Elected to IAJGS Board

August 2020,  For release: Upon receipt

Contact: Sandra Golden, Publicity Chair, IAJGS, publicity@iajgs2020.org

Perth resident elected to International Jewish Genealogy Board                 

Eli Rabinowitz, a Perth, Australia, resident,  was elected to the Board of Directors of the International Association of Jewish Genealogical Societies (IAJGS) at its International Jewish Genealogy Conference, presented virtually on Aug. 12.  The Conference drew more than 2300 registrants from 28 countries.

Eli  has researched his family’s genealogy and associated Jewish cultural history for over 30 years. A South African-born Australian, Eli has travelled extensively, writing about Jewish life, travel and education on his website, Tangential Travel and Jewish Life. http://elirab.me 

 Eli writes and manages 87 Jewishgen KehilaLinks, and over 750 WordPress posts. His articles have appeared in numerous publications. Eli has lectured internationally: at educational institutions, commemorative events, at IAJGS and other conferences, and online platforms.

He established the Partisans’ Song Project, and was awarded a U.S. government cultural grant for his WE ARE HERE! Human Rights and Social Justice initiative, https://wah.foundation.

Eli has an Economics Honours degree from the University of Cape Town.

IAJGS is an umbrella organization of more than 91 Jewish genealogical organizations worldwide.  The IAJGS coordinates and organizes activities such as its annual International Conference on Jewish Genealogy and provides a unified voice as the spokesperson on behalf of its members. The IAJGS’s vision is of a worldwide network of Jewish genealogical research organizations and partners working together as one coherent, effective and respected community, enabling people to succeed in researching Jewish ancestry and heritage. Find the IAJGS at: www.iajgs.org and like us on Facebook at http://www.facebook.com/iajgsjewishgenealogy.  

                                                            

 

Video of Rabbi Chaim Gutnick Z”L in 2000

Videos from the 6th yahrzeit of the Lubavitcher Rebbe Z”L

Today is the 26th yahrzeit of the Rebbe Z”L

My videos of the Rabbi Chaim Gutnick Z”L, filmed at CHABAD House in Perth, Western Australia on 5 July 2000 on the 6th yahrzeit of the Lubavitcher Rebbe.

An inspiring story about the Rebbe Z”L told by Chaim Gutnick Z”L

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chaim_Gutnick

Menachem Mendel Schneerson

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 
 
For the third Rebbe of the Chabad Lubavitch dynasty, see Menachem Mendel Schneersohn.
Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneerson
Lubavitcher Rebbe
Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneerson2.jpg

Menachem Mendel Schneerson at the Lag BaOmer parade in Brooklyn, 1987.
Synagogue 770 Eastern Parkway, Brooklyn, NY
Began 10 Shevat 5711 / January 17, 1951
Predecessor Yosef Yitzchok Schneersohn
Personal details
Born April 5, 1902 OS (11 Nissan5662)[1]
Nikolaev, Kherson Governorate,Russian Empire (present-dayMykolaivUkraine)
Died June 12, 1994 NS (3 Tammuz5754) (aged 92[2])
ManhattanNew YorkUSA
Buried QueensNew York, USA
Dynasty Chabad Lubavitch
Parents Levi Yitzchak Schneerson
ChanaYanovski Schneerson
Spouse Chaya Mushka Schneerson
Semicha Rogatchover Gaon

Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneerson (April 5, 1902 OS[1] – June 12, 1994 NS), known as the Lubavitcher Rebbe or just the Rebbe,[3] was a prominent Hasidic rabbi who was the seventh and last Rebbe (Hasidic leader) of the Chabad-Lubavitch movement. He was fifth in a direct paternal line to the third Chabad-Lubavitch Rebbe, Menachem Mendel Schneersohn. In January 1951, a year after the death of his father-in-law, Rabbi Yosef Yitzchok Schneersohn, he assumed the leadership of the Lubavitch movement.

He led the movement until his death in 1994, greatly expanding its worldwide activities and founding a worldwide network of institutions to spread traditional religious practices among the Jewish people.[4] These institutions include schools, kindergartens, synagogues andChabad houses. He successfully built a network of more than 3,600 institutions in over 70 countries and 1000 cities around the world.[5]During his lifetime, some of his followers considered him to be the Jewish Messiah, but Rabbi Schneerson mildly discouraged such talk.[6]

He was recognized as a contributor to Jewish continuity and religious thought,[7] and recognized by both the Orthodox and Reform movements, as the pioneer of Jewish outreach.[8]

Early life

Birth and early years

Menachem Mendel Schneerson was born on Friday, April 18, 1902, equivalent to 11 Nissan, 5662, in the town of Nikolaev.[9] His father was Rabbi Levi Yitzchak Schneerson, a renowned Talmudic scholar and authority on Kabbalah and Jewish law.[10] His mother was Rebbetzin Chana Schneerson (nee Yanovski).

In 1907, when Menachem Mendel was six years old, the Schneersons moved to Yekatrinislav (today, Dnepropetrovsk), where Rabbi Levi Yitzchak was appointed Chief Rabbi of the city. He served until 1939.[11] He had two younger brothers, Dov Ber and Yisroel Aryeh Leib.[12] His younger brother Dov Ber, an accomplished Talmudist in his youth, had become mentally disturbed during his late teenage years, and spent time at an institution for the mentally disabled near Nikolaiev. He was murdered in 1944 in a mass shooting by Nazi collaborators.[13]

The youngest, Yisrael Aryeh Leib, was close to his brother, and often traveled with him. He was widely viewed as a genius and studied Talmud, Kabbalah and science. In the late 1920s together with his brother, he met Rabbi Yosef Yitzchak Schneersohn, the sixth Rebbe.[14] To escape the Soviet Union, he changed his name to Mark Gourary using the papers of Mr. Mark (Mordecahi) Gourary, who had been a friend of his father. He moved to Israel where he became a businessman. He later moved to England where he began doctoral studies atLiverpool University but died in 1952 before completing them. His wife died in 1996 and his children—Schneerson’s closest living relatives—currently reside in Israel.[12]

Early education

During his youth, Schneerson received a mostly private Jewish education. He was tutored by Zalman Vilenkin from 1909 through 1913. In 1977, he said of Vilenkin: “He taught me and my brothers ChumashRashi and Talmud. He put me on my feet. He was an illustrious Jew…”[15] When Schneerson was eleven years old, Vilenkin informed the boy’s father that he had nothing more to teach his son.[16] At that point, the boy’s father, Rabbi Levi Yitzchak, began teaching his son. He also taught him Kaballa. And Menachem Mendel was gifted in both Talmudic and Kabalistic study.[17] Yona Kesse, who in his youth frequented Schneerson’s home later recounted: “I witnessed his intense diligence in Torah study, I always found him learning in a standing position, never sitting down. I remember him as an extremely private person, an introvert; his entire being as I recall it, was Torah.”[18] He was considered anIllui and genius, and by the time he was seventeen, he had mastered the entire Talmud, some 5,894 pages with all its early commentaries.[19][20] Menachem Mendel learned far more from his father than just Talmud and Kaballa. Rabbi Levi Yitzchak’s courage and principles were a guide to his son for the rest of his life. Many years later, when he once reminisced about his youth, Schneerson said “I have the education of the first-born son of the rabbi of Yekatrinoselav. When it comes to saving lives, I speak up whatever other may say.”[21]

Schneerson later studied independently under his father, who was his primary teacher. He studied Talmud and rabbinic literature, as well as the Hasidic view of Kabbalah. He received separate rabbinical ordinations from both the Rogatchover Gaon, Yosef Rosen,[22] and from Rabbi Yechiel Yaakov Weinberg (also known as the Sridei Aish).[23]

Although Schneerson didn’t attend a Soviet school, he took the exams as an external student and did well on them,[24] and he immersed himself in Jewish studies while simultaneously qualifying for Russian secondary school.[12] Throughout his childhood Schneerson was involved in the affairs of his father’s office, where his secular education and knowledge of the Russian language were useful in assisting his father’s public administrative work. He was also said to have acted as an interpreter between the Jewish community and the Russian authorities on a number of occasions.[12]

Early travels and marriage

In 1923 Schneerson visited Yosef Yitzchok Schneersohn for the first time. It was presumably at that time that he met Schneersohn’s middle daughter, Chaya Mushka.[12] He became engaged to her in Riga in 1923 and married her five years later in 1928, after being away in Berlin.[citation needed]

Chana Schneerson, the mother of Menachem Mendel, has noted in her memoirs that when Yosef Yirzchok was permitted to leave the USSR in 1927, “he submitted a list of those for whom he requested an exit visa to accompany him.” And that “the list included my son, M.M., long may he live”. She then notes that “for each one on the list individually, the Rebbe (Yosef Yitzchok) gave a reason for his request — a reason the Soviet government officials had to find satisfactory. When they came to his request for our son, however, they asked the Rebbe (Yosef Yitzchok) why he needed him. He replied that he wanted him as a son-in-law, to marry his daughter. “Do you really need to bring even a son-in-law from here?” they asked, to which the Rebbe (Yosef Yitzchok) replied firmly, “I won’t find such a son-in-law there!”[25]

Schneerson returned to Warsaw for his wedding, and in an article about his wedding in a Warsaw newspaper, “a number of academic degrees” were attributed to him. During the wedding celebration an elder Chassid asked Yosef Yitzchok “Tell me about the groom!”, to which he responded “I have given my daughter to this man. He is wholly fluent in the Babalonian and Jerusalem Talmuds; he knows the Torah writings of the Rishonim and Acharonim (the classic and modern commentators), and much, much more.”[26] Taking great pride in his son-in-law’s outstanding knowledge, Yosef Yitzchok asked him to engage the great Torah scholars that were present at the wedding in learned conversation.[27] Following the marriage, the newlyweds went to live in Berlin.[citation needed] The marriage was long and happy (60 years), but childless.

