River in the northwestern corner of the historic province of Lesser Poland.

In 1807 Przedbórz was regained by the Poles and included within the short-lived Duchy of Warsaw, and after its dissolution, it passed to Russian-controlled Congress Poland in 1815.

In World War II the area of Przedbórz was a center of resistance where units of Major Henryk Dobrzański were active.

This meant that the commune included the town of Przedbórz, the suburb of Widoma and a number of suburban settlements: Majowa Góra, Chałupki Trzecie, Chałupki Drugie, Miejskie Pola Dzień and Miejskie Pola Drugie.

In the Second Polish Republic in Przedbórz, the rabbi was Nusyn Dawid Grynbaum, and the cantor was Moszek Halper.

[11] In committing the crime, Jezierski was most likely supported by Mieczysław Król, Stefan Hoffman and Jan Marciński.

Their primary goal was to murder Jews who managed to survive World War II.

The victims were: Josel Maszlak, Lejzor Lizband, Becalel Wyszyński, Sara Litwin, Chil Sholem the Immemorial, Izrael Blumenzon, Szlomo Szwarc and Pincze Miedziński.

The victims' small possessions consisted mainly of clothes, two old hat making machines, bedding and a bicycle.

Przedbórz in the 1910s