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David Feuerwerker

David Feuerwerker (October 2, 1912 – June 20, 1980) was a French Jewish rabbi and professor of Jewish history who was effective in the resistance to German occupation the Second World War. He was completely unsuspected until six months before the war ended, when he fled to Switzerland and his wife and baby went underground in France. The French government cited him for his bravery with several awards. After the war, he and his wife re-established the Jewish community of Lyon. He settled in Paris, teaching at the Sorbonne. In 1966, he and his family, grown to six children, moved to Montreal, where he developed a department of Jewish studies at the University of Montreal.

David Feuerwerker
Born( 1912-10-02)October 2, 1912
Geneva, Switzerland
DiedJune 20, 1980(1980-06-20) (aged 67)
Resting placeJerusalem, Israel
NationalityFrance, Canada
Occupation(s)Rabbi, Historian
SpouseAntoinette Feuerwerker
ChildrenAtara, Natania, Elie, Hillel, Emmanuel, Benjamine
Parent(s)Jacob Feuerwerker and Regina Neufeld

Early life

He was born on October 2, 1912, at 11 Rue du Mont-Blanc, in Geneva, Switzerland. He was the seventh of eleven children. His father Jacob Feuerwerker was born in Sighet, now Sighetu Marmației, Maramureş, then Austria-Hungary, now Romania. His mother Regina Neufeld was born in Lackenbach, one of the famous seven Jewish communities or Sheva Kehillos (Siebengemeinden) in the Burgenland, Hungary, now Austria. The family moved to France because Jacob was unable to work as a shochet, a trained ritual slaughterer, in Switzerland.

In 1925, he completed his primary school education at the Rue Vauquelin Talmud Torah school in Paris, and after receiving his baccalauréat in science, literature and philosophy, he entered the rabbinical school Séminaire israélite de France in 1932. Beginning in 1933, he simultaneously studied Semitic languages at the prestigious École pratique des hautes études, where he received the Diplôme de l’EPHE, a postgraduate degree. Among the languages he spoke were Aramaic and Syriac. He became a naturalized French citizen in 1936, and was ordained a rabbi on October 1, 1937.

Second World War

Military service and recognition

From October 15, 1937, until September 1, 1939, he served in the French Army, in Alsace. After World War II broke out, he remained in the army until July 25, 1940. He was in charge of communications for a group of artillery of the 12th R.A.D. (Régiment d'Artillerie Divisionnaire) and chaplain of the 87th D.I.A. He was demobilized at Châteauroux on July 25, 1940.

He received the Croix de guerre 1939-1945 (France) with a bronze star.

The citation to the Order of the Brigade reads as follows:

As chief of artillery communications has participated from September 1939 to February 1940 in the engagements in Alsace in the region of Bitche. Has shown drive, courage, and competence in assuring under fire the phone and radio contacts. Distinguished himself again during the combats of June 1940 on the Ailette, the Aisne, and the Seine, as Jewish Chaplain of his Division. Has contributed to maintain the fighting spirit around him and to uphold the morale of the engaged units.

A second citation for the Croix de guerre 1939-1945 (France) was to the Order of the Army, with palm.

Rabbi of Brive and of three départements

In 1940, he was nominated rabbi of three French Departments: Corrèze,[1] Creuse, and Lot, based in Brive-la-Gaillarde. He lived at Villa du Mont-Blanc, avenue Turgot, in Brive. He created his first Study Circle (Cercle d'Etudes).

The Jewish population consisted of numerous refugees, including a large segment originating from Alsace and other regions occupied by the Nazi invader. He helped numerous of them to find a country of refuge, with the help of the oldest agency dealing with refugees in the United States, the HIAS. Among the destinations, Cuba. For himself, there was no thought of leaving France, since he was a community leader. He succeeded in liberating many internees from transit camps in France, including the camp at Gurs. He helped Benoit Mandelbrot in the pursuit of his studies.[2]

In the Résistance

In Brive with Edmond Michelet, later to be a senior minister under Charles de Gaulle, he participated actively in the French Résistance Movement "Combat" against the Nazi occupation. His name in the French Résistance was "Jacques Portal". He received the Croix du combattant volontaire 1939–1945, the Medaille Commémorative de la Guerre 1939–1945 with the bar "France".

He was to be made Knight (Chevalier) of the Legion of Honor (Légion d'honneur) for his military activities. The Citation says:

Despite the exceptional risks which were attached to his ministry, has participated in an active, permanent and unselfish way to the organisation of the resistance in all the region.

