Anielewicz, Mordecai

Anielewicz, Mordecai

▪ Polish hero
also spelled  Mordechai Anilowitz 
born 1919, Wyszków, Poland
died May 8, 1943, Warsaw

      hero and principal leader of armed Jewish resistance in the Warsaw ghetto during World War II.

      Anielewicz was born into a working-class family and attended a Hebrew academic secondary school. As a boy he joined Betar, a Zionist youth organization that among other things advocated self-defense for Jews. By 1940 he had gone to Warsaw and become active in a pro-Soviet group of young Zionists, Hashomer Hatzair. When Germany invaded Poland, he escaped to Vilna (now Vilnius), which the Soviet Union had annexed with Lithuania. He eventually made his way back to the Warsaw ghetto, where he set up an underground newspaper, Neged Hazerem (“Against the Stream”), and organized cultural and educational activities. He was out of Warsaw (Warsaw Ghetto Uprising), spreading his educational and political ideas covertly in western Poland, when the SS (the Nazi paramilitary corps) decimated the population of the Warsaw ghetto by deportation and execution in late summer 1942. Over two months about 265,000 Jews were deported without open armed resistance to the newly established extermination camp of Treblinka, some 50 miles (80 km) away.

      Convinced that Jews in Adolf Hitler's Europe should protect themselves, Anielewicz rushed back to Warsaw to urge the ghetto's elders to adopt armed resistance. Most of the elders had initially cautioned against resistance because they feared massive German retaliation, and many continued to argue that confrontation would provoke the final liquidation of the ghetto and the deportation of the remaining population. With strong support from other young activists, notably Yitzhak Zuckerman (Zuckerman, Yitzhak), Anielewicz's view prevailed, and the Jewish Fighting Organization (Żydowska Organizacja Bojowa; ŻOB) was founded. Anielewicz was the obvious choice to command the ŻOB. He stressed discipline, the construction of bunkers, and the acquisition of arms.

      On January 18, 1943, the Germans entered the ghetto to select Jews for a new shipment to the death camp at Treblinka, and the ŻOB met them with force, mainly pistols and grenades, starting an uprising (Warsaw Ghetto Uprising) and street battle that lasted four days and killed about 50 Germans—and all of the ŻOB defenders except Anielewicz himself. The Germans withdrew. The Jews interpreted the halt in the deportation as a victory—Germany backing down from armed confrontation. For two months the Germans tried various deceptions to persuade the ghetto's remaining Jews to go peacefully to the boxcars that would take them to Treblinka. Anielewicz had effectively become the commander of the ghetto as well as the ŻOB, and he accelerated defensive preparations until the Germans returned with 2,000 troops and tanks on April 19. The ŻOB held them off at first, then gave ground slowly. On May 8 the Germans found the ŻOB headquarters bunker and gassed it. Civilian occupants surrendered, but Anielewicz and about 100 comrades died. Those not killed in the fighting took their own or one another's lives to avoid capture. Despite the loss of its leadership, the remnants of the ŻOB continued to fight the Germans until May 16.

      In his final letter to Zuckerman, Anielewicz wrote:

Peace be with you, my dear friend. Who knows whether we shall meet again? My life's dream has now been realized: Jewish self-defense in the ghetto is now an accomplished fact.…I have been witness to the magnificent, heroic struggle of the Jewish fighters.

      Anielewicz is commemorated in Israel by a kibbutz, Yad Mordecai.

Michael Berenbaum
 

* * *


Universalium. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужно решить контрольную?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • ANIELEWICZ, MORDECAI — (1919–1943), commander of the Warsaw ghetto uprising. Anielewicz, who was born into a Jewish working class family in Wyszków, Poland, was for a short time a member of betar . He later joined Ha Shomer ha Ẓa ir and at the outbreak of World War II …   Encyclopedia of Judaism

  • Anielewicz, Mordecai — (1919–1943)    Anielewicz was the commander of the Warsaw ghetto uprising in April 1943. Born into a poor family in the Warsaw slum, he joined a Zionist youth group where he excelled as an organizer and youth leader. Following the German invasion …   Historical dictionary of the Holocaust

  • Anielewicz, Mordecai — (1919–43)    Commander of the Warsaw Ghetto Revolt. A labour Zionist leader in Poland, Anielewicz was one of the organizers of the Jewish resistance in Nazi occupied Warsaw. In the ghetto, he founded an urban kibbutz and published an underground… …   Who’s Who in Jewish History after the period of the Old Testament

  • Mordecai (disambiguation) — Mordecai is one of the main personalities in the Book of Esther in the Hebrew Bible. Mordecai may also refer to: The Mordechai or Mordecai ben Hillel, major Talmudist and posek Kevin Fertig, an American professional wrestler who used the ring… …   Wikipedia

  • Mordechaj Anielewicz — Infobox Military Person name=Mordechaj Anielewicz lived=1919 1943 placeofbirth=Wyszków, Second Polish Republic placeofdeath=Warsaw, General Government caption=Mordechaj Anielewicz nickname= Little Angel ( Aniołek ) allegiance=Jewish Combat… …   Wikipedia

  • Mordechai Anielewicz — Mordechaj Anielewicz Mordechaj Anielewicz Nickname Little Angel (Aniołek) …   Wikipedia

  • Zuckerman, Yitzhak — or Yitzhak Cukierman born 1915, Warsaw, Pol. died June 17, 1981, Tel Aviv, Israel Hero of Jewish resistance to the Nazis in World War II. Active in Zionist organizations in his native Warsaw, he urged the creation and arming of a Jewish defense… …   Universalium

  • Warsaw Ghetto Uprising — (April 19–May 16, 1943) Revolt by Polish Jews under Nazi occupation against deportation to the Treblinka extermination camp. By July 1942 the Nazis had herded 500,000 Jews from surrounding areas into the ghetto in Warsaw. Though starvation killed …   Universalium

  • holocaust — holocaustal, adj. holocaustic, adj. /hol euh kawst , hoh leuh /, n. 1. a great or complete devastation or destruction, esp. by fire. 2. a sacrifice completely consumed by fire; burnt offering. 3. (usually cap.) the systematic mass slaughter of… …   Universalium

  • List of Jewish history topics — This list covers topics related to Jewish history and religion. Changes to the articles listed here may be monitored by clicking on the Related changes link in the sidebar. Please do not remove non existent articles from this list, unless they… …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”