Schneerson and Yosef Yitzchok Schneersohn are related through Tzemach Tzedek, the third Rebbe of Chabad Lubavitch.

Berlin

Studies

Schneerson studied mathematics, physics and philosophy at the University of Berlin for five semesters from mid-1928 through 1930.[28]His father-in-law, Yosef Yitzchok, paid for all the tuition expenses and helped facilitate his studies throughout.[29] Whilst there, he wrote hundreds of pages of original Torah discourses, subsequently published as “Reshimot”,[30] and corresponded with his father on Torah matters, which were published in the 1970s in the book “Likuttei Levi Yitzchak—Letters”.[31] During his stay in Berlin, R. Schneerson was assigned specific communal tasks by his father-in-law, Rabbi Yosef Yitzchok Schneersohn, who also requested that he write scholarly annotations to the responsa of Tzemach TzedekYosef Yitzchok Schneersohn also sought his annotations to various hasidic discourses. It was during this period, between 1928 and 1932, that there took place a serious interchange of halachic correspondence between R. Schneerson and the famed talmudic genius known as the Rogachover Gaon. This correspondence is indicative of Schneerson’s talmudic erudition at the time. In 1933 he also met with Rabbi Chaim Elazar Shapiro, as well as with famed talmudist Rabbi Shimon Shkop.[32]During this time he would keep a diary in which he would carefully document his private conversations with his father-in-law Yosef Yitzchok Schneersohn, as well as customs he witnessed his father-in-law observing over the next fifteen years.[33]

With his brother

His brother, Yisroel Aryeh Leib joined him in Berlin in 1931, traveling with false papers under the name ‘Mark Gurary’ to escape the Soviets. He arrived and was cared for by his brother and sister-in-law as he was seriously ill with typhoid fever. Leibel attended classes at the University of Berlin from 1931 to 1933. In 1933, after Hitler took over Germany and began instituting anti-Semitic policies, Mendel and his wife helped Leibel escape from Berlin, before themselves fleeing to Paris.[28] Leibel escaped to Mandate Palestine in 1939 with his fiancee Regina Milgram, where they later married.[34]

Encounters with Rabbi J. B. Soloveitchik

Rabbis Herschel Schacter, Sholem Kowalsky, Julius Berman, Rabbi Menachem Genack, and Rabbi Fabian Schoenfeld (all students of Soloveitchik) have asserted that Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneerson, and Rabbi Joseph B. Soloveitchik met for the first time while they both studied in Berlin. They met many times at the home of Hayyim Heller in Berlin, and remained close even after the two left Germany.[35][36][37]

According to Soloveitchik’s son Rabbi Dr. Haym Soloveitchik, Rabbi Soloveitchik only saw Rabbi Schneerson pass by in Berlin and they did not meet while there.[38]

In 1964, Soloveitchik paid a lengthy visit to Schneerson while the latter was mourning the death of his mother. Their conversation during this visit lasted approximately two hours. Soloveitchik afterwards told his student Sholem Kowalsky, who accompanied him: “the Rebbe has a ‘gewaldiger’ (awesome) comprehension of the Torah.”[39] Soloveitchik later visited again following the death of Rabbi Schneerson’s mother-in-law.[35] In 1980, accompanied by his student Herschel Schacter, Rabbi Soloveitchik visited Rabbi Schneerson at Chabad headquarters in Brooklyn on the occasion of a celebration marking the 30th anniversary of his leadership. The visit lasted close to two hours after which Soloveitchik told Schacter his opinion of Schneerson; “He is a gaon, he is a great one, he is a leader of Israel.”[40]

Paris

In 1933, Rabbi Schneerson moved to ParisFrance. He studied mechanics and electrical engineering at the École spéciale des travaux publics, du bâtiment et de l’industrie (ESTP), a Grandes écoles in the Montparnasse district. He graduated in July 1937 and received a license to practice as an electrical engineer. In November 1937, he enrolled at the Sorbonne, where he studied mathematics until World War II broke out in 1939.[41] Schneerson lived most of the time in Paris at 9 Rue Boulard in the 14th arrondissement, in the same building as his wife’s sister, Shaina, and her husband, Mendel Hornstein.[citation needed] His father-in-law, Yosef Yitzchok, also recommended that Professor Alexander Vasilyevitch Barchenko consult with Menachem Mendel regarding various religious and mystical matters.[42]

During his time in Paris, Schneerson oversaw and edited the “Hatamim”, a scholarly rabbinic journal that was published periodically from 1935 until 1938.[43] Rabbi Yosef Yitzchok Schneersohn, wrote to his daughter, Chaya Mushka: “although other names will appear in print, the entire work of “Hatamim” is that of my dear and beloved son-in-law, the Rabbi.”[44]

Prominent Rabbis, such as Yerachmiel Binyaminson and Eliyahu Eliezer Dessler turned to Schneerson with their queries regarding the reconciliation of different rabbinic and kabalistic opinions.[45] His response has been published in Igrot Kodesh.[46]

On June 11, 1940, three days before Paris fell to the Nazis, the Schneersons fled to Vichy, and later to Nice, where they stayed until their final escape from Europe.[47]

Rabbi Schneerson learned to speak French, which he put to use in establishing his movement there after the war.[citation needed] The Chabad movement in France later attracted many Jewish immigrants from AlgeriaMorocco, and Tunisia.[citation needed]

America and leadership

Escape from Europe

In 1941, Rabbi Schneerson escaped from Europe on the Serpa Pinto, which sailed from Lisbon, Portugal. It was one of the last neutral passenger ships to cross the Atlantic before the danger from U-boats became too great.[48] He joined his father-in-law, Rabbi Yosef Yitzchok Schneersohn, in Crown Heights, Brooklyn. Upon his arrival in New York, Yosef Yitzchak dispatched a delegation of respected members of the Chabad community to greet him at the harbor. Yosef Yitzhok told them, “you will be greeting my son-in-law; he is fluent in all of TalmudTosafotThe Rosh and Ran, as well as all the published Chassidic books”.[49] Seeking to contribute to the war effort, he went to work in the Brooklyn Navy Yard, drawing wiring for the battleship USS Missouri (BB-63),[50][51] and other classified military work.[52]

Rise in America

In 1942, his father-in-law appointed him director of the Chabad movement’s newly founded central organizations, Merkos L’Inyonei ChinuchMachneh Israel and Kehot Publication Society, placing him at the helm of the movement’s Jewish educational, social services, and publishing networks across the United StatesIsraelAfricaEurope and Australia. Over the next decade, Rabbi Yosef Yitzchok referred many of the scholarly questions that had been inquired of him to his son-in-law Menachem Mendel.[53] At his father-in-law’s request, Schneerson would speak publicly once a month, delivering talks to his father-in-law’s followers,[12] and he became increasingly known as a personal representative of Rabbi Yosef Yitzchok.[53]

During the 1940s, Rabbi Schneerson became a naturalized US citizen. For many years to come, he would speak about America’s special place in the world, and would argue that the bedrock of the United States’ power and uniqueness came from its foundational values, which were, according to Rabbi Schneerson, ‘”E pluribus unum‘—from many one”, and “In God we trust.”[54] In 1949, his father-in-law would become a U.S. citizen, with the Rebbe assisting to coordinate the event.[55]

Succession as Rebbe

Rabbi Yosef Yitzchok Schneersohn died in 1950, leaving behind two sons-in-law. Rabbi Shemaryahu Gurary and Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneerson. Chassidim began rallying around Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneerson, persuading him to succeed his father-in-law as Rebbe. Although Rabbi M. Schneerson was reluctant, and actively refused to officially accept leadership of the movement for the entire year after Rabbi Y. Schneersohn’s death, he was eventually cajoled into accepting the post by his father-in-law’s followers.[56] Although there was no election, he was the natural candidate on dynastic grounds and on the basis of his scholarship and personal qualities.[57] On the first anniversary of his father-in-law’s passing, 10 Shevat 1951, he delivered a Hasidic discourse, (Ma’amar), spontaneously at the suggestion of someone in the crowd at a gathering, and formally became the Rebbe.[58]

Activities as Rebbe

Education

From the beginning of his leadership, Schneerson put a strong emphasis on education and often spoke of the need of a true moral educational system.[59] He said that education infused with godliness is the bedrock for a true moral society for all mankind regardless of religious faith,[60] and that we cannot rest until every child, boy and girl, receives a proper moral education.[61] Seeking to promote awareness for educational matters, Schneerson proclaimed 1977 as a “Year of Education” and urged Congress to do the same. He stated: “Education, in general, should not be limited to the acquisition of knowledge and preparation for a career, or, in common parlance, ‘to make a better living.’ We must think in terms of a ‘better living’ not only for the individual, but also for the society as a whole. The educational system must, therefore, pay more attention, indeed the main attention, to the building of character, with emphasis on moral and ethical values. Education must put greater emphasis on the promotion of fundamental human rights and obligations of justice and morality, which are the basis of any human society, if it is to be truly human and not turn into a jungle.”[62] Following which, the Ninety-Fifth Congress of the United States issued a Joint Resolution designating April 18, 1978, as “Education Day, U.S.A.“.[63] Since then, every President has issued a proclamation, proclaiming Schneerson’s birthday as “Education and Sharing Day, U.S.A.[64] In 1982 Ronald Reagan also proclaimed Schneerson’s birthday as a “National Day of Reflection”.[60]

Women

In 1953, Schneerson established the Lubavitch women’s organisation. And in a marked departure from an entrenched tendency to limit high-level Torah education to men and boys, he addressed his teachings equally to both genders.[65] Schneerson would describe the increase in Torah study by women as one of the “positive innovations of the later generations”[66]

Jewish outreach

Rabbi Schneerson was the first person to put priority on what today is called ‘kiruv’, and drawing Jews closer to their religion,[8] and he believed that the American public was seeking to learn more about their Jewish heritage. Speaking to an American journalist in 1951, he stated: “America is not lost, you are not different. You sincerely crave to know, to learn. Americans are inquisitive. It is Chabad’s point of view that the American mind is simple, honest, direct—good, tillable soil for Hassidism, or just plain Judaism”.[67] Rabbi Schneerson believed that Jews need not be on the defensive, but need to be on the ground building Jewish institutions, day schools and synagogues. Rabbi Schneerson said that we need “to discharge ourselves of our duty and we must take the initiative”.[68]

Rabbi Schneerson placed a tremendous emphasis on outreach. He made great efforts to intensify this program of the Chabad movement, bringing Jews from all walks of life to adopt Torah-observant Judaism, and aggressively sought the expansion of the baal teshuva movement. His work included organizing the training of thousands of young Chabad rabbis and their wives, who were sent all over the world by him as shluchim (emissaries) to promote Jewish observance and education.