Has not hesitated to risk his freedom, and without any doubt his life, to be for the Movement "Combat" an auxiliary particularly serious.

It's to him that many hundreds of resistants owed their false identification papers which allowed them to escape the searches by the Gestapo.

His wife, Antoinette Feuerwerker (née Gluck), who had finished law school in Strasbourg before the war, and whom he married at the beginning of the war, participated with him in the underground. Combattant Volontaire de la Résistance, in 1944 she was awarded the French Liberation Medal (Médaille de la France Libérée), "for her participation in the liberation of France".

Jacques Soustelle and the passage to Switzerland

Six months before the end of World War II, the Germans finally understood that the Rabbi of Brive was an active member of the Résistance. But the Rabbi got ahead of the occupier. After receiving reliable information that he was on the list of people to be arrested by the Gestapo, he decided to act. His arrest and his probable disappearance would not advance the cause he defended, day after day. He took the difficult decision, in agreement with his spouse, Antoinette Feuerwerker, to leave Brive. Only one destination was possible, Switzerland.

Antoinette Feuerwerker obtained from Jacques Soustelle, a future minister of Charles de Gaulle and later his opponent, but then a leader of the Résistance, information how to reach clandestinely neutral territory, in Divonne-les-Bains. Once in his native city of Geneva, he was imprisoned by the Swiss authorities. But his life was not in immediate danger. Once Lyon had been liberated, in which he participated, he resumed the task of rebuilding the Jewish community of Lyon and of France, then in disarray.

Antoinette Feuerwerker had remained in France for the last six months of the war. In order to evade the Germans and deportation, she went underground with her baby daughter, Atara. Once the war ended, the couple reunited in Lyon, for the adventure of reconstruction of the post-war French Judaism.

Chief rabbi of Lyon, at the Libération

He participated in the liberation of Lyon as the captain-chaplain (Capitaine-Aumônier) of the French Forces of the Interior (Forces Françaises de l'Intérieur, F.F.I.), In Lyon in 1944. He became the chief rabbi of Lyon at the Liberation, rabbi of the Great Synagogue 13, Quai Tilsit, Lyon 2. He became also the captain-chaplain of the Place de Lyon and of the Alpine Division (27e brigade d'infanterie de montagne).

He spoke at the ceremony commemorating the Liberation of Lyon, at Place Bellecour.[3]

His activities included liaising with the former Prime Minister of France, Édouard Herriot and the Roman Catholic primate of the Gauls, Cardinal Pierre-Marie Gerlier, later, recognized as a Righteous Among the Nations, by Yad Vashem, Jerusalem, Israel.

He published in Lyon, the first weekly Jewish newspaper since the war, called L'Unité ("Unity").

Post-War

In 1946, he was elected rabbi in Neuilly-sur-Seine, near Paris, where he established a Cercle d'Etudes (Study Circle) at 12 rue Ancelle. The money destined for the Aliyah Bet ship Exodus was hidden, without his knowledge, by his wife, Antoinette Feuerwerker, under his bed, since no one would suspect him.

In 1948, he became rabbi of Les Tournelles, the Great Synagogue in Paris. In the Cercle d'Etudes du Marais he formed at 14 Place des Vosges, in the heart of Le Marais, the lecturers included: Raymond Aron, Robert Aron, Henri Baruk, le Père Marie-Benoît, Jean Cassou, Georges Duhamel, Marcel Dunan, Edmond Fleg, Henri Hertz, Louis Kahn, Joseph Kessel, Jacques Madaule, Arnold Mandel, Szolem Mandelbrojt, François Mauriac, Edmond Michelet, Pierre Morhange, François Perroux, le Père Michel Riquet, Pierre-Maxime Schuhl, André Spire, Jean Wahl, and many others.

In an assessment of "European Jewry Ten Years After The War", and of France, in particular, Arnold Mandel writes in 1956: "Under the auspices of a very dynamic, forceful and militant rabbi David Feuerwerker a free debating club the Circle du Marais has been active for several years. Situated in one of the most beautiful squares in Paris, the Place des Vosges where the Victor Hugo Museum is located, the club, where the discussions are sometimes stormy, is one of the liveliest and most picturesque spots in the Jewish quarter of the French capital. It is Hyde Park with more spirit.[4]"

Roger Berg writes[5] en 1992 on the Cercle d'Études du Marais: "Sometime after the end of World War II, and before the sudden emergence of television in homes, study circles were created all over, the most prestigious among them was the Circle of the Marais of David Feuerwerker." The French Jewish Community paid tribute to him, on December 23, 1956, on the occasion of his twentieth year in the Rabbinate and of the two hundred and fiftieth Session of the Cercle d'Etudes du Marais, to as it specified, Honor the guide and the master whose activity is creative and efficient for the Jewish Community of France.

