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Mike Jacobs was born in 1925 in the
small Polish town of Konin, a town whose Jewish community dated
back to 1397. Mike's given name was Mendel Jakubowicz. After
he changed it to English he also uses the full name "Michael".
On September 1, 1939, the Nazi Army invaded
Poland. Two months later, Jacobs and his entire family were herded
into cattle cars and moved to the ghetto in Ostrowiec. His parents,
two brothers and two sisters were murdered in the Treblinka death
camp. Another brother was later killed while fighting the Nazis
with the partisans.
Jacobs was sent to the camp Ostroweic and
subsequently transported to Auschwitz (Poland), Birkenau (Poland),
Mathausen-Gusen II (Austria). Americans liberated him from Mathausen-Gusen
II on May 5, 1945. Refusing to remain in a DP (Displaced Persons)
Camp, Jacobs worked as a shop keeper in Western Europe, studied
physical education in Germany and taught sports to Jewish refugees
and German children before receiving his papers to emigrate to
the United States in 1951.
Jacobs has volunteered extensively as a lecturer
on the Holocaust and has appeared before high schools, churches,
civic groups and universities. He is founder and past president
of the Holocaust survivors in Dallas and is founder of the Dallas
Memorial Center for Holocaust Studies dedicated to the memory
of the 11 million souls - 6 million Jews and 5 million non-Jews
- who perished at the hands of the Nazis from 1939 -1945.
Jacobs and his wife, Ginger Chesnick
Jacobs, a native Dallasite, have four children. Jacobs is the
founder of Jacobs Iron and Metal Company, Inc., from which he
retired in the 1990s.
His speeches focus on his experience during
the Holocaust and, thereafter, as a survivor.
Themes included are:
What one human can do to another
Don't take freedom for granted
How beautiful it is to be free
Mr. Jacobs continues to be an enthusiastic
speaker and a dedicated member of the Dallas Jewish community.
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