World War II broke out in September 1939. The
Holocaust in Belgium began with the German invasion in May 1940: the Military Government passed the first anti-Jewish laws in October that year. Shentow and his family - like all Belgian Jews - were refused emigration documents. In 1941, their radios and bicycles were confiscated by the
Gestapo. Shentow and his sisters - indeed, all Jewish children - were denied access to schools: they were banned from parks, and other public places. From May 1942, Shentow and all Jewish citizens - including babies and young children - were forced to wear the yellow
Star of David that segregated them for persecution. In 1942, all men and boys over 16, were instructed to report to the
Mechelen transit camp (halfway between Antwerp and Brussels). David and his father - a tailor - were deported to a labour camp in France, where they were beaten as slaves, labouring on the Chemin Des Juifs. Later that year Shentow was transferred to the
Auschwitz-Birkenau extermination camp. All members of his family in Europe - his parents, sisters, cousins, aunts, and uncles - were murdered. Shentow survived slave labour, the Auschwitz extermination camp, the death marches, and the
Dachau concentration camp, from which he was liberated on his 20th birthday (April 29, 1945). ==Appearance in films==