He was the head of Jewish Education (Directeur de l'instruction religieuse) (Paris) (1952), and vice president of the Council for Education and Jewish Culture in France (Conseil pour l'Education et la Culture Juive en France, CECJF) (1953).

The City of Paris, and in its name, the municipal council, in its session of December 14, 1957, awarded to him the Gold Medal of the City of Paris.

Teacher and orator

On diverse occasions, his talent as an orator was made to contribution. He participated on a regular basis to the Annual Commemoration at the Memorial of the Unknown Jewish Martyr (Mémorial du Martyr Juif Inconnu), with the attendance of civilian and military authorities. He gave the only funeral oration in French for the famous Rabbi Samuel Jacob Rubinstein of the Synagogue of the 10 rue Pavée in Paris 4 (Agoudas Hakehilos Synagogue). He spoke at a commemoration on the site of the camp at Drancy. He spoke also at the Grande Synagogue of Paris, rue de la Victoire in the 9th arrondissement of Paris.

In parallel to his rabbinical activities, he obtained a Licence ès Lettres and a Ph.D. in history from the Sorbonne. He taught at the Sorbonne EPHE 6ème section Ecole Pratique des Hautes Etudes from 1962 to 1965.

Among his many lectures, he spoke at the Societé de l'Histoire de Paris, and at the Institut Napoléon de Paris.

He published articles in, among other publications, La Revue Historique des Annales; Evidences; Bulletin de nos communautés; le Journal des communautés.

Chaplain

He created the position of chief chaplain of the French Navy. There had been no Jewish chaplain of the French Navy before him. He was based at the Centre Marine Pépinière, 15 rue Laborde, in Paris 8. He went on special missions in Algeria and Tunisia (at the navy base in Bizerte).

He was also chaplain of prisons (La Petite Roquette), Lycées (Lycée Henri-IV, Lycée Fénelon) and hospitals (Hôtel-Dieu de Paris) in Paris.

In 1963, General Charles de Gaulle nominated him to be officer of the Legion of Honor (Légion d'honneur), for his work for the French Navy.

Hebrew at the Baccalauréat

He introduced Hebrew as a foreign language for the French Baccalauréat, in 1954. He was the sole examiner for the city of Paris. To this day, it is offered as an option worldwide. Among those who were examined by him, and who remember vividly the questions, was Haïm Brezis, the future member of the French Academy of Sciences (Académie des sciences; France) and of the National Academy of Sciences (USA).

Famous contacts

He was close to Pierre Mendès France, the former Prime Minister of France. He led the funerals of both his parents. He befriended and helped Aimé Pallière (1868–1949), who has remained as the Noahide (B'nei Noah) par excellence.

Among the many Jewish leaders he met, two made an everlasting impression, Rabbi Avrohom Yeshaya Karelitz (1878–1953), the Chazon Ish, in Bnei Brak, Israel, and the Hassidic leader of Belz, Rabbi Aharon Rokeach (1877–1957), called Reb Arele, also, living in Israel.

After the Sinai War of 1956 Suez Crisis, when Moshe Dayan visited France, he represented the Jewish community, at a ceremony under the Arc of Triumph (Arc de Triomphe de l'Étoile), in Paris.

He became the rabbi of the Synagogue 15 Rue Chasseloup-Laubat (15th arrondissement of Paris).

Move to Montreal

In 1966, he moved with his family (six children: Atara, Natania, Elie, Hillel, Emmanuel, and Benjamine) to Montreal, Quebec, Canada. He lived at 5583 Woodbury Avenue, in Montreal, a minute away from l'Université de Montréal. His neighbour, René Lévesque, the future premier of Quebec, paid tribute to him, in his own name, and in the name of the Quebec Government, when he died. He became professor of sociology at the Université de Montréal, from 1966 to 1968, and then created at that university a department of Jewish Studies. He became judge in the rabbinical court (Beth Din) of that city, and a member of the Vaad Hair (Jewish Community Council of Montreal), beside the chief rabbi of Montreal, Pinhas Hirschprung.