He oversaw the building of schools, community centers, youth camps, and “Chabad Houses”, and established contacts with wealthy Jews and government officials around the world. Rabbi Schneerson also instituted a system of “Chabad mitzvah campaigns” called mivtzoim to encourage Jews to follow Orthodox Jewish practices. They commonly centered on practices such as keeping kosher, lighting Shabbat candles, studying Torah, putting on tefillin, helping to write sifrei Torah, and teaching women to observe the laws of Jewish family purity. He also launched a global Noahide campaign[69] to promote observance of the Noahide Laws[70] among gentiles, and argued that involvement in this campaign is an obligation for every Jew.[71]

Today there are Chabad Shluchim, emissaries of Rabbi Schneerson, in over 70 countries and 1000 cities around the world, totaling more than 3,600 institutions.[72] Chabad is very often the only Jewish presence in a given town or city and it has become the face of Jewish Orthodoxy for the Jewish and general world.[73]

Political activities

Although not a political lobby, Schneerson had great influence on numerous politicians, many of whom would seek his advice. During his years as Rebbe, he was visited by Presidents, Prime Ministers, Governors, Senators, Congressmen and Mayors. Many politicians came to him during their campaigns, courting his blessing and endorsement. Notable among them are prominent American politicians such as John F. KennedyRobert KennedyFranklin D. Roosevelt, JrJacob JavitsEd KochRudy GiulianiDavid Dinkins and Joe Lieberman.[52][74]

Israel

Rabbi Schneerson always took an interest into the affairs of the state of Israel.[75] Although he never was in Israel, he had many admirers there, and many among Israel’s top leadership made it a point to visit him.[76] One of Israel’s presidents, Zalman Shazar, who was of Lubavitch ancestry, would visit Schneerson and corresponded extensively with him.Menachem Begin,[77] Ariel Sharon,[78] Yitzhak Rabin,[79] Shimon PeresMoshe Katzav, and later, Benjamin Netanyahu[80] also paid visits and sought advice, along with numerous other less famous politicians, diplomats, military officials, and media producers. In the elections that brought Yitzhak Shamir to power, Schneerson publicly lobbied his followers and theOrthodox members in the Knesset to vote for the Likud alignment. It attracted the media’s attention and led to articles in TimeNewsweek, and many newspapers and TV programs, and led to considerable controversy within Israeli politics.

Rabbi Schneerson did whatever was in his power to support the infrastructure of the state, and advance its success.[81] He was concerned with the agricultural,[82] industrial and overall economic welfare of Israel,[83] and sought to promote its scientific achievements, and enhance Israel’s standing in the international community.[84] He consistently expressed enormous recognition for the role of the Israel Defense Forces and stated that those who serve in the Israeli army perform a great Mitzva.[85] Schneerson publicly expressed his view, that the safety and stability of Israel were in the best interests of the United States, as Israel is the front line against those who want the anti-west nations to succeed.[86]

Just before the outbreak of the Six-Day War, Schneerson instructed his followers in Israel and throughout the world to initiate an active Teffilin campaign, to see that Jews observe the Mitzva of Tefillin as a means of ensuring divine protection against Israel’s enemies.[87] Speaking to a crowd of thousands of people on May 28, 1967, only a few days before the outbreak of the war, he assured the world that Israel would be victorious.[88] He said Israel had no need to fear as God was with them, quoting the verse, “the Guardian of Israel neither sleeps nor slumbers.”[89]

After the Operation Entebbe rescue, in a public talk on 16 August 1976, Schneerson applauded the courage and selflessness of the IDF, “who flew thousands of miles, putting their lives in danger for the sole purpose of possibly saving the lives of tens of Jews”. He said “their portion in the Hereafter is guaranteed”.[90][91] He was later vilified by ultra haredi rabbis for publicly praising the courage of irreligious, Zionist soldiers and suggesting that God chose these people as a medium through which he would send deliverance to the Jewish people.[92]Schneerson protested vehemently against those elements within the ultra haredi society who sought to undermine the motivations and actions of the soldiers.[93][94][95]

He lobbied Israeli politicians to pass legislation in accordance with Jewish religious law on the question “Who is a Jew?” and declare that “only one who is born of a Jewish mother or converted according to Halakha is Jewish.” This caused a furore in the United States. Some American Jewish philanthropies stopped financially supporting Chabad-Lubavitch since most of their members were connected to Reform and Conservative Judaism. Controversial issues such as territorial compromise in Israel that might have estranged benefactors from giving much-needed funds to Chabad.[96]

United Nations

Benjamin Netanyahu said that while serving as Israel’s ambassador to the United Nations in 1984, Schneerson told him: “you will be serving in a house of darkness, but remember, that even in the darkest place; the light of a single candle can be seen far and wide…” Netanyahu later retold this episode in a speech at the General Assembly, on Sept 23, 2011.[97]

Russia

Schneerson greatly encouraged the Jewish community who were living in the Eastern Bloc, sending many emissaries on covert missions to sustain Judaism under Communist regimes.[98] At the same time, he opposed public demonstrations on behalf of Soviet Jews, stating that he believed quiet diplomacy would be more effective than loud protests when it comes to rescuing the Jews of Russia.[99]

Schneerson spoke passionately about the Jews in Russia. He said: “Behind the Iron Curtain, there are Jews who are in an extremely precarious position, to the extent that they must have self-sacrifice for every aspect of fulfillment of Judaism. Nevertheless, they do not worry about their physical wants…There are Jews who do not have tefillin! They cannot go to the synagogue, for if they get caught they will lose their employment… Despite all this, they make no calculations regarding what the next day may bring; their whole desire is to be able to put on tefillin…”[100]

Following the Chernobyl disaster in 1986, Schneerson called for efforts to rescue children from Chernobyl and founded a special organization for this purpose.[101] The first rescue flight occurred on August 3, 1990, when 196 children were flown to Israel and brought to a shelter campus. Since then, thousands of children have been rescued and brought to Israel where they receive housing, education and medical care in a supportive environment.[102]

Natan Sharansky, the Chairman of the Jewish Agency said that Chabad Lubavitch was an essential connector to Soviet Jewry during the Cold War.[103]

Iran

Beginning in the winter of 1979, during the tumultuous days of the Islamic Revolution in Iran, Rabbi Schneerson directed his emissaries to make arrangements to rescue Jewish teenagers from Iran and place them in foster homes within the Lubavitcher community in Brooklyn.[104] This mission, while not political in nature, was originally started as a secretive quest in order not to jeopardize the safety of the Iranian Jewish community at large. Many of Rabbi Schneerson’s followers in Brooklyn were asked to open their homes to these Jewish children and help save their lives from another potential Holocaust in the making. The new Islamic government in Iran was vocally opposed to the existence of Israel and created a genuine concern in world Jewish circles by accusing many in the Jewish community of being Zionists. The execution of the leader of the Iranian Jewish community, Habib Elghanian, had made this a tangible threat to the very existence of the community. Ultimately, while more than a dozen members of the Jewish community were executed by the new Iranian government, Jews were allowed to continue to live in Iran and there would be no Holocaust. Hundreds of Jewish children from Tehran and other major cities in Iran were flown from Tehran to New York with the help of Schneerson’s emissaries, placed in foster homes in Crown Heights and educated in Chabad schools. Many would adopt the Lubavitcher lifestyle and later, some even served as Chabad emissaries and religious leaders. Many others would later reunite with their biological parents after their parents and other family members emigrated to the United States.

Scholarship

Rabbi Schneerson is known for his scholarship both in the Talmud and hidden parts of the Torah (both Kabbalah and Chasidus). Rabbis and Rosh Yeshivas, as well as scientists and professors who would meet him or correspond with him would marvel at his wisdom and knowledge, of both Torah and secular subjects.[105] Rabbi Mordechai Eliyahu, former chief Rabbi of Israel, has said regarding one of his meetings with Rabbi Schneerson: “The conversation covered all sections of the Torah: the Talmud, Jewish law, Kabbalah, etc. The Rebbe jumped effortlessly from one Talmudic tractate to another, and from there to Kabbalah and then to Jewish law… He was clear in all the subjects discussed and organized in his delivery. It was as if he had just finished studying these very topics from the holy books. The whole Torah was an open book in front of him”.[106] His collected writings and speeches are gathered in more than a hundred volumes in Hebrew and Yiddish. They include Torah expositions, halakhic analysis, Talmudic discourses, explorations of Jewish mysticism and letters of guidance to Jews throughout the world.[107] He also penned tens of thousands of replies to requests and questions. The majority of his correspondence is printed in Igrot Kodesh, partly translated as “Letters from the Rebbe”. His correspondence fills more than two hundred published volumes. These detailed and personal letters to many thousands of people offer advice and explanation on a wide variety of subjects, including spiritual matters as well as all aspects of life.[108]

He is also especially renowned for his original insights and unprecedented analysis of Rashi‘s Torah commentary, which were delivered at the regular public Farbenegens. Many of these talks were later published in the 39 volume set of Likkutei Sichos. In halachic matters, he would normally refer to local orthodox rabbis, and advised the movement to do likewise in the event of his death.[109] While Rabbi Schneerson rarely chose to involve himself with questions of halakha (Jewish law), some notable exceptions were with regard to the use of electrical appliances on Shabbat, sailing on Israeli boats staffed by Jews, and halakhic dilemmas related to certain religious observances which may arise when crossing theInternational Date Line.

