Mordechai Anielewicz: Difference between revisions
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[[Image:Monument of ghetto uprising crop.JPG|thumb|Warsaw Ghetto Heroes' Monument in Warsaw (in the center, wielding a hand grenade)]] |
[[Image:Monument of ghetto uprising crop.JPG|thumb|Warsaw Ghetto Heroes' Monument in Warsaw (in the center, wielding a hand grenade)]] |
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In July 1944 Anielewicz was posthumously awarded the [[ |
In July 1944 Anielewicz was posthumously awarded the [[Cross of Valour (Poland)|Cross of Valour]] by the Polish government in exile. In 1945 he was also awarded the [[Cross of Grunwald]] 3rd Class by the [[Polish People's Army]]. |
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During the later part of war a unit of the [[People's Guard]] made out from the Warsaw Ghetto survivors bore the name of Anielewicz. In December 1943 the [[kibbutz]] [[Yad Mordechai]] in [[Israel]] was renamed after him and a monument has been erected there in his memory. There are also memorials for him in Wyszków and in Warsaw, where in the 1960s the Gęsia Street in Warsaw, [[Gęsiówka|site of a former German concentration camp]], was renamed the Mordechaj Anielewicz Street. In 1983, 40 years after their deaths, the Israeli government issued a two-stamp set honoring Anielewicz and Josef Glazman as the heroes of the Warsaw and [[Vilna Ghetto|Vilna]] ghettos.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.boeliem.com/content/1983/298.html|title=The Holocaust|date=3 January 2009|work=Boeliem:The Complete Reference to Israeli Stamps from 1948 and Onwards|accessdate=11 May 2010}}</ref> |
During the later part of war a unit of the [[People's Guard]] made out from the Warsaw Ghetto survivors bore the name of Anielewicz. In December 1943 the [[kibbutz]] [[Yad Mordechai]] in [[Israel]] was renamed after him and a monument has been erected there in his memory. There are also memorials for him in Wyszków and in Warsaw, where in the 1960s the Gęsia Street in Warsaw, [[Gęsiówka|site of a former German concentration camp]], was renamed the Mordechaj Anielewicz Street. In 1983, 40 years after their deaths, the Israeli government issued a two-stamp set honoring Anielewicz and Josef Glazman as the heroes of the Warsaw and [[Vilna Ghetto|Vilna]] ghettos.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.boeliem.com/content/1983/298.html|title=The Holocaust|date=3 January 2009|work=Boeliem:The Complete Reference to Israeli Stamps from 1948 and Onwards|accessdate=11 May 2010}}</ref> |
Revision as of 16:04, 1 February 2011
This article may require copy editing for grammar, style, cohesion, tone, or spelling. (November 2009) |
Mordechaj Anielewicz | |
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Nickname(s) | "Little Angel" (Aniołek) |
Allegiance | Jewish Combat Organization |
Rank | Commander |
Battles / wars | Warsaw Ghetto Uprising |
Awards | Virtuti Militari, Cross of Grunwald |
Mordecai Anielewicz (1919 – May 8, 1943) was the leader of Żydowska Organizacja Bojowa (English: Jewish Combat Organization), also known as ŻOB, during the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising from January to May 1943.
Biography
Anielewicz was born into a poor family in the small town of Wyszków near Warsaw. After he completed his high school studies, he joined and became a leader of the Zionist-socialist youth movement "Hashomer Hatzair".
On September 7, 1939, a week after the German invasion of Poland, Anielewicz escaped with his members of the group from Warsaw to the eastern regions in the hopes that the Polish Army would slow down the German advance. When the Soviet Red Army invaded and then occupied Eastern Poland in accordance with the Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact, Anielewicz heard that Jewish refugees, other youth movement members and political groups flocked to Vilna, Lithuania, which was then under Soviet control. He went there too and attempted to convince his colleagues to send people back to Poland to continue the fight against the Germans. He then attempted to cross the Romanian border in order to open a route for young Jews to get to the Mandate of Palestine, but he was caught and thrown into a Soviet jail. He was released a short time later, and returned to Warsaw in January 1940 with his girlfriend, Mira Fuchrer.
In the summer of 1942 Anielewicz was visiting the southwest region of Poland – annexed to Germany – attempting to organize armed resistance. Upon his return to Warsaw, he found that a major deportation to the Treblinka extermination camp had been carried out and only 60,000 of the Warsaw Ghetto's 350,000 Jews remained. He soon joined the ŻOB, and in November 1942 he was appointed as the group's chief commander. A connection with the Polish government in exile in London was made and the group began receiving weapons from the Polish underground on the "Aryan" side of the city. On January 18, 1943, Anielewicz was instrumental in the first act of the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising, preventing the majority of a second wave of Jews from being deported to extermination camps. This initial incident of armed resistance was a prelude to the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising that commenced on April 19.
Though there were no surviving eyewitnesses, it is assumed that he took his own life on May 8, 1943, along with his girlfriend and many of his staff, in a mass suicide at the surrounded ŻOB command post at 18 Miła Street so they would not die from the gas.[1] His body was never found and it is generally believed that his body was carried off to nearby crematoria along with those of all the other Jewish dead; nevertheless, the inscription on the memorial at the site of the Miła 18 bunker states that he is buried there.
Honors
In July 1944 Anielewicz was posthumously awarded the Cross of Valour by the Polish government in exile. In 1945 he was also awarded the Cross of Grunwald 3rd Class by the Polish People's Army.
During the later part of war a unit of the People's Guard made out from the Warsaw Ghetto survivors bore the name of Anielewicz. In December 1943 the kibbutz Yad Mordechai in Israel was renamed after him and a monument has been erected there in his memory. There are also memorials for him in Wyszków and in Warsaw, where in the 1960s the Gęsia Street in Warsaw, site of a former German concentration camp, was renamed the Mordechaj Anielewicz Street. In 1983, 40 years after their deaths, the Israeli government issued a two-stamp set honoring Anielewicz and Josef Glazman as the heroes of the Warsaw and Vilna ghettos.[2]
In popular culture
The actor Murray Salem played Anielewicz in the 1978 television miniseries Holocaust, while Hank Azaria played this role in the 2001 television film Uprising. Anielewicz is also a key figure in Harry Turtledove's alternate history series Worldwar and appears as a character in the Highlander 1997 novel Zealot and in the role-playing game Wraith: The Oblivion, where he is the de-facto leader of the Shadowlands version of the Warsaw Ghetto.
Sources
- Edelman, Marek, and Krall, Hanna. Shielding the Flame: An Intimate Conversation With Dr. Marek Edelman, the Last Surviving Leader of the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising. Henry Holt and Company, New York, 1986
- Zuckerman, Yitzhak, A Surplus of Memory: Chronicle of the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising (A Centennial Book), ISBN 0-520-07841-1
References
- ^ Zertal, Idith (2005). Israel's Holocaust and the Politics of Nationhood. Cambridge University Press. p. 27. ISBN 9780521850964.
- ^ "The Holocaust". Boeliem:The Complete Reference to Israeli Stamps from 1948 and Onwards. 3 January 2009. Retrieved 11 May 2010.
External links
- Wikipedia articles needing copy edit from November 2009
- 1919 births
- 1943 deaths
- Jewish resistance members
- Military personnel who committed suicide
- People from Wyszków County
- People who died in the Holocaust
- Polish Jews
- Polish resistance fighters of World War II
- Recipients of the Virtuti Militari
- Suicides in Poland
- Warsaw Ghetto inmates