He introduced Rabbi Moshe Feinstein (1895–1986), the halahic authority of his time, to the mayor of Montreal, Jean Drapeau at the Montreal City Hall. He was the editor of the French section of the Voice of the Vaad journal, called "la Voix du Conseil".

Other activities

Among his many publications, he wrote the classic book on the emancipation of the French Jews, which is still cited today. For this work L'Emancipation des Juifs en France de l'Ancien Régime à la Fin du Second Empire (Albin Michel: Paris, 1976), he was awarded the Broquette-Gonin Prize for history from the Académie Française. A review of the book appeared on the front page of the newspaper Le Monde.

He appeared on French and Canadian television and radio, was called often as an expert and lectured extensively. He had a special interest in Jewish music. He organized the appearance of the famous Hazzan Moshe Koussevitzky, at the Synagogue de la rue des Tournelles, in Paris. He also was a guest on several occasions on the radio show, animated by Alain Stanké, called "La musique des nations" of Radio-Canada.

Death in Montreal and burial in Jerusalem

He died in Montreal on June 20, 1980, and was buried in Sanhedria in Jerusalem, Israel.

References

  1. ^ See, Are There Any Jews in Correze? 2010-02-27 at the Wayback Machine
  2. ^ See, Mandelbrot, 2013, p. 62-63.
  3. ^ The Chief Rabbi of Lyon Richard Wertenschlag recalls his father often mentioning that occasion.
  4. ^ European Jewry Ten Years After The War. Universal Digital Library. Institute Of Jewish Affairs. 1956.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: others (link)
  5. ^ See, p. 131-132.

Bibliography

  • David Feuerwerker. L'Emancipation Des Juifs En France. De L'Ancien Régime à la Fin Du Second Empire. Albin Michel: Paris, 1976. ISBN 2-226-00316-9

Many books refer to his activities, particularly for his work in the Resistance. Among them :

  • Pierre Trouillé. Journal D'Un Préfet Pendant L'Occupation. nrf, Gallimard: Paris, 1964.
  • Roger Peyreffite. Les Juifs. Flammarion: Paris, 1964.
  • Roger Peyreffite. The Jews. A Fictional Venture into the Follies of Antisemitism. The Bobbs-Merrill Company: New York City, 1967.
  • Lucien Steinberg. Not As a Lamb. The Jews Against Hitler. Saxon House: England, 1974. ISBN 0-347-00003-7
  • Ruth Blau. Les Gardiens De La Cité. Histoire D'une Guerre Sainte. Flammarion: Paris, 1978. ISBN 2-08-064118-2
  • Edmond Michelet. Rue de La Liberté. Dachau 1943-1945. Seuil: Paris, 1983 [First Edition was in 1955]. [Lettre-Préface de Charles de Gaulle; aussi avec Préface pour l'édition allemande de Konrad Adenauer]. ISBN 2-02-003025-X
  • Raymond Aron. Mémoires. 50 ans de réflexion politique. Julliard: Paris, 1983. ISBN 2-260-00332-X, ISBN 2-266-01500-1 & ISBN 2-266-01501-X
  • Bernard Lecornu. Un Préfet Sous L'Occupation Allemande. Chateaubriant, Saint-Nazaire, Tulle. Editions France-Empire: Paris, 1984. [Préface de Maurice Schumann de l'Académie Française]. ISBN 2-7048-0372-2
  • Allen Gotheil. Les Juifs Progressistes Au Québec. Editions Par Ailleurs: Montréal, 1988. ISBN 2-9801242-0-6
  • Raymond Aron. Memoirs. Fifty Years of Political Reflection. Holmes & Meier: New York City, 1990. [Foreword by Henry A. Kissinger]. ISBN 0-8419-1113-4 & ISBN 0-8419-1114-2
  • Ysrael Gutman and Avital Saf, Editors. She'erit Hapletah, 1944-1948. Rehabilitation and Political Struggle. Proceedings of the Sixth Yad Vashem International Historical Conference. Jerusalem, October 1985. Yad Vashem: Jerusalem, 1990.
  • Roger Berg. Histoire du rabbinat français. Patrimoines. Judaïsme. Cerf: Paris, 1992. [Préface du grand rabbin Jacob Kaplan, membre de l'Institut]. ISBN 2-204-04252-8
  • Nicolas Baverez. Raymond Aron. Flammarion: Paris, 1993.
  • Renée Poznanski. Etre juif en France pendant la Seconde Guerre Mondiale. Hachette: Paris, 1994. ISBN 2-01-013109-6
  • Asher Cohen. History of the Holocaust. France. Yad Vashem: Jerusalem, 1996. ISBN 965-308-053-9
  • Donna F. Ryan. The Holocaust & the Jews of Marseille. The Enforcement of Anti-Semitic Policies in Vichy France. University of Illinois Press: Urbana And Chicago, 1996. ISBN 0-252-06530-1
  • Anne Grynberg. Les camps de la honte. Les internés juifs des camps français 1939-1944. La Découverte: Paris, 1999. ISBN 2-7071-3046-X
  • Georges Vadnaï. Grand Rabbin de Lausanne. Jamais la lumière ne s'est éteinte: un destin juif dans les ténèbres du siècle. L'Age d'homme, 1999, p. 84. ISBN 2-8251-1241-0, ISBN 978-2-8251-1241-0
  • Catherine Poujol. Aimé Pallière (1868–1949). Un chrétien dans le judaïsme. Desclée de Brouwer: Paris, 2003. ISBN 2-220-05316-4
  • Benoit M. Mandelbrot. The Fractalist. Memoir of a Scientific Maverick. First Vintage Books Edition: New York, 2013. ISBN 978-0-307-38991-6