Public addresses

Rabbi Schneerson was known for delivering regular lengthy addresses to his followers at public gatherings in precise Yiddish and without a text or even any notes open in front of him the entire time.[110][111][112] These talks usually centered on the weekly Torah portion and on various tractates of the Talmud, during which he demonstrated a unique and amazing approach in explaining seemingly different concepts by analysis of the fundamental principle common to the entire tractate.[113] These talks were then transcribed by followers known as choizerim and distributed widely. Many of them were later edited by him and distributed worldwide in small booklets, later to be compiled in the Likkutei Sichot set. Listening to these talks, which sometimes went for eight or nine hours straight, was an unparalleled spiritual experience.[108] Following his attendance at one such talk with his son-in-law Rabbi Yisrael Lau, the then Rabbi of Tel-Aviv, Yitzchak Yedidya Frankel said “I have witnessed the magnificence of Polish Jewry…and I have known most of the great scholars of recent generations. But I have never seen such command of the material. That is genius.”[114]

Yechidus and “Sunday Dollars”

Beginning in 1951 when he accepted the leadership, Schneerson would receive visitors twice a week, on Sundays and Thursdays. These meetings, called yechidus, would start at 8pm and often continue until five in the morning. Anyone would have the chance to meet Schneerson privately for a discussion and to receive his advice and blessings.[57][115] These meetings had to be booked in advance with Mordechai Hodakov, Schneerson’s chief secretary.[115] At such private audiences he would meet over three thousand people.[116] The sessions were so popular that reservations were required—often months in advance. It was at these sessions, that Schneerson met with mayors, senators, presidents and every prime minister of Israel.[52]

Aside from a brief period of two months, after Schneerson suffered a heart attack in 1978, these meetings lasted weekly until 1982 when it became impossible to facilitate the large number of people. These meetings were then held only for those who had a special occasion, such as bride and groom for their wedding or a boy and his family on the occasion of a bar mitzvah.[116]

In 1986, Rabbi Schneerson again began to regularly greet people individually. This time, the personal meetings took the form of a weekly receiving line in “770”. Almost every Sunday, thousands of people would line up to meet briefly with Schneerson and receive a one-dollar bill, which was to be donated to charity. People filing past Schneerson would often take this opportunity to ask him for advice or to request a blessing. This event is usually referred to as “Sunday Dollars.”[117] Beginning in 1989, these events were recorded on videotape. Posthumously, hundreds of thousands of these encounters have been posted online for public access.[118]

“770”

Main article: 770 Eastern Parkway

770 Eastern Parkway.

Rabbi Schneerson rarely left Crown Heights in Brooklyn except for frequent lengthy visits to his father-in-law’s gravesite in Queens, New York. A year after the death of his wife, Chaya Mushka, in 1988, when the traditional year of Jewish mourning had passed, he moved into his study above the central Lubavitch synagogue at 770 Eastern Parkway.

It was from this location that Rabbi Schneerson directed his emissaries’ work and managed the movement’s development. His public roles included celebrations called farbrengens (gatherings) on Shabbats, Jewish holy days, and special days on the Chabad calendar, when he would give lengthy sermons to crowds. In later years, these would often be broadcast on cable television and via satellite to Lubavitch branches around the world.

Later life

Illness

In 1977, Rabbi Schneerson suffered a massive heart attack while celebrating the hakafot ceremony on Shemini Atzeret. Despite the best efforts of his doctors to convince him to change his mind, he refused to be hospitalized.[119] This necessitated building a mini-hospital in his headquarters at “770.” Although he did not appear again in public for four weeks, Rabbi Schneerson continued to deliver talks and discourses from his study via intercom. His chief cardiologist, Dr. Ira Weiss, later stated that despite his own protestations against the Rebbe’s being treated in 770, in retrospect, it had turned out to be the correct decision, and “the Rebbe, in fact received better medical care in 770 than he would have had we taken him to the hospital.”[120] On Rosh Chodesh Kislev, he left his study for the first time in more than a month to go home. His followers celebrate this day as a holiday each year.

Retirement

Schneerson was opposed to retirement, seeing it as a waste of precious years.[121] In 1972, on the occasion of his 70th birthday, Schneerson spoke at length about his opposition to retirement, and instead of announcing a retirement plan, he proposed the establishment of 71 new institutions to mark the beginning of the 71st year of his life.[122] In the mid 1980s, when Schneerson was already in his late 80s, he remarked to Rabbi David Hollander who was contemplating retiring at the time “I am older than you are, and I am taking on additional burdens, by what right do you retire?”[123]

Death of his wife

On February 10, 1988 Rebbetzin Chaya Mushka Schneerson died. Following her death, Schneerson greatly increased his public functions. For example, whereas previously he had led Shabbat gatherings once a month, he now began holding these gatherings every Shabbat.[124] He later edited these addresses, which have since been published in the 10 volumeSefer HaSichos set.

Final illness

In 1992, Schneerson suffered a serious stroke while praying at the grave of his father-in-law. The stroke left him unable to speak and paralyzed on the right side of his body. Nonetheless, he continued to respond daily to thousands of queries and requests for blessings from around the world. His secretaries would read the letters to him and he would indicate his response with head and hand motions. During this time, the belief in Schneerson as the Messiah (Moshiach) became more widespread.[125]

Despite his deteriorating health, Schneerson once again refused to leave “770”. Several months into his illness, a small room with tinted glass windows and an attached balcony was built overlooking the main synagogue. This allowed Rabbi Schneerson to pray with his followers, beginning with the Rosh Hashanah services, and to appear before them after services either by having the window opened or by being carried out onto the balcony.

His final illness led to a split between two groups of aides who differed in their recommendations as to how Schneerson should be treated, with the two camps led by Leib Groner andYehuda Krinsky.[126][127]

Final years

His own stated goals

From his childhood and throughout the years of his leadership, the Rebbe explained that his goal was to “make the world a better place,”[128] and to eliminate suffering. In 1954, in a letter to Yitzchak Ben Tzvi, Israel’s second President, the Rebbe wrote: “From the time that I was a child attending cheder, and even before, the vision of the future Redemption began to take form in my imagination – the Redemption of the Jewish People from their final Exile, a redemption of such magnitude and grandeur through which the purpose of the suffering, the harsh decrees and annihilation of Exile will be understood…[129] ”

Final declarations

In 1991, he declared to his followers: “I have done everything I can [to bring Moshiach], now I am handing over to you [the mission]; do everything you can to bring Moshiach!” A campaign was then started to usher in the Messianic age through “acts of goodness and kindness,” and some of his followers placed advertisements in the mass media, including many full-page ads in the New York Times, declaring in Rabbi Schneerson’s name that the Moshiach’s arrival was imminent, and urging everyone to prepare for and hasten it by increasing their good deeds.[citation needed]

Death and burial

Main article: Ohel (Chabad)

The Rebbe’s Tomb: Schneerson’s burial place next to his father-in-law and predecessor in Queens, NY.

RabbiMenachemMendelMedal.jpg

Rabbi Schneerson died at the Beth Israel Medical Center on June 12, 1994 (3 Tammuz 5754) and was buried at the Ohel next to his teacher and father-in-law, Rabbi Yosef Yitzchak Schneersohn, at Montefiore Cemetery in Queens, New York,[130] in 1994.[131] The Ohel had been built around the previous Rebbe’s grave in 1952.

Funeral

According to police estimates, some 35,000 people were gathered outside Lubavitch headquarters waiting for the coffin to be brought outside. When the plain pine coffin appeared, the scene became one of emotional mayhem, with women wailing and men pressing forward to touch it. The 350 police who were on the scene could barely contain the surging crowds, and the pallbearers had difficulty getting the coffin into a waiting hearse. Among the dignitaries present at Lubavitch headquarters were New York Mayor Rudolph GiulianiBenjamin NetanyahuGad Yaacobi, Israel’s ambassador to the United Nations; Colette Avital, Israeli consul general in New York; and Malcolm Hoenlein, the chairman of the Conference of Presidents of Major American Jewish Organizations.[132]

Ohel Chabad-Lubavitch Center

Soon after Schneerson’s death, philanthropist Joseph Gutnick of MelbourneAustralia established the Ohel Chabad-Lubavitch Center on Francis Lewis Boulevard, Queens, New York, which is located adjacent to the Rebbe’s Ohel. Following the age-old Jewish tradition of turning the resting place of a tzadik into a place of prayer, thousands of people flock to the Rebbe’s resting place[133] every week.[134] Many more send faxes and e-mails[135] with requests for prayers to be read at the grave site.

Awards and tributes

U.S. Government awards

Starting with President Carter in 1978,[136] the U.S. Congress and President have issued proclamations each year, declaring that Rabbi Schneerson’s birthday — usually a day in March or April that coincides with his recognized Hebrew calendar birthdate of 11 Nissan — be observed as Education and Sharing Day in the United States.[137] The Rebbe would usually respond with a public address[138] on the importance of education in modern society, and holding forth on the United States’ special role in the world.

Honors

On March 25, 1983, on the occasion of his 80th birthday, the United States Congress proclaimed Rabbi Schneerson’s birthday as “Education Day, USA,” and awarded him the National Scroll of Honor.[139]

Honored by Congress

After Schneerson’s death, a bill was introduced in the U.S. House of Representatives—sponsored by Congressman Charles Schumer and cosponsored by John LewisNewt Gingrich, and Jerry Lewis, as well as 220 other Congressmen—to posthumously bestow upon Schneerson the Congressional Gold Medal.

