Belgian Medal of the Armed Resistance 1940-1945, ribbon and box awarded to a Belgian Jewish resistance fighter

Identifier
irn82332
Language of Description
English
Alt. Identifiers
  • 2012.473.13 a-d
Dates
1 Jan 1940 - 31 Dec 1945
Level of Description
Item
Languages
  • Latin
  • French
Source
EHRI Partner

Extent and Medium

a-b: Height: 3.375 inches (8.573 cm) | Width: 1.500 inches (3.81 cm) | Depth: 0.125 inches (0.318 cm)

c: Height: 3.875 inches (9.843 cm) | Width: 2.000 inches (5.08 cm) | Depth: 0.125 inches (0.318 cm)

d: Height: 4.000 inches (10.16 cm) | Width: 2.125 inches (5.398 cm) | Depth: 0.375 inches (0.953 cm)

Creator(s)

Biographical History

Menachem (Maurice) Benzion Konkowski (1905 – 1966) was born in Warsaw, Poland, to Marja Fajgla Binstock, born in Bedzin, and Zalman Josek Konkowski. He had a brother Adolf, born in 1903, and a sister Sonja. Zalman died in 1933. Later, Menachem immigrated to Brussels, Belgium, where he established Selecta, a metalworking shop that made clasps for handbags. He married Ita Blinbaum. Ita was born on July 5, 1904, in Pabianice, Poland, to Michael Jakub and Yachieta Zilbersac (1876-1963.) Her family immigrated to Belgium in the late 1920s. Her father had a textile factory that manufactured fabric used to make ties. Ita and Menachem had two daughters: Renée, born on September 19, 1935, and Claudine, born on August 20, 1938. In May 1940, Belgium was invaded and occupied by Nazi Germany. Anti-Jewish laws were immediately enacted to ostracize the Jewish population. Jewish property and businesses were confiscated and they were banned from certain professions. By 1942, all Jews were required to wear a yellow Star of David. Belgian Jews and immigrant Jewish males were selected for forced labor. That year, Menachem made arrangements to pay Aurelia Parent to hide his young daughters, as well as his nieces: Adolf’s daughters, Henriette and Marja and Sonja’s daughter, Lilianne. The girls lived in the Etterbeek section of Brussels. They were taught to tell people that they attended school with the nuns for a few hours daily. Menachem and Ita lived in hiding in a room next to the metal shop, and Adolf and his wife lived nearby. Occasionally, parents and children would meet briefly on street corners. The workshop was maintained by the Germans in case its metal working capabilities were needed for the war effort. The Germans assigned a permanent guard to the factory to inspect it regularly, but the guard was unaware of an ingenious wall concealing a hidden space in the back of the factory. Menachem had arranged for its construction earlier and used the space throughout the war to produce false documents and identification cards as well as store valuables and weapons. The Germans never discovered the space behind the wall or anything it concealed. In late 1941, Menachem joined the Belgian resistance. He adopted the nom de guerre Moliere, and founded a group of primarily Jewish resistance fighters, known as the Moliere Group. The unit was part of the 9th Brigade of the Belgian Nationalist Movement in Uccle, a civil resistance organization, and Menachem held the rank of Commanding Major. He also worked with CDJ (Comité de Défense des Juifs) and other resistance organizations. By early 1942, the Moliere Group had nearly 200 members. Menachem organized the Brigade into specialized units with a designated head, responsible to him, that could resist and sabotage German rule in multiple ways: Shock section, an armed resistance that performed assaults of German units and acts of sabotage to seize weapons; Information service, which created lists of traitors and collaborators, and gathered military, political, and economic information and was run by Domb Abraham, under the alias, Ali; Press service, a major producer and distributor of clandestine publications in German and Yiddish, including Unser Wort and Flambeau; Social service, which aided families in need of basic provisions such as clothing and food or in danger of deportation; False documents service; Medical service, and eventually, a Purge service. Menachem managed Shock section and the arms and munitions they captured were stored in two warehouses in Brussels. This unit also sabotaged German equipment and vehicles. One of the warehouses was in a location owned by the Association of Jews in Belgium (AJB). This was a Jewish council organized by the Germans to register Jews for forced labor and deportation. Menachem, in the guise of a coat clerk, stationed himself in this warehouse to safeguard his group’s weapons cache. The Moliere Brigade viewed the AJB as a collaborationist organization which exploited their fellow Jews by charging people large sums of money to be left off the lists. This rancor continued after the war when the AJB claimed that Menachem’s only role at the warehouse was as a coat check receptionist uninvolved in the resistance. The Moliere information service gathered information on companies and people working directly or indirectly to support the occupying Nazi forces. This information was used to get some of these collaborationists to cease cooperating with the Germans either voluntarily or as a result of threats by the resistance. As the war continued, this information was used to eliminate the infamous denouncer known as Jacques, among other collaborators. In the fall of 1944, the Shock section joined Allied Forces in the fight to liberate Brussels in the Sonian Forest and countryside on the outskirts of the city. Brussels was liberated in early September 1944. At the war’s end, Moliere Group had been reduced by deportation and execution by the Germans to 130 members. During the war, Menachem’s sister Sonja and her husband were killed in Auschwitz. His wife Ita’s parents were hidden by an employee, Jeanne de Bruyn, and her family. During the war, Menachem and his unit secretly removed materials and equipment from his in laws’ textile factory. This enabled the family to quickly start up their business in Belgium, after the war and provided a living for four families. Postwar, Menachem supported and supplied weapons to Haganah, the Jewish underground army in Palestine, during the fight for Independence. Menachem was honored by the governments of Belgium and Poland for his bravery and resistance activity during World War II, and by the Israeli Defense Ministry for his support during the fight for Independence. In 1994, the de Bruyn family was recognized as Righteous Among the Nations for their efforts to hide the Blinbaum family.

