Isabelle Choko (née Izabela Sztrauch Galewska, born 18 September 1928) is a Polish concentration camp survivor and former chess player who won the 1956 French Women's Chess Championship.[1]
Isabelle Choko | |
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![]() Isabelle Choko in 1957 in 1st Women's Chess Olympiad | |
Country | France |
Born | (1928-09-18) 18 September 1928 (age 93) Łódź, Poland |
Choko was born in Łódź in Poland. She and her parents were driven out of their pharmacy and sent to the Łódź Ghetto established in 1940. Her father died in February 1942 of deprivation and hunger. During the summer of 1944, the ghetto was liquidated and Isabelle Choko and her mother were sent to Auschwitz concentration camp where she was selected in a working kommando. In February 1945, during the evacuation of Auschwitz, she was sent to Bergen-Belsen concentration camp where her mother died. Weakened by typhus, she was saved by an American army doctor when the camp was liberated.[2] At that time, she weighed only 25 kg.[3] She was sent to Sweden to regain her health before joining one of her uncles in Paris in 1946.[4][5]
In Paris, she met Arthur Choko whom she married and with whom she has three children.[6] She became French women's chess champion in 1956.[7] At the beginning of the 2000s, she decided to testify about the deportation by publishing her autobiography Mes deux vies with the editions Caractères. She will be one of the 52,000 surviving witnesses of the Shoah filmed by the Shoah Foundation as well as for the documentary Les Survivants by Patrick Rotman.[8]
Choko played for France in the Women's Chess Olympiad:[9]
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