Among the articles written about David Feuerwerker are:

  • Elie Feuerwerker. Le Rabbin Dr. David Feuerwerker, ZT"L (2 Octobre 1912-20 Juin 1980/ 21 Tichri 5673-6 Tamouz 5740). Le Combat d'Une Vie. Revue d'Histoire de la Médecine Hébraïque, Paris, 1980. [Mentioned in Gad Freudenthal & Samuel S. Kottek, editors, Mélanges D'Histoire De La Médecine Hébraïque: Etudes Choisies De La Revue D'Histoire De La Médecine Hébraïque (1948–1985). Brill: Netherlands, 2003], p. 573. ISBN 978-90-04-12522-3]
  • François Perroux. Souvenir de David Feuerwerker. Revue d'Histoire de la Médecine Hébraïque, Paris, 1981.
  • Catherine Poujol. David Feuerwerker, Rabbin, Résistant, Enseignant, Historien. Archives Juives, Paris, 2002.
  • Valery Bazarov. "In The Cross-Hairs: HIAS And The French Resistance." The Hidden Child. Vol. XXI, 2013, p. 8-11. [Published by Hidden Child Foundation/ADL, New York].

External links

  • Synagogue de la rue des Tournelles
  • Jack Meyer-Moog "Loup" par Alain Kahn (juin 2006)
  • Historique de la synagogue et de la communauté de Neuilly 2011-02-24 at the Wayback Machine