Archival History

The medal and box were donated to the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum in 2012 by Claudine Davison and Renée Alalouf, the daughters, and Diane Leigh Davison, the granddaughter, of Menachem and Ita Blinbaum Konkowski.

Acquisition

United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Collection, Gift of Claudine Davison, Diane Leigh Davison, and Renée Alalouf

Funding Note: The cataloging of this artifact has been supported by a grant from the Conference on Jewish Material Claims Against Germany.

Scope and Content

Medal de la Resistance Armee 1940 - 1945 (Belgian Medal of the Armed Resistance 1940-1945) awarded to Menachem Konkowksi, a Jewish resistance fighter in Belgium, during the German occupation. Belgium was conquered by Nazi Germany in May 1940. The Germans enacted anti-Jewish legislation to persecute the Jewish population. Beginning in late 1941, Menachem, under the alias, Moliere, organized a Jewish resistance group, also called Moliere, the 9th Brigade of the Belgian Nationalist Movement in Uccle, a civil resistance organization. His unit committed acts of sabotage against the German occupiers, as well as assaults on German soldiers, and warehouse raids to acquire large weapons caches. The Moliere Group also gathered information on and arranged for the elimination of collaborators. Menachem placed his two young daughters, Renee, 7, and Claudine, 4, in hiding with Aurelia Parent in 1942. He and his wife Ita hid elsewhere, and were constantly on the move. Belgium was liberated by Allied troops on September 3, 1944. Menachem was honored by the Belgian and Polish governments for his wartime activities.

Conditions Governing Access

No restrictions on access

Conditions Governing Reproduction

No restrictions on use

Physical Characteristics and Technical Requirements

Bronze circular medal, 1.375 inches diameter, with an attached grosgrain ribbon. The front has an embossed image of a woman’s head and naked torso. The head is in left profile, and she stares over the right shoulder and clasps the left arm with the right hand in a defiant pose. She has long flowing hair and wears a short sleeve blouse. The back of the medal has an embossed laurel wreath along the edges. On the center is an embossed Latin word with a date above and below. A suspension ring is attached at the top to a jump ring through which the ribbon is threaded. The black ribbon has 2 narrow red center stripes and green edge stripes. There is a metal backing pin with 2 prongs on the back of the ribbon. c. Rectangular shallow cardboard box base with the sides covered in thin, gray paper. The underside is covered in thin white paper and an adhered shiny gold colored paper label with the brand name and logo of a man’s profile within a circle. The interior has diamond patterned white cloth lining that has separated. d. Rectangular shallow cardboard box lid with the exterior covered in thin, gray paper. The interior has diamond patterned white cloth lining.

Subjects

Genre

This description is derived directly from structured data provided to EHRI by a partner institution. This collection holding institution considers this description as an accurate reflection of the archival holdings to which it refers at the moment of data transfer.