On November 2, 1994 the bill passed both Houses by unanimous consent, honoring Schneerson for his “outstanding and enduring contributions toward world education, morality, and acts of charity”.[140] President Bill Clinton spoke these words at the Congressional Gold Medal ceremony:

The late Rebbe’s eminence as a moral leader for our country was recognized by every president since Richard Nixon. For over two decades, the Rabbi’s movement now has some 2000 institutions; educational, social, medical, all across the globe. We (the United States Government) recognize the profound role that Rabbi Schneerson had in the expansion of those institutions.

Other posthumous commendations

In 2009, the National Museum of American Jewish History[141] selected Schneerson as one of eighteen American Jews to be included in their “Only in America” Hall of Fame.

Controversies

Wills

There is considerable controversy within Chabad about Schneerson’s will, as he named no successor. He did however write one legal will, which was signed before witnesses, whereby he transferred stewardship of all the major Chabad institutions, as well as all his possessions to Agudas Chassidei Chabad.[142]

Another will, no executed copies of which are known to be in existence, named three senior Chabad rabbis, as directors of Agudas Chassidei Chabad.[142]

“Moshiach” (Messiah) fervor

Rabbi Schneerson’s followers believed he was the Jewish Messiah, the “Moshiach,” and some have persisted in that belief since his death. The reverence with which he was treated by followers led many Jewish critics from both the Conservative and Reform communities to allege that a cult of personality had grown up around him. His obituary in The New York Timessaid he “was attacked for allowing a cult of personality to grow around him”[143] from Conservative and Reform critics. Though he worked to dissuade his followers from making it that, telling New York Times reporter Israel Shenker in 1972 “I have never given any reason for a cult of personality, and I do all in my power to dissuade them from making it that”.[57] Moshe D. Sherman, an associate professor at Touro College wrote that “as Schneerson’s empire grew, a personality cult developed around him… portraits of Rabbi Schneerson were placed in all Lubavitch homes, shops, and synagogues, and devoted followers routinely requested a blessing from him prior to their marriage, following an illness, or at other times of need.”[144]

Works

Books

  • Hayom Yom – An anthology of Chabad aphorisms and customs arranged according to the days of the year.
  • Haggadah Im Likkutei Ta’amim U’minhagim – The Haggadah with a commentary written by Schneerson.
  • Sefer HaToldot – Admor Moharash – Biography of the fourth Lubavitcher Rebbe, Rabbi Shmuel Schneersohn.

Personal writings and correspondence

  • Igrot Kodesh – 30 volume set of Rabbi Schneerson’s Hebrew and Yiddish letters.
  • Letters from the Rebbe – 5 volume set of Rabbi Schneerson’s English letters.
  • Reshimot – 10-volume set of Schneerson’s personal journal discovered after his death. Includes notes for his public talks before 1950, letters to Jewish scholars, notes on the Tanya, and thoughts on a wide range of Jewish subjects (2,190 pp).

Public talks delivered and edited by Schneerson

  • Likkutei Sichot – 39 volume set of Schneerson’s discourses on the weekly Torah portions, Jewish Holidays, and other issues. (16,867pp)
  • Hadran al HaRambam – Commentary on Maimonides‘ Mishneh Torah.
  • Sefer HaSichot – 12 volume set of Rabbi Schneerson’s talks from 1987–1992. (4,136pp)
  • Sefer HaMa’amarim Melukot – 6 volumes of edited chassidic discourses.
  • Chidushim UBiurim B’Shas – 3 volumes of novellae on the Talmud.
  • Besuras Hageula – compilation of talks on the imminent arrival of Moshiach from 1990–1992.

Public talks delivered by Schneerson, unedited by Schneerson

  • Sichot Kodesh – 50 volume Yiddish set of Sichos from 1950–1981.
  • Torat Menachem Hitva’aduyot – 43 volume set of Sichot and Ma’amarim from 1982–1992. (Based on participants’ recollections and notes, not proofread by Rabbi Schneerson.)
  • Torat Menachem – 40 volume Hebrew set Maamarim and Sichos currently spanning 1950–1964 (Approximately 4 new volumes a year). Planned to encompass 1950–1981.
  • Heichal Menachem – Shaarei – 34 volumes of talks arranged by topic and holiday.
  • Sefer HaShlichut – 2 volume set of Schneerson’s advice and guidelines to the shluchim he sent.
  • Karati Ve’ein Oneh – Compilation of Sichos discussing the Halachic prohibition of surrendering land in the Land of Israel to non-Jews
  • Sefer HaMa’amarim Hasidic discourses – Approx. 24 vols. including 1951–1962, 1969–1977 with plans to complete the rest.
  • Biurim LePeirush Rashi – 5 volume set summarizing talks on the commentary of Rashi to Torah.
  • Torat Menachem – Tiferet Levi Yitzchok – 3 volumes of elucidations drawn from his talks on cryptic notes of his father.
  • Biurim LePirkei Avot – 2 volumes summarizing talks on the Mishnaic tractate of “Ethics of the Fathers“.
  • Yein Malchut – 2 volumes of talks on the Mishneh Torah.
  • Kol Ba’ei Olam – Addresses and letters concerning the Noahide Campaign.
  • Hilchot Beit Habechira LeHaRambam Im Chiddushim U’Beurim – Talks on the Laws of the Chosen House (the Holy Temple) of the Mishneh Torah.
  • HaMelech BeMesibo – 2 volumes of discussions at the semi-public holiday meals.
  • Torat Menachem – Menachem Tzion – 2 volumes of talks on mourning.

Collections and esoterica

  • Heichal Menachem – 3 volumes.
  • Mikdash Melech – 4 volumes.
  • Nelcha B’Orchosov
  • Mekadesh Yisrael – Talks and pictures from his officiating at weddings.
  • Yemei Bereshit – Diary of the first year of his leadership, 1950–1951.
  • Bine’ot Deshe – Diary of his visit and talks to Camp Gan Israel in upstate New York.
  • Tzaddik LaMelech – 7 volumes of letters, handwritten notes, anecdotes, and other.

Esoterica continue to be released by individual families for family occasions such as weddings, known as Teshurot.

 

We Are Here: A Celebration of Resilience, Resistance, and Hope

https://wah.foundation

We Are Here: A Celebration of Resilience, Resistance, and Hope

Livestreamed at: www.wearehere.live

This special livestreamed concert event commemorates the 75th anniversary of the end of World War II and the 77th anniversary of the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising, even as it speaks to the challenges of the current moment.

Featuring: Mayim Bialik, Renée Fleming, Whoopi Goldberg, Billy Joel, Academy Award Winner – Adrien Brody

Dr. Ruth Westheimer, Lang Lang, Joyce DiDonato, Lea Salonga, Lauren Ambrose, NY Governor Andrew Cuomo and many others—

Museum of Jewish Heritage – A Living Memorial to the Holocaust

National Yiddish Theatre Folksbiene

Sing For Hope

In partnership with:

Lang Lang International Music Foundation

Network of 135+ organizations across the globe to livestream event— in 14 countries (Australia, Belarus, Canada, France, Greece, Israel, Italy, Lithuania, the Netherlands, Poland, South Africa, Ukraine, the UK, and the US) and 35 US states. We hope to reach more than 100,000 people worldwide with a message of hope grounded in our history and elevated by powerful music. 

Australia: WE ARE HERE Foundation 

Premieres USA:  Sunday June 14 at 2pm US ET (New York) and goes dark Wed 17th 2pm US ET

Australia: Monday June 15 at 4am – Eastern States (3:30am – Adelaide, 2am – WA,  6am – Auckland)

The video will be online for 72 hours after that, until Thursday 18th in Australia

Livestreamed at: www.wearehere.live

The Warsaw Ghetto Uprising—in which 13,000 Jews died fighting Nazi oppression in April and May 1943—was the largest single act of resistance during the Holocaust. The Uprising was the inspiration for “Zog nit keyn mol” (Yiddish: “Never Say”), also known as the “Partisan Song,” which was written in 1943 by Hirsch Glick while he was in the Vilna Ghetto. The song, which exemplifies Jewish resistance to Nazi persecution, provided the initial inspiration for the June 14 concert event, and resonates today with themes of resistance, resilience, and hope.

“We are all inspired by the example set in the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising. The Partisan Song, which begins and ends this program, speaks to the fight for social justice and fundamental human rights,” said Bruce Ratner, Chairman of the Board at the Museum of Jewish Heritage – A Living Memorial to the Holocaust. 

 “With this program we hope to make our contribution to the tradition of resilience, resistance, and hope.” said Jack Kliger, President & CEO of the Museum of Jewish Heritage, NYC

The partial list of those featured:

Renowned actors, musicians, and civic leaders who will be featured in the event include: EGOT-winner Whoopi Goldberg; four-time Grammy Award and National Medal of Arts-winner, star soprano Renée Fleming; Grammy Hall of Famer and Tony-winner Billy Joel; world-renowned pianist Lang Lang; the iconic Dr. Ruth Westheimer; Emmy- and Tony-nominated actress Lauren Ambrose; multi-platinum, Tony-winning Broadway star Lea Salonga; multi-Grammy-winning opera star Joyce DiDonato; award-winning actress Mayim Bialik; acclaimed soprano and curator Julia Bullock; conductor and pianist Christian Reif; Broadway actor and Lucille Lortel-winner Steven Skybell; multi-Grammy-winning mezzo-soprano Isabel Leonard; internationally renowned baritone Lester Lynch; Broadway star Jelani Remy; award-winning comedienne Jackie Hoffman; Broadway veteran and international opera singer Elmore James; beloved klezmer singer Daniel Kahn; 2020 Grammy-winner John Brancy; pianist and NPR From The Top host Peter Dugan; Congregation Rodeph Sholom Cantor Rebecca Garfein; Yiddish singer Sasha Lurje; celebrated Yiddish theater performer Dani MarcusYiddish Fiddler star Rachel Zatcoff; Congregation Rodeph Sholom organist J. David Williams; New York City Opera and Yiddish theater performer Glenn Seven Allen; accordionist and composer Patrick Farrell; internationally recognized soprano Jennifer Zetlan; renowned operatic and new music interpreter Blythe Gaissert; pianist and conductor Gerald Steichen; pianist and musical director Thomas Bagwell; National Yiddish Theatre Folksbiene Artistic Director Zalmen Mlotek; and acclaimed sopranos and Sing for Hope Co-Founders Monica Yunus and Camille Zamora. A special feature of the program will be the world premiere of a new work by Pulitzer Prize-winning composer John Corigliano based on a text by Kitty O’Meara, to be performed by Ms. Fleming.

