Nisha Rathode (Editor)

Sol Rosenberg

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Religion
  
Jewish


Name
  
Sol Rosenberg

Born
  
February 2, 1926 (
1926-02-02
)
Warsaw, Poland

Died
  
January 30, 2009(2009-01-30) (aged 82) Monroe, Ouachita Parish, Louisiana, USA

Resting place
  
Jewish Cemetery in Monroe, Louisiana

Occupation
  
Businessman; Philanthropist

Spouse(s)
  
Tola Barron Rosenberg (married ca. 1946-2006, her death)

Children
  
Joe Rosenberg Jackie Rosenberg Herman Rosenberg Jeannie R. Wermuth Terri Rosenberg Ten grandchildren

Jerky boys sol rosenberg s glasses


Sol Rosenberg (February 2, 1926 – January 30, 2009) was a Polish-born American businessman and philanthropist. He was a Jewish survivor of the German Nazi death and concentration camps who became an industrialist and philanthropist in Monroe in northeastern Louisiana.

Contents

After the German invasion of Poland of 1939 Rosenberg lived in the Warsaw Ghetto set up by the Nazi occupiers of Poland. The German Nazi regime sent his parents and two sisters to their deaths in 1942, but Rosenberg was one of the very few to escape from the death camp at Treblinka; he returned to Warsaw, where he participated in the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising. Rosenberg was then sent to the Dachau concentration camp, where he was liberated by the Allied Powers after the final overthrow of the Nazi regime.

In Poland, Rosenberg met his wife, the former Tola Baron (June 22, 1924 – January 12, 2006). The couple emigrated to Louisiana in 1949 and thereafter settled in Monroe where they started Sol's Pipe and Steel Co. from scratch.

Sol rosenberg hurt at work


United States

Rosenberg was involved in community affairs and charitable works, being a charter founder of the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum in Washington, D.C., and the Holocaust Museum Houston. He was a member of the Monroe Chamber of Commerce and supported the Booster Club at the University of Louisiana at Monroe. In 2006, he was awarded the Kitty DeGree Lifetime Business Achievement Award. He played golf at the Bayou Desiard Country Club in Monroe, where he made a hole in one at the age of eighty-one.

Rosenberg contributed to youth athletics and the reconstruction of the Jewish Cemetery in Monroe. His friend Jay Marx, a Jewish member of the Monroe City Council, characterized Rosenberg's life as "the American dream. He found his way in a new country and reaped the benefits of this country... He didn't take for granted anything, and he shared plenty. I think all of us will certainly regret his loss but will admire his life.”

"My father was kind of like a Will Rogers in reverse; he never met a man who didn't like him,” said his son, Jackie Rosenberg in an interview with the Monroe News Star. The senior Rosenberg remained active in the family's business, Sol's Pipe and Steel Co., an international company, until cancer struck.

Rosenberg died at his Monroe residence. In addition to his son Jackie and his wife, Diane, Rosenberg was survived by four other children, Joe Rosenberg and wife, Pam; Herman Rosenberg, Jeannie Wermuth and her husband, Gary, and Terri Rosenberg, and twelve grandchildren. Services were held on February 1, 2009 – one day before what would have been Rosenberg's 83rd birthday – at the Reform Judaism synagogue, Temple B'nai Israel, in Monroe. Interment was at the Jewish Cemetery.

Sol’s Story: A Triumph of the Human Spirit by Richard B. Chardkoff, a ULM historian, tells the story of Rosenberg’s trials and triumphs. His obituary quotes him, accordingly: "I love the United States. I’m a citizen. I’m proud to be an American, and I’m a good American. Nowhere in the whole world did I find happiness. I find happiness in America."

References

Sol Rosenberg Wikipedia