Israel Gutman

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Israel Gutman (1923-) is a Polish-born Israeli historian of the Holocaust.[1]

Contents

[edit] Biography

Israel Gutman was born in Warsaw, Poland. After playing an important role in the Warsaw Ghetto uprising, he was deported to Majdanek, Auschwitz and Mauthausen. [2] His older sister died in the ghetto. [3]After two years in the camps, he was hospitalized in Austria. He managed to escape and join the Jewish Brigade in Italy. [4] In 1946, he immigrated to Palestine and joined Kibbutz Lehavot Habashan, where he raised a family. He was a member of the kibbutz for 25 years. In 1961, he testifed at the trial of Adolf Eichmann.[5]

[edit] Academic career

He was a professor of history at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, chairman of the Scientific Council of Yad Vashem in Jerusalem and deputy chairman of the International Auschwitz Council. Gutman was the editor-in-chief of the Encyclopedia of the Holocaust. [6] He is an advisor to the Polish government on Jewish affairs, Judaism and Holocaust commemoration. [7]

[edit] Awards

Gutman won the Salonika Prize for Literature, the Yitzhak Sadeh prize for Military Studies, and the Polish Unification Prize.[8]

[edit] Controversies

Speaking about the 2008 German memorial for homosexuals persecuted and murdered during the Holocaust, Gutman made derisively unsympathetic, anti-gay statements about the relevance, location and existence of the site. "The location was particularly poorly chosen for this monument," Mr Gutman told Polish newspaper Rzeczpospolita. "If visitors have the impression that there was not a great difference between the suffering of Jews and those of homosexuals, it's a scandal." He further claimed that the German people "understood the immense scope of the crime of the Holocaust which they had committed, but this time, they made an error."[9]

[edit] Published work

  • Resistance: The Warsaw Ghetto Uprising[10]
  • Anatomy of Auschwitz Death Camp[11]
  • The Jews of Poland Between Two World Wars [12]
  • Emanuel Ringelblum – The Man and the Historian[13]

[edit] References