david, feuerwerker, this, article, includes, list, general, references, lacks, sufficient, corresponding, inline, citations, please, help, improve, this, article, introducing, more, precise, citations, august, 2020, learn, when, remove, this, template, message. This article includes a list of general references but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations August 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article may contain an excessive amount of intricate detail that may interest only a particular audience Please help by spinning off or relocating any relevant information and removing excessive detail that may be against Wikipedia s inclusion policy August 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message David Feuerwerker October 2 1912 June 20 1980 was a French Jewish rabbi and professor of Jewish history who was effective in the resistance to German occupation the Second World War He was completely unsuspected until six months before the war ended when he fled to Switzerland and his wife and baby went underground in France The French government cited him for his bravery with several awards After the war he and his wife re established the Jewish community of Lyon He settled in Paris teaching at the Sorbonne In 1966 he and his family grown to six children moved to Montreal where he developed a department of Jewish studies at the University of Montreal David FeuerwerkerBorn 1912 10 02 October 2 1912Geneva SwitzerlandDiedJune 20 1980 1980 06 20 aged 67 Montreal Quebec CanadaResting placeJerusalem IsraelNationalityFrance CanadaOccupation s Rabbi HistorianSpouseAntoinette FeuerwerkerChildrenAtara Natania Elie Hillel Emmanuel BenjamineParent s Jacob Feuerwerker and Regina Neufeld Contents 1 Early life 2 Second World War 2 1 Military service and recognition 2 2 Rabbi of Brive and of three departements 2 3 In the Resistance 2 4 Jacques Soustelle and the passage to Switzerland 3 Chief rabbi of Lyon at the Liberation 4 Post War 5 Teacher and orator 5 1 Chaplain 5 2 Hebrew at the Baccalaureat 5 3 Famous contacts 6 Move to Montreal 6 1 Other activities 6 2 Death in Montreal and burial in Jerusalem 7 References 8 Bibliography 9 External linksEarly life EditHe was born on October 2 1912 at 11 Rue du Mont Blanc in Geneva Switzerland He was the seventh of eleven children His father Jacob Feuerwerker was born in Sighet now Sighetu Marmației Maramures then Austria Hungary now Romania His mother Regina Neufeld was born in Lackenbach one of the famous seven Jewish communities or Sheva Kehillos Siebengemeinden in the Burgenland Hungary now Austria The family moved to France because Jacob was unable to work as a shochet a trained ritual slaughterer in Switzerland In 1925 he completed his primary school education at the Rue Vauquelin Talmud Torah school in Paris and after receiving his baccalaureat in science literature and philosophy he entered the rabbinical school Seminaire israelite de France in 1932 Beginning in 1933 he simultaneously studied Semitic languages at the prestigious Ecole pratique des hautes etudes where he received the Diplome de l EPHE a postgraduate degree Among the languages he spoke were Aramaic and Syriac He became a naturalized French citizen in 1936 and was ordained a rabbi on October 1 1937 Second World War EditMilitary service and recognition Edit From October 15 1937 until September 1 1939 he served in the French Army in Alsace After World War II broke out he remained in the army until July 25 1940 He was in charge of communications for a group of artillery of the 12th R A D Regiment d Artillerie Divisionnaire and chaplain of the 87th D I A He was demobilized at Chateauroux on July 25 1940 He received the Croix de guerre 1939 1945 France with a bronze star The citation to the Order of the Brigade reads as follows As chief of artillery communications has participated from September 1939 to February 1940 in the engagements in Alsace in the region of Bitche Has shown drive courage and competence in assuring under fire the phone and radio contacts Distinguished himself again during the combats of June 1940 on the Ailette the Aisne and the Seine as Jewish Chaplain of his Division Has contributed to maintain the fighting spirit around him and to uphold the morale of the engaged units A second citation for the Croix de guerre 1939 1945 France was to the Order of the Army with palm Rabbi of Brive and of three departements Edit In 1940 he was nominated rabbi of three French Departments Correze 1 Creuse and Lot based in Brive la Gaillarde He lived at Villa du Mont Blanc avenue Turgot in Brive He created his first Study Circle Cercle d Etudes The Jewish population consisted of numerous refugees including a large segment originating from Alsace and other regions occupied by the Nazi invader He helped numerous of them to find a country of refuge with the help of the oldest agency dealing with refugees in the United States the HIAS Among the destinations Cuba For himself there was no thought of leaving France since he was a community leader He succeeded in liberating many internees from transit camps in France including the camp at Gurs He helped Benoit Mandelbrot in the pursuit of his studies 2 In the Resistance Edit In Brive with Edmond Michelet later to be a senior minister under Charles de Gaulle he participated actively in the French Resistance Movement Combat against the Nazi occupation His name in the French Resistance was Jacques Portal He received the Croix du