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  • Leopold Lahola (1918 - 1968)
  • Gisella Feldmann (1887 - c.1942)
    Gisela Gisella Gizela FELDMANN, née WAGMANN VAGMAN?: b.13 Aug 1887, Banovce - d. circa 1942, ?, HOLOCAUST Details of deportation and subsequent death courtesy of: Gizela Feldman was born in Czecho...
  • Emanuel Feldmann (1878 - bef.1945)
    Emanuel "Emil" FELDMANN: b. 24 Feb 1878, Banovce - d. circa 1942, ?, HOLOCAUST N.B. Actual birth record states born in May not in February - not clear where error is ...? Details from actual IKG-Baan...
  • Imre Rosenthal (1907 - 1944)
    Yad Vashem entry from sister Ilona (Shifra) Shreiber on 16 May 1955 at: Last Name Rosenthal* Last Name* Rozental* First Name Imre* First Name Moshe* Title Dr.* Gender Male* Date of Birth 1907* Place of...
  • Anna Löwenbein (1928 - 1944)
    Imprisoned at Nováky Labour Camp, which was liberated in August 1944 during the Slovak National Uprising. Her father Dr., Ing. Rudolf Lowenbein, her mother Gertrude, and Anna were imprisoned in Banská ...

(from www.yadvashem.org/odot_pdf/Microsoft%20Word%20-%205969.pdf)

Nováky was a labor camp in central Slovakia. The first Jews were brought to Nováky in late 1941, but the camp expanded greatly in 1942, when the Germans began the mass deportation of Slovak Jews. Nováky was created due to the efforts of the Slovak Jewish Center, which had petitioned the Slovak government to establish camps where Jews could work and be spared from deportation.

Nováky, one of the largest labor camps in Slovakia, held 1,600 Jewish prisoners. Most were skilled craftsmen and carpenters who worked in workshops. The prisoners ran their own school, medical clinics, and welfare institutions, and cultural activities such as drama, religious studies, and sports were allowed.

As the Final Solution took shape, the resulting increase in deportation of Slovak Jews led to transformations in the utilization of the Slovak labor camps. Sered, Vyhne, and Nováky were now used to serve the deportation policy, and a number of buildings in Sered and Nováky functioned as a concentration camp, separated from the labor camp by boundaries and supervised by armed guards. In June 1943, there were more than 3,000 Jews in these camps, and some 650 Jews served as forced labor in various labor centers.

Nováky was liberated in August 1944 during the Slovak National Uprising. Over 200 inmates from the camp joined the rebels, and 35 were killed in the fighting.