Online Store Contact us About us
Yad Vashem logo

Kerkhofs Louis

Righteous
Ceremony in honor of Louis Kerkhofs.
Ceremony in honor of Louis Kerkhofs.
Kerkhofs, Monsignor Louis-Joseph Monsignor Louis-Joseph Kerkhofs, was the bishop of Liège/Luik during the war years. He used his considerable authority and prestige to urge the clerics in his diocese to lend a hand to save Jews from deportation. Many cases of people involved in rescue that are documented in this book are a direct result of his intervention. Thus for instance, Father Hubert Celis*, in Halmaal, Limburg province, relates that he was influenced by Kerkhofs’ appeal to help Jews, which resulted in the sheltering of a Jewish family in his parish, an endeavor in which his whole family took part. Betty Garfinkles, who hid with Father Louis Jamin*, relates that as a result of Kerkhofs’ appeal to the priests under his jurisdiction, the Banneux monastery afforded a roof to a large number of fleeing Jews. Other monasteries and Catholic seminaries spontaneously followed suit, including the Benedictine monks in Liège, in Charneux and in Val Dieu, The Holy Heart of Maria in Ter Hulpe, and other religious institutions. In July 1942, Monsignor Kerkhofs was personally involved in securing a safe hiding place for cantor Joseph Lepkifker, who officiated as head of the religious Jewish community in Liège, and his family. Monsignor Kerkhofs, known as the “Prince of Charity” for his magnanimity, first hid Joseph Lepkifker, his wife Tzivica, and their two sons Mendel and Elie in the bishopric; Tzivica Lepkifker was then moved to a convent in Huy/Hoei (the mother superior of which was a cousin of Kerkhofs), and the two sons were placed with Paul Bonhomme*, and Dr. Marcel Lambrichts*. When Lepkifker’s parents were arrested and deported, Monsignor Kerkhofs felt it best to move Mrs. Lepkifker to another place, and he took her in his car to a small convent in Liège (Les Soeurs du Bon Secours), made up of nuns of different nationalities. There, Tzivica stayed from 1943 until the country’s liberation. In this rescue operation, Monsignor Kerkhofs worked closely with FathersEmile Boufflette* and Joseph Peeters*, who was executed by the Germans. He was well known for his stand in favor of persecuted Jews, not only in Liège but in other regions as well. On July 6, 1981,Yad Vashem recognized Monsignor Louis Kerkhofs as Righteous Among the Nations.
Last Name
Kerkhofs
First Name
Louis
Joseph
Name Title
MONSEIGNEUR
Date of Birth
15/02/1878
Date of Death
31/12/1962
Fate
survived
Nationality
BELGIUM
Gender
Male
Profession
PRIEST
Item ID
4042527
Recognition Date
06/07/1981
Ceremony Place
Brussels, Belgium
Commemoration
Tree
Ceremony In Yad Vashem
Yes
File Number
M.31.2/1361/1