More details:

PRESS RELEASE – We Are Here FINAL – 6-10-2020

Livestreamed at: www.wearehere.live

Eli Rabinowitz

eli@elirab.com

The Partisans’ Song in four languages – Yiddish, Hebrew, Noongar & English

We Are Here – Now!

How an idea has progressed around the globe!

From: UK Jewish Telegraph Manchester – May 2018

To: Philadephia – April 2020

Highlights

Australia 2019

WE ARE HERE! For Upstanders

For Upstanders – Founded by Eli Rabinowitz

Source: wah.foundation

Melbourne, Australia
The William Cooper Legacy

The Ark Centre Melbourne
Elder Shane & Rabbi Gabi
Barbara Miller & Federal Minister Ken Wyatt
With Viv Parry
Maroopna VIC, Australia 2019
Uncle Boydie, Maroopna VIC
London 2019 – World ORT
With Shoshana, Daniel & Edwin

Johannesburg  – ORT SA
Marcelle & Ariella
The Together Plan 2019
With Debra Brunner & Michael Mail in London
Birzh Lithuania 2019
Benny Rabinowitz
Aldone Shapiro & Emanuelis Zingeris MP at Birzh commemoration
Ambassadors to Lithuania
Kedainiai, Lithuania 2019
Keidaner descendants weekend at cemetery with Laima Ardaviciene 
Kedainiai Students

Israel 2019
Group at Yad Vashem

Belarus 2019

The welcome committee to Novogrudok – Tamara & Olga 
Nance Adler, Aron Bell- the last of the original Bielski with wife Henryka
Jerusalem Forest, Naliboki
IAJGS Conference in Cleveland 2019
With Saul Issroff, Roy Ogus & Henry Blumberg – all ex SA
South Africa

King David Victory Park, South Africa
Zog Nit Keynmol on Yom Hashoah 2020

Zog Nit Keynmol on Yom Hashoah 2020

South Africa  – Footage from SAJBD Facebook Live Stream with thanks

Source: youtu.be/ab_o311MR6Y

Choir Performances | WE ARE HERE!

Choir Performances | WE ARE HERE!

At Perth Modern School at Kristallnacht Commemoration on 10 November 2019 The joint choir of Ellenbrook Secondary College and Carmel High School The World Premiere performance at Ellenbrook Secondary

Source: wah.foundation/program/

Audience at Perth Modern School

 

Yom Hashoah – The Partisans’ Song Legacy

Commencing tonight, on 20 April 2020, and continuing tomorrow, on the 21st, corresponding to the 27th day of Nisan, the State of Israel and many Jews around the globe, commemorate the six million Jews who perished in the  Holocaust, as well as the heroism of survivors, and Jewish Partisans and rescuers.

Due to the COVID-19 pandemic and global lockdown, regular ceremonies will not be held.

We have compiled this YouTube highlights video to give you a perspective of why the the Partisans’ Song is so integral to a meaningful commemoration:

Educators and students are welcome to download a functional powerpoint presentation (1.8gb) that matches this video:

https://drive.google.com/file/d/18g67tFpg0YpKtAp2dtSX1J1CyUTOsVeQ/view?usp=sharing

I can also run an online ZOOM presentation for your school or organisation.   Please contact me at  eli@elirab.com to arrange this. There is no charge for this or the accompanying lesson plans and films.

Here is a pdf of the List of Slides on my presentation:

A List of Slides

 

Here is more information for you:

Yom Hazikaron laShoah ve-laG’vurah or Holocaust Remembrance Day.

In Israel, flags are lowered to half-mast, there is no public entertainment; ceremonies are held, and a siren at 10:00 signals the start of two minutes of silence.

The ceremonies held, usually conclude with Zog Nit Keynmol, the Partisans’ Song and Hatikvah.

 

Zog nit keyn mol” (Never Say; Yiddish: זאָג ניט קיין מאָל‎, [zɔg nit kɛjn mɔl]) or “Partizaner lid” (Partisan Song) is a Yiddish song considered one of the chief anthems of the Holocaust survivors and is sung in memorial services around the world.

The lyrics of the song were written in 1943 by Hirsh Glick, a young Jewish inmate of the Vilna Ghetto. The title means “Never Say”, and derives from the first line of the song. Glick’s lyrics were set to music from a pre-war Soviet song written by Pokrass brothers, Dmitri and Daniel, “Терская походная” (Terek Cossacks’ March Song), also known as “То не тучи – грозовые облака” (Those aren’t clouds but thunderclouds), originally from the 1937 film I, Son of Working People (story by Valentin Kataev).

Glick was inspired to write the song by news of the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising. During World War II, “Zog nit keyn mol” was adopted by a number of Jewish partisan groups operating in Eastern Europe. It became a symbol of resistance against Nazi Germany‘s persecution of the Jews and the Holocaust.

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

 

For more information on the WE ARE HERE! Foundation, a not for profit organisation, please visit:

WE ARE HERE! For Upstanders

WE ARE HERE! For Upstanders

For Upstanders – Founded by Eli Rabinowitz

Source: wah.foundation

 

54th Yahrzeit Rev N.M. Rabinowitz

54th Yahrzeit  – 8 Nissan  5780 – 2 April 2020

My Zaida, Rev Nachum Mendel Rabinowitz

Nachum Mendel ben Avrom Yaakov

 

Volksrust, South Africa

(from SA Jewish Life in the Country Communities book just published) 

 

Vredehoek Shul, Cape Town

Arthurs Road Shul, Sea Point, Cape Town

The visit of Rav Kahaneman to Cape Town

Rev NM  – second row from The front, third from the left

 

 

Descendants of Rev NM Rabinowitz

Nachum Mendel Rabinowitz – Descendant Chart

 

Eli Rabinowitz talks about his family from Orla | Virtual Shtetl

Eli Rabinowitz talks about his family from Orla | Virtual Shtetl

My name is Eli Rabinowitz. I live in Perth, Australia.  My three siblings live in New York, Israel and South Africa. I am married to Jill Reitstein (originally Rotzstejn, from Nasielsk). 

Source: sztetl.org.pl/en/towns/o/682-orla/104-cultural-texts/139505-eli-rabinowitz-talks-about-his-family-orla

Audio

elirab.digital historical audio

Rev NM Rabinowitz benching with two of his sons, Leib and Harry, at Sorrel and Gidon Katz’s wedding in Johannesburg 1961

Source: elirab.com/Audio.html

Zaida with me at 107 Corlette Drive, Birnam, Johannesburg.

WE ARE HERE! In South Africa

Human Rights and Social Justice Project

Eli Rabinowitz introduced his highly successful WE ARE HERE! Education Program to key educators and students while on a recent visit to Johannesburg and Cape Town.

Here are some photo highlights:

King David Victory Park, Johannesburg – Presentation

King David Linksfield – Leadership Meeting
Darryl Frankel, Shelly Freinkel, Myleen Ben Melech & Eli Rabinowitz

ORT SA – Johannesburg
With Marcelle and Ariella
With Marcelle & Tyde
ORT Honour Plaques
Evelyn Green & Russel Lurie.
A Possible Collaboration on a multi-language Partisans’ Song in the Future! 
United Herzlia Schools – Cape Town
Highlands House, Cape Town – Presentation

Slide Show Presentation

 
WE ARE HERE! Project Australia

WE ARE HERE! For Upstanders

WE ARE HERE! For Upstanders

For Upstanders – Founded by Eli Rabinowitz

Source: wah.foundation

The World Premiere of the four language Partisan Song

The World Premiere of the four language Partisan Song

Ellenbrook Secondary College & Carmel High School At Ellenbrook Secondary College 5 August 2019

Source: youtu.be/iIJ-rC-DcWA

WE ARE HERE! at SA Friends of Beth Hatefutsoth

  

On Friday 13 March 2020, the South African Friends of Beth Hatefutsoth will be hosting a presentation by Eli Rabinowitz, from Perth.

Eli, who is the founder of the education project the We Are Here Foundation, will be giving a talk accompanied by video footage about the programme for youth across the globe. The foundation focuses on the importance of educating Jewish youth about the Jewish partisans during the World War II. He will be giving an update on the success of this project, which is funded by the US government.

The project which started at schools in Australia is now functioning in Belarus, Lithuania, Israel and the USA.  Communities across the globe have been taught to sing the famous Partisans Song (Shir HaPartizanim).

His message is loud and clear: WE MUST NEVER FORGET!

