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Ignaz "I.G." and Miriam (Golomb) Grossman

Ignaz "I.G." and Miriam (Golomb) Grossman met and married in the Linz-Bindermichl Deportation Camp (DP) in Austria in 1947. Their only son, Alex, was born there in March 1948 and together the family left for the U.S. in 1949. They arrived in Omaha by train with a few single dollars in their pocket. In Nebraska, I.G. used his mechanical skills to make a living. He used his prisoner number “33072” as an identification number for the rest of his life. Miriam sought to speak out publicly about her experiences and stood up against injustices wherever possible.

Miriam was from a family of nine children in the small Polish town of Konin. In her teens, the family moved to the second largest Polish city of Łodz. They were forced into the Jewish ghetto after the outbreak of the war. Renamed Litzmannstadt by the Nazis, the Jewish occupants were amassed in one section of the city behind barbed wire, and many were sent to slave labor in textile factories. Many members of the Golomb family were living together in poor conditions in a small room. Scarce food rations barely sustained them, and Miriam's parents ultimately died of sickness and malnutrition. Miriam worked as a nurse in the ghetto hospital. With the liquidation of the ghetto, Miriam was sent to Auschwitz and later to a sub-camp as a slave laborer in a factory. She was liberated by the Russians. Following months of recovery from illness, Miriam went to the DP in Austria .

I.G was from a small town in the Tatra Mountains then in northern Czechoslovakia. He had seven siblings and an extended family in his town. A trained mechanic, he and his brother ran a successful machine shop prior to Nazi occupation of Czech provinces. I.G. joined the Czech army, which was soon defeated, and he and his fellow soldiers were taken prisoner to Auschwitz. When his skills as a machinist were discovered, I.G. was transferred to Gusen-Zwei, a sub-camp of Mauthausen in Austria. In defiance of an order to melt down stolen gold for the Nazis, I.G. secretly hid small bits of gold as a memory to those who were murdered. Surviving a failed Nazi tunnel explosion, I.G. was liberated by the Russians in May 1945.


84 items

ADL honors four, April 16, 1999

  • Date: April 16, 1999
  • Creator(s): Belmont, Jill
  • Format: newspaper

Alex and Ignac Grossman

  • Date: 1972
  • Creator(s): Grossman, I.G. | Grossman, Alex
  • Format: photograph

Alex Grossman's birth announcement

  • Date: 1947
  • Format: object

Alex Grossman's birth announcement

  • Date: 1947
  • Format: object

Contributions to Civilization

  • Creator(s): Grossman, Miriam
  • Format: newspaper

Death Camp Came to Life, Saturday, April 9, 1994

  • Date: April 9, 1994
  • Creator(s): Kelly, Michael
  • Format: newspaper

Doubts of the Holocaust?

  • Format: document

Dvar Torah, January 22, 1988

  • Date: January 22, 1988
  • Creator(s): Grossman, Miriam
  • Format: document

I.G. and Miriam after birth of Alex Grossman

  • Date: March 1948
  • Format: photograph

I.G. and Miriam after birth of Alex Grossman (back)

  • Date: March 1949
  • Format: photograph

I.G. and Miriam Grossman at the Shop

  • Date: 1990
  • Creator(s): I.G. and Miriam Grossman
  • Format: photograph

I.G. and Miriam Grossman at the Shop

  • Date: 1990
  • Creator(s): I.G. and Miriam Grossman
  • Format: photograph

I.G. Grossman at the Shop

  • Date: 1987?
  • Creator(s): I.G. Grossman
  • Format: photograph

Ignac and a Dog

  • Creator(s): Grossman, I.G.
  • Format: photograph

Ignac and His Brother at their Shop

  • Creator(s): Grossman, I.G.
  • Format: photograph

Ignac and Miriam at the Shop

  • Date: 1987
  • Creator(s): Grossman, I.G. | Grossman, Miriam
  • Format: photograph

Ignac and Miriam Outside of their Home

  • Creator(s): Grossman, I.G. | Grossman, Miriam

Ignac as a Mechanic Before WWII

  • Creator(s): Grossman, I.G.
  • Format: photograph

Ignac Grossman at Morton Motors

  • Date: 1950
  • Creator(s): Grossman, I.G.
  • Format: photograph

Ignac, Again, as a Mechanic Before WWII

  • Creator(s): Grossman, I.G.
  • Format: photograph

Ignac, Alex and Miriam 1949

  • Date: 1949
  • Format: photograph

Ignac, Miriam, and Alex at the Shop

  • Creator(s): Grossman, I.G. | Grossman, Miriam | Grossman, Alex
  • Format: photograph

Ignac, Miriam, and Alex Land at Ellis Island

  • Date: 1949
  • Format: photograph

Ignac, Miriam, and Alex Land at Ellis Island

  • Date: 1949
  • Format: photograph

Laying Wreaths in the Linz-Bindermichl Deportation Camp

  • Date: 1946
  • Creator(s): Miriam Grossman
  • Format: photograph

Laying Wreaths in the Linz-Bindermichl Deportation Camp

  • Date: 1946
  • Creator(s): Miriam Grossman
  • Format: photograph

Letter from Miriam Grossman to Marsha, March 1, 1969

  • Date: March 1, 1969
  • Creator(s): Grossman, Miriam
  • Format: document

Letter to the Editor

  • Creator(s): Grossman, Miriam
  • Format: newspaper

Mauthausen 8.8.1938 5.5.1945

  • Date: May 2, 1991
  • Format: book

Message from the Pulpit: An Analogy of the Times – of Moses and Now, April 24, 1987

  • Date: April 24, 1987
  • Creator(s): Grossman, Miriam
  • Format: document

Miriam & Alex On Ship to America

  • Date: 1949
  • Format: photograph

Miriam & Alex On Ship to America

  • Date: 1949
  • Format: photograph

Miriam at a Funeral in the Linz-Bindermichl Deportation Camp

  • Date: 1946
  • Creator(s): Miriam Grossman
  • Format: photograph

Miriam at a Funeral in the Linz-Bindermichl Deportation Camp

  • Date: 1946
  • Creator(s): Miriam Grossman
  • Format: photograph

Miriam Grossman

  • Creator(s): Miriam Grossman
  • Format: photograph

Miriam Grossman (from The Day Still Lives in Infamy), December 7, 1991

  • Date: December 7, 1991
  • Creator(s): Hendee, David
  • Format: newspaper