combattant volontaire 1939 1945 the Medaille Commemorative de la Guerre 1939 1945 with the bar France He was to be made Knight Chevalier of the Legion of Honor Legion d honneur for his military activities The Citation says Despite the exceptional risks which were attached to his ministry has participated in an active permanent and unselfish way to the organisation of the resistance in all the region Has not hesitated to risk his freedom and without any doubt his life to be for the Movement Combat an auxiliary particularly serious It s to him that many hundreds of resistants owed their false identification papers which allowed them to escape the searches by the Gestapo His wife Antoinette Feuerwerker nee Gluck who had finished law school in Strasbourg before the war and whom he married at the beginning of the war participated with him in the underground Combattant Volontaire de la Resistance in 1944 she was awarded the French Liberation Medal Medaille de la France Liberee for her participation in the liberation of France Jacques Soustelle and the passage to Switzerland Edit Six months before the end of World War II the Germans finally understood that the Rabbi of Brive was an active member of the Resistance But the Rabbi got ahead of the occupier After receiving reliable information that he was on the list of people to be arrested by the Gestapo he decided to act His arrest and his probable disappearance would not advance the cause he defended day after day He took the difficult decision in agreement with his spouse Antoinette Feuerwerker to leave Brive Only one destination was possible Switzerland Antoinette Feuerwerker obtained from Jacques Soustelle a future minister of Charles de Gaulle and later his opponent but then a leader of the Resistance information how to reach clandestinely neutral territory in Divonne les Bains Once in his native city of Geneva he was imprisoned by the Swiss authorities But his life was not in immediate danger Once Lyon had been liberated in which he participated he resumed the task of rebuilding the Jewish community of Lyon and of France then in disarray Antoinette Feuerwerker had remained in France for the last six months of the war In order to evade the Germans and deportation she went underground with her baby daughter Atara Once the war ended the couple reunited in Lyon for the adventure of reconstruction of the post war French Judaism Chief rabbi of Lyon at the Liberation EditHe participated in the liberation of Lyon as the captain chaplain Capitaine Aumonier of the French Forces of the Interior Forces Francaises de l Interieur F F I In Lyon in 1944 He became the chief rabbi of Lyon at the Liberation rabbi of the Great Synagogue 13 Quai Tilsit Lyon 2 He became also the captain chaplain of the Place de Lyon and of the Alpine Division 27e brigade d infanterie de montagne He spoke at the ceremony commemorating the Liberation of Lyon at Place Bellecour 3 His activities included liaising with the former Prime Minister of France Edouard Herriot and the Roman Catholic primate of the Gauls Cardinal Pierre Marie Gerlier later recognized as a Righteous Among the Nations by Yad Vashem Jerusalem Israel He published in Lyon the first weekly Jewish newspaper since the war called L Unite Unity Post War EditIn 1946 he was elected rabbi in Neuilly sur Seine near Paris where he established a Cercle d Etudes Study Circle at 12 rue Ancelle The money destined for the Aliyah Bet ship Exodus was hidden without his knowledge by his wife Antoinette Feuerwerker under his bed since no one would suspect him In 1948 he became rabbi of Les Tournelles the Great Synagogue in Paris In the Cercle d Etudes du Marais he formed at 14 Place des Vosges in the heart of Le Marais the lecturers included Raymond Aron Robert Aron Henri Baruk le Pere Marie Benoit Jean Cassou Georges Duhamel Marcel Dunan Edmond Fleg Henri Hertz Louis Kahn Joseph Kessel Jacques Madaule Arnold Mandel Szolem Mandelbrojt Francois Mauriac Edmond Michelet Pierre Morhange Francois Perroux le Pere Michel Riquet Pierre Maxime Schuhl Andre Spire Jean Wahl and many others In an assessment of European Jewry Ten Years After The War and of France in particular Arnold Mandel writes in 1956 Under the auspices of a very dynamic forceful and militant rabbi David Feuerwerker a free debating club the Circle du Marais has been active for several years Situated in one of the most beautiful squares in Paris the Place des Vosges where the Victor Hugo Museum is located the club where the discussions are sometimes stormy is one of the liveliest and most picturesque spots in the Jewish quarter of the French capital It is Hyde Park with more spirit 4 Roger Berg writes 5 en 1992 on the Cercle d Etudes du Marais Sometime after the end of World War II and before the sudden emergence of television in homes study circles were created all over the most prestigious among them was the Circle of the Marais of David Feuerwerker The French Jewish Community paid tribute to him on December 23 1956 on the occasion of his twentieth year in the Rabbinate and of the two hundred and fiftieth Session of the Cercle d Etudes du Marais to as it specified Honor the guide and the master whose activity is creative and efficient for the Jewish Community of France He was the head of Jewish Education Directeur de l instruction religieuse Paris 1952 and vice president of the Council for Education and Jewish Culture in France Conseil pour l Education et la Culture Juive en France CECJF 1953 