If you would like to attend please email us at museum@beyachad.co.za

For more information please visit the website:  https://wah.foundation

WE ARE HERE! An Education Program That Inspires Upstanders

 

With Barbara Miller and Ken Wyatt, Federal Minister 2019
With Vince Connelly MP 2020

Kristallnacht Cantata Melbourne – World Premiere 2019

With Benny Rabinowitz in Birzh, Lithuania 2019
With Ambassadors of of China, Israel and Japan in Birzh, Lithuania 2019
Ground Turning at Lost Shtetl Museum, Seduva Lithuania
With Finnish, UK and US Ambassadors in Lithuania 2018
Yad Vashem, Jerusalem 2019
With Ian Stein and Dimitri Coutras at Sea Point School in 2019
At Beyachad meeting in 2019

New Book on Lithuania Compiled by David Sandler

 

Leyb Koniuchowsky

  The Lithuanian Slaughter of its Jews

The Testimonies from 121 Jewish survivors of the

Holocaust in Lithuania, recorded by Leyb Koniuchowsky,

in Displaced Persons’ camps (1946-48)

Translated into English by Dr Jonathan Boyarin

Book Compiled by David Solly Sandler

 

The Testimonies from 121 Jewish survivors of the

Holocaust in Lithuania, recorded by Leyb Koniuchowsky,

in Displaced Persons’ camps (1946-48)

 

Foreword

This book contains first-hand accounts from 121 Jewish survivors of the Holocaust in Lithuania, recorded by Leib Koniuchowsky in Displaced Persons’ camps from 1946 to 1948.

HISTORY

Grand Duke Vytautas the Great ruled Lithuania from 1386 to 1430. Early in his reign he granted Jews formal privileges, which formed the basis of the legal, political and economic structure of Lithuanian Jewry until the end of the eighteenth century.  

More than five centuries after Vytautas, however, Jewish life in Lithuania was abruptly ended. Lithuanian Jews were slaughtered en masse in the second half of 1941. 

 HORRORS

The testimonies published here tell of the destruction of Jewish life in Lithuania. Perpetrators of the massacre, most of them Lithuanians, acted with enthusiasm and in many cases without help or supervision from the invading Germans.

The testimonies are not pleasant to read. They tell of the horrors and evils inflicted on Lithuanian Jews.  Many echo the same pattern of degradation and slaughter: Lithuanians first attacked Jews morally and spiritually, imposing assorted humiliating labours, torture and other evils; then began their physical annihilation.

Armed bands of self-described “partisans” took control of Lithuanian towns as soon as the occupying Soviets left. Often, even before the Germans arrived, these bands started to terrorise and abuse the Jewish population: Partisans and others broke into Jewish homes and brazenly looted Jewish property. Jailings, torture, and summary executions began shortly afterward. First to be killed were Jews with Soviet connections; later, any perceived or invented offence could mean execution, or a Jew could be killed for no reason at all. Jews’ non-moveable possessions were claimed by their Lithuanian neighbors, particularly the partisans and their families.

In towns and villages, new civilian administrations suddenly emerged from underground with the German invasion. Lithuanian mayors, police chiefs and civil servants worked hand in hand with the partisans and a few Germans. These new governments often worked to extort money, jewellery and household goods from the Jews.

Jews were harassed and subjected to harsh decrees. They were forced to wear yellow armbands, forbidden to walk on sidewalks, barred from trading or even talking with non-Jews, and permitted to leave their houses only at certain times each day. Jews had to report for forced labour that in many cases was designed to be demeaning, harsh and degrading. Guarded by armed Lithuanians, they were constantly tormented, humiliated, beaten and starved.

Jews were forced to remove Torah scrolls and holy books from synagogues and study houses and burn them. Rabbis were humiliated, often having their beards cut or ripped off. Jewish women were frequently raped, and often tortured and killed afterward.

Within several weeks of the German invasion, most Jews were forced out of their homes and confined in small, closed areas, without food or water, and subject to constant harassment and torture as they were prepared for the final slaughter. Many died during this process. Often their former neighbors turned up to watch Jews being beaten and bludgeoned. In other cases, Jews were crowded into tiny ghettos in rundown areas. Hunger, thirst, and filth was common, and disease followed.

Eventually, the Jews were taken to pits dug in nearby forests to be shot. Amid the chaos of this organized slaughter, many were buried alive in the pits. At times partisans broke small children on their knees or bashed their heads on trees before throwing them, half dead, into a pit. 

WHO COMMITTED CRIMES, AND WHO KNEW

From the 121 testimonies published here, it is clear that the slaughter of the Jews was widely known. Townsfolk saw Jews being confined, tortured, abused and taken away. Peasants with wagons at times helped to transport Jews and their property.

Besides that portion of the population that actively participated in the slaughter of the Jews, or engaged in torture or rape, many local people appropriated or “inherited” Jews’ houses. The same happened with household property, including the clothes Jews had to remove at the pits before they were murdered. Money and jewellery not taken by the Germans or by those in charge was extorted by townsfolk or rural people.

It was common for Jews to entrust their property to Lithuanian friends or neighbors, “until after the war.” The mass slaughter meant that most often, this property was never reclaimed. In some cases Lithuanians later betrayed Jews who tried to recover their property.

On the other side, there were Lithuanians who were honest, and who risked their own lives and the lives of their family members to help Jews. Today we salute, honour, and thank them. Moreover, it is important to recognize that contemporary Lithuanians are not guilty of the crimes of earlier generations.

Yet the current Lithuanian government, unlike the German government, is reluctant to take full responsibility for genocide committed on its territory. Indeed, some of the perpetrators have been honoured as heroes for resisting the Soviet occupation. They have commemorative plaques and streets named after them. None of these “heroes” were prosecuted when alive.

The extent of participation in the genocide of Jews and collaboration with Nazis is still downplayed in Lithuania and the current Lithuanian government is seeking to legislate their responsibility away. We hope that this attitude and honouring of criminals will change.

David Solly Sandler

 

IN MEMORY OF MY BELOVED

FATHER MAUSHE-JOSEPH KONIUCHOWSKY

MOTHER FRUME-LIBE KONIUCHOWSKY-DREJERMAN

Both shot September 10, 1941, together with the rest of

the Jews of Alytus ghetto by Lithuanian murderers

 

FOR MY DEAREST

SISTER SLOVE KONIUCHOWSKY (CHAZANOWITZ)

Died September 8, 1936 in Alytus

HER HUSBAND JAKOV CHAZANOWITZ

Shot at the end of 1941 in Alytus ghetto by Lithuanian murderers

BROTHER KOPL

Died in Israel October 29, 1974

BROTHER EPHROJIM

Died in Montevideo, Uruguay December 18, 1983

 

LEYB KONIUCHOWSKY 

Leyb was the author and collector of these testamonies and a survivor of the Holocaust in Lithuania.

Leyb Koniuchowsky was born in Lithuania on 18 November 1910.

He graduated in 1928 from the Jewish Real Gymnasium in Vilkomir, and then studied civil engineering. He was an engineer by profession and resided in Kaunas (Kovno).

During the German occupation he lived in the Kaunas Ghetto and worked there until his escape.

He found shelter in a bunker at a farmer’s home where he remained until the liberation of Lithuania by the Red Army in 1944.

From 1944-46, he wandered through the war battered towns of Lithuania, collecting testimonies from the few Jews that survived.

The testimonies focus on the extermination of the Jews and the destruction of the local towns and villages. Koniuchowsky was meticulous about the accuracy and authenticity of the information in the testimonies, and even had the witnesses sign their testimonies. The testimonies include the names of thousands of victims of the Holocaust, the names of their murderers and those who had collaborated with the Germans.

Koniuchowsky continued to collect testimonies in She’erit Hapletah DP camps in Germany, where he lived for a few years.

From Germany he immigrated to the United States in 1951 and settled in New York, with help from the HIAS organization.

He lived in Israel between 1975 and 1982 and then later lived in Florida and passed away in 2003.

AKNOWLEDGEMENTS AND THANKS

Leyb Koniuchowsky’s foresight and diligence in collecting these testimonies deserves to be acknowledged, recognised and honoured. Hopefully this publication will help towards this.

The testimonies collected by Leyb have been in archives for decades and their publishing is long overdue. I have been honoured to have been given the opportunity to publish them and salute and thank Leyb Koniuchowsky for leaving this legacy for us and generations yet unborn.

 The Lithuanian  Slaughter of its Jews

Table of Contents

                                                                                                                                                             PAGE

FOREWORD                                                                                                                                       3

 

IN MEMORY OF                                                                                                                              5

LEYB KONIUCHOWSKY                                                                                                          6

 

THE HISTORY OF THE JEWS IN LITHUANIA                                                          11

 

THE SLAUGHTER OF THE JEWS                                                                                      21

 

THE SLAUGHTER OF JEWS IN THE LITHUANIAN COUNTY SEAT TELZH (TELSHIAI)          22

Compound at Rainiai, Camp at Geruliai and Telzh Ghetto

Testamonies of Malke Gilis (nee Rabinovitz) and Khane Pelts

 

THE SLAUGHTER OF JEWS IN THE LITHUANIAN TOWN OF RIETAVAS                                    41

Vieshvenai Compound

Testimony of Yente Alter (nee Gershovitz)

 

THE SLAUGHTER OF JEWS IN THE TELZH COUNTY TOWNS:                                         51

Towns: Nevarenai, Varnai, Tverai, Zarenai, Liplauke and Alsedzhiai.

