Zivia Lubetkin
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Zivia Lubetkin | |
Known for | Żydowska Organizacja Bojowa |
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Zivia Lubetkin (1914–1976) (in Polish: Cywia Lubetkin), (in Hebrew: צביה לובטקין ), also known by her nom de guerre "Celina", was one of the leaders of the Jewish underground in Nazi-occupied Warsaw and the only woman on the High Command of the resistance group Żydowska Organizacja Bojowa (ŻOB).
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[edit] Biography
[edit] Pre-World War II
She was born in 1914 in Byteń near Słonim in Poland (now in Belarus). She joined the Labor Zionist Movement at an early age. In her late teens she joined the Zionist youth movement Habonim Dror, and in 1938 became a member of its Executive Council. She was in the Soviet Union-occupied area of Poland when Nazi Germany invaded the country in September 1939 and she made the perilous journey back to Warsaw to join the underground there.
[edit] World War II
In 1942, Lubetkin helped found the left-wing Zionist Anti-Fascist Bloc. She also, as one of the founders of the ŻOB, served on the Warsaw Jewish community's political council, the Jewish National Committee (Żydowska Komitet Narodowy; ŻKN), and also served on the Coordinating Committee, an umbrella organization comprising the ŻKN and the non-Zionist General Jewish Labor Union (Bund), that sponsored the ŻOB. During her years of underground activities, the name "Cywia" became the code word for Poland in letters sent by various resistance groups both within and outside of the Warsaw Ghetto. She was one of the leaders of the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising and one of only 34 fighters to survive the war. After leading her group of surviving fighters through the sewers of Warsaw with the aid of Simcha "Kazik" Rotem in the final days of the ghetto uprising (on May 30, 1943), she continued her resistance activities in the rest of Warsaw outside the ghetto. She took part in the Polish Warsaw Uprising in 1944.
[edit] Postwar life
Following the Second World War, Lubetkin was active in the Holocaust survivors community in Europe, and helped organize the Beriha, an organization staffed by operatives who helped Eastern and Central European Jews cross borders en route to Mandate Palestine by illegal immigration channels. She herself immigrated to Mandate Palestine in 1946. She married Yitzhak Zuckerman, the ŻOB commander, and they, along with other surviving ghetto fighters and partisans founded Kibbutz Lohamey ha-Geta'ot and the Ghetto Fighters' House museum located on its grounds. In 1961, she testified at the trial of captured Nazi war criminal Adolf Eichmann.
She died in 1976. Her granddaughter, Roni Zuckerman, became the Israeli Air Force's first female fighter pilot in 2001.
[edit] Bibliography
- Lubetkin, Zivia. Die letzten Tage des Warschauer Gettos. pp. 47, illus. Berlin: VVN-Verlag, 1949
- Lubetkin, Zivia. Aharonim `al ha-homah. (Ein Harod, 1946/47)
- Lubetkin, Zivia. Bi-yemei kilayon va-mered. pp. 89. Tel-Aviv, 1953
- Lubetkin, Zivia. In the days of destruction and revolt. [translated from the Hebrew by Ishai Tubbin; revised by Yehiel Yanay; biographical index by Yitzhak Zuckerman; biographical index translated by Debby Garber]. Pp. 338, illus. Tel Aviv: Hakibbutz Hameuchad Pub. House: Am Oved Pub. House, 1981
[edit] References
- Gutman, Israel, Zivia Lubetkin, in the Encyclopedia of the Holocaust, New York: Macmillan (1990), vol.3, pp.606-607 (Hebrew edition)
[edit] External links
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