Camps: Vieshvenai and Geruliai

Testimony of Khane Golemba

 

THE SLAUGHTER OF THE JEWS OF LUOKE                                                                  

62

Testimony of Dvoyre Zif

 

THE SLAUGHTER OF THE JEWS OF PLUNGYAN (PLUNGE)                                                     66

The Geruliai Camp

Testimony of Mashe Rikhman

 

THE SLAUGHTER OF JEWS IN THE LITHUANIAN COUNTY SEAT RASEINIAI                        70

The Biliūnai Compound

Testimonies of Dvoyre Lazarsky (nee Yankelevitsh), Frida Praz, Yeshayohu and Rivka Krom

 

THE SLAUGHTER OF THE JEWS OF THE SMALL LITHUANIAN TOWN SHIMKAITSIAI                       93

Testimony of Yeshayohu Krom

 

THE SLAUGHTER OF THE JEWS OF KELM                                                                                        95

Towns: Vaiguva and Padubisis and in the Shavl Ghetto

Testimonies of Yakov Zak and Khaye Roziene

 

THE SLAUGHTER OF JEWS IN THE LITHUANIAN TOWN JURBARKAS                            116

Testimony of Khane Goldman (nee Magidovits)

                                    

THE SLAUGHTER OF JEWS IN THE SMALL LITHUANIAN TOWN VIDUKLE                                125

Testimonies of Hirsh Hirshovits and Peshe Icikovits

 

THE SLAUGHTER OF JEWS IN THE LITHUANIAN TOWN OF KRAZHIAI                                    129

Testimony of Elke Flaks

 

THE SLAUGHTER OF JEWS IN THE LITHUANIAN TOWN OF TITOVENAI                                  135

Testimony of Bashe Bloch

 

THE SLAUGHTER OF JEWS IN THE LITHUANIAN TOWN OF STAKIAI                             138

Testimony of Yitskhok and Zelda Feinshtein

 

THE SLAUGHTER OF JEWS IN MAZHEIKIAI COUNTY                                                          146

Towns: Vekshniai, Tirkshliai, Seda, Zhidikai, Klikoliai, Vegerai, Mazheikiai and Akmene.

Testimony of Khonon Reif

 

THE GRUESOME SLAUGHTER OF THE JEWS OF KĖDAINIAI, SHETA AND ZHEIME                    154

Testimonies of Moyshe Krost and Aba Lison 

THE EXTERMINATION OF JEWS IN THE COUNTY SEAT TAWRIK (TAURAGE), LITHUANIA               162

Testimonies of Berl Gurvitz, Eliyohu Baykovitz, Frume Baykovitz, Dvoyre Fish, Ida Fish,

Dina Koropatkin, Miriam Kivelevitz and Rokhel Maler.

Supplementry testimony of Tobe Rosenshteyn-Gurvitz                                                                      173

THE SLAUGHTER OF THE JEWS OF ERZHVILIK (ERZVILKAS)                                                          177

Testimonies of Khayem Goldshteyn and Menukhe Goldshteyn

THE SLAUGHTER OF THE JEWS .IN THE TOWN OF LAUKUVA                                                          190

Testimony of Josef Aranovitz

THE SLAUGHTER OF THE JEWS OF LAUKUVA AND SHILALE                                                          194

Testimony of Lea Szapiro-Rudnik

THE SLAUGHTER OF THE JEWS OF PAJURIS                                                                                   200

Testimony of Peshe Meltsner

THE SLAUGHTER OF THE JEWS IN UPYNAS (UPYNAS), BOTIK (BATAKIAI) AND SKAUDVILE         202

Testimony of Peshe Meltsner

THE SLAUGHTER OF JEWS IN THE SMALL LITHUANIAN TOWN KOLTINAN (KALTINENAI)              209

Testimony of Sender Linkimer

THE SLAUGHTER OF THE JEWS OF SHVEKSHNE (SVEKSNA)                                                          212

Testimonies of Moyshe Ment, Naftoli Ziv, Mayer Shmulovitz and Yitskhok Markushevitz

THE SLAUGHTER OF THE JEWS OF KHVEIDAN (KVEDARNA)                                                          217

Testimonies of Motl Druzin, Gershon Yung, Berl Levit, Khayem Nadl, Roze Rakhmil and

Rosa Rachmil.

THE SLAUGHTER OF THE JEWS OF NAY-SHTOT                                                                              223

Testimonies of Henekh Elert, Azriel Glukh and Leyzer Gold

THE SLAUGHTER OF THE JEWS OF VAINUTA (VAINUTAS)                                                               227

Testimonies of Yitskhok Markus and Yakov-Mendl

THE SLAUGHTER OF THE JEWS OF VERZHAN (VEIVIRZHENAI)                                                       234

Testimonies of Shimen and Yoysef Shlomovitz

  THE SLAUGHTER OF THE JEWS IN JONISHKIS                                                                                 237

Testimony of Efroyim Veinpres

THE SLAUGHTER OF THE JEWS IN THE LITHUANIAN TOWN OF ANYKSHTSIAI                               240

Testimonies of Golde Yed and Zalmen and Galya Bregman

THE SLAUGHTER OF THE JEWS IN KRUONIS, PAKUONIS AND DARSHUNISHKIS                           246

Testimony of Yosef Gar

THE SLAUGHTER OF JEWS IN THE SMALL TOWN OF RUMSHISHKES                                             249

Testamony of Khane Shuster

THE SLAUGHTER OF JEWS IN ZAPYSHKIS AND KRUKIAI                                                                 252

Testimonies of Shakhne, Yerakhmiel, Yitzkhok and Nosn Volk.

THE SLAUGHTER OF THE JEWS OF VILKIJA  (1 and 2)                                                                     256

Testimonies of Moyshe Karnovsky and Rokhel Gempl

THE SLAUGHTER OF THE JEWS IN VENDZHIOGALA AND BABTAI (1 and 2)                        261

Testimony of Abe Lison and Sheyne Nozhikov

THE SLAUGHTER OF JEWS IN THE LITHUANIAN TOWN OF JONAVA (1 and 2)                                 266

Testimony of Shloyme Katsas and Gershon Reybshteyn

THE SLAUGHTER OF JEWS IN TOWNS IN THE VILNIUS REGION:                                                     274

Towns: Pabershe, Maishiogala, Rieshe, Suderwe, Dukshtas, and Jerusalimka.

Testimony of Khyene Katsev (Izrailsky)

THE SLAUGHTER OF JEWS IN RIESHE                                                                                              283

Testimony of Khyene Fridberg-Mindes

THE SLAUGHTER OF JEWS IN MAISHIOGALA (1 and 2)                                                                    285

Testimony of Moyshe Fridberg and Dovid Rudnik

THE SLAUGHTER OF THE JEWS IN THE TOWN OF VALKININKAI                                                     293

Testimony of Leyzer Goldman

THE SLAUGHTER OF THE JEWS IN THE TOWN OF NEMENTZINE (1, 2 and 3)                                   296

Testimony of Sore Eynbinder, Yekusiel Gordon and Avrom Daytz

THE SLAUGHTER OF THE JEWS IN THE COUNTY OF SHVENTZIONYS (1, 2 and 3)                           313

The county includes: Ignalina, Tveritzius, Tzeikinia, Malagenai, Adutishkis, Kaltinenai,

Shventzioneliai, Daugilishkis, Stajatzishkis, Padbrade, Shventzionys and smaller settlements.

The Slaughter of the Jews in Lentupis and at Ponari and the Liquidation of the Vidz Ghetto

Testimony of Dr Binyomin Taraseysky, Yankl Levin, Avrom Taytz and Fruma Hochmann

THE SHVENTZIONYS GHETTO  Testimony of Shimen Bushkanetz and Khaye Ginzberg                   357

THE SLAUGHTER OF THE JEWS OF SHVENTZIONELIAI (1 and 2)                                                     360

Testimonies of Fayve Khayet and his wife Rokhl Khayet-Kramnik

THE SLAUGHTER OF THE JEWS OF IGNALINA                                                                                  370

Labor Camp: Padbardeand Dukshtas and Vidz Ghetto

Testimony of Tevye Solomyak

THE SLAUGHTER OF THE JEWS OF DAUGELISHKIS                                                                         387

Testimony of Dvoyre Kuritzky-Solomyak

THE SLAUGHTER OF THE JEWS OF PADBRADE                                                                               393

Collective testimonies of Yisroel and Feygl Bavarsky

THE SLAUGHTER OF THE JEWS OF ADUTISHKIS                                                                             400

Testimony of Mikhoel Potashnik

THE SLAUGHTER OF THE JEWS OF STAJATZISHKIS                                                                        410

Testimonies of Zalmen Yofe and Reyzl Yofe-Gantovnik

THE SLAUGHTER OF THE JEWS OF LENTUPIS                                                                                 418

Testimony of Moyshe Gilinsky

THE SLAUGHTER OF THE JEWS OF TZEIKINIAI                                                                                422

Testimonies of Zelik Gilinsky and Khasye Gilinsky

THE SLAUGHTER OF THE JEWS OF TZVERETZIUS                                                                           427

Testimony of Shmuel Yisroel Reykhl

THE WORK CAMPS IN HEIDEKRUG (SILUTE) IN MEMEL (KLEIPEDA) COUNTY                                 429

Work camps: Mactubern, Silwen, Piktaten, Versmininken, Varus, Rusne, Kalwelischken

and Heidekrug.

Concentration camps Auschwitz, Warsaw and Dachau,

Birkenau Extermination Camp and Warsaw Ghetto

Testimonies of Shimen Shlomovitz, Yoysef Shlomovitz, Yoysef Aranovitz, Sender Linkimer,

Berl Levit, Gershon Yung, Motl Druzin, Naftoli Ziv, Moyshe Ment, Gutman Shayovitz, Zev Ment,

Gutman Shayovitz, Zev Ment, Binyomin Lapin, Heyne Elert and Yitskhok Markus

THE HEROIC RESISTANCE AND LIQUIDATION OF THE JEWS OF MARCINKONIS                            465

Testimonies of Khane Gorfing, Leyb Kobrovsky, Khayim Kobrovsky and Shloyme Peretz.

MASS SHOOTINGS OF JEWS IN THE SEVENTH FORT KOVNO                                                         497

Testimonies of Khasye Khodash and Peshe Kagan

THE SLAUGHTER OF JEWS IN ANYKSHTSIAI                                                           520

Testimony of Motl Kuritsky

EVENTS DURING THE OCCUPATION OF GRODNO AND KOVNO                                                       555

GERMAN OFFICERS AND JEWISH FURS   Testimony of Yitskhok Kobrovsky

A HORSE SLIPPED 

 

To purchase, contact David Sandler:

sedsand@iinet.net.au

 

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