The City of Paris and in its name the municipal council in its session of December 14 1957 awarded to him the Gold Medal of the City of Paris Teacher and orator EditOn diverse occasions his talent as an orator was made to contribution He participated on a regular basis to the Annual Commemoration at the Memorial of the Unknown Jewish Martyr Memorial du Martyr Juif Inconnu with the attendance of civilian and military authorities He gave the only funeral oration in French for the famous Rabbi Samuel Jacob Rubinstein of the Synagogue of the 10 rue Pavee in Paris 4 Agoudas Hakehilos Synagogue He spoke at a commemoration on the site of the camp at Drancy He spoke also at the Grande Synagogue of Paris rue de la Victoire in the 9th arrondissement of Paris In parallel to his rabbinical activities he obtained a Licence es Lettres and a Ph D in history from the Sorbonne He taught at the Sorbonne EPHE 6eme section Ecole Pratique des Hautes Etudes from 1962 to 1965 Among his many lectures he spoke at the Societe de l Histoire de Paris and at the Institut Napoleon de Paris He published articles in among other publications La Revue Historique des Annales Evidences Bulletin de nos communautes le Journal des communautes Chaplain Edit He created the position of chief chaplain of the French Navy There had been no Jewish chaplain of the French Navy before him He was based at the Centre Marine Pepiniere 15 rue Laborde in Paris 8 He went on special missions in Algeria and Tunisia at the navy base in Bizerte He was also chaplain of prisons La Petite Roquette Lycees Lycee Henri IV Lycee Fenelon and hospitals Hotel Dieu de Paris in Paris In 1963 General Charles de Gaulle nominated him to be officer of the Legion of Honor Legion d honneur for his work for the French Navy Hebrew at the Baccalaureat Edit He introduced Hebrew as a foreign language for the French Baccalaureat in 1954 He was the sole examiner for the city of Paris To this day it is offered as an option worldwide Among those who were examined by him and who remember vividly the questions was Haim Brezis the future member of the French Academy of Sciences Academie des sciences France and of the National Academy of Sciences USA Famous contacts Edit He was close to Pierre Mendes France the former Prime Minister of France He led the funerals of both his parents He befriended and helped Aime Palliere 1868 1949 who has remained as the Noahide B nei Noah par excellence Among the many Jewish leaders he met two made an everlasting impression Rabbi Avrohom Yeshaya Karelitz 1878 1953 the Chazon Ish in Bnei Brak Israel and the Hassidic leader of Belz Rabbi Aharon Rokeach 1877 1957 called Reb Arele also living in Israel After the Sinai War of 1956 Suez Crisis when Moshe Dayan visited France he represented the Jewish community at a ceremony under the Arc of Triumph Arc de Triomphe de l Etoile in Paris He became the rabbi of the Synagogue 15 Rue Chasseloup Laubat 15th arrondissement of Paris Move to Montreal EditIn 1966 he moved with his family six children Atara Natania Elie Hillel Emmanuel and Benjamine to Montreal Quebec Canada He lived at 5583 Woodbury Avenue in Montreal a minute away from l Universite de Montreal His neighbour Rene Levesque the future premier of Quebec paid tribute to him in his own name and in the name of the Quebec Government when he died He became professor of sociology at the Universite de Montreal from 1966 to 1968 and then created at that university a department of Jewish Studies He became judge in the rabbinical court Beth Din of that city and a member of the Vaad Hair Jewish Community Council of Montreal beside the chief rabbi of Montreal Pinhas Hirschprung He introduced Rabbi Moshe Feinstein 1895 1986 the halahic authority of his time to the mayor of Montreal Jean Drapeau at the Montreal City Hall He was the editor of the French section of the Voice of the Vaad journal called la Voix du Conseil Other activities Edit Among his many publications he wrote the classic book on the emancipation of the French Jews which is still cited today For this work L Emancipation des Juifs en France de l Ancien Regime a la Fin du Second Empire Albin Michel Paris 1976 he was awarded the Broquette Gonin Prize for history from the Academie Francaise A review of the book appeared on the front page of the newspaper Le Monde He appeared on French and Canadian television and radio was called often as an expert and lectured extensively He had a special interest in Jewish music He organized the appearance of the famous Hazzan Moshe Koussevitzky at the Synagogue de la rue des Tournelles in Paris He also was a guest on several occasions on the radio show animated by Alain Stanke called La musique des nations of Radio Canada Death in Montreal and burial in Jerusalem Edit He died in Montreal on June 20 1980 and was buried in Sanhedria in Jerusalem Israel References Edit See Are There Any Jews in Correze Archived 2010 02 27 at the Wayback Machine See Mandelbrot 2013 p 62 63 The Chief Rabbi of Lyon Richard Wertenschlag recalls his father often mentioning that occasion European Jewry Ten Years After The War Universal Digital Library Institute Of Jewish Affairs 1956 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint others link See p 131 132 Bibliography EditDavid Feuerwerker L Emancipation Des Juifs En France De L Ancien Regime a la Fin Du Second Empire Albin Michel Paris 1976 ISBN 2 226 00316 9Many books refer to his activities particularly for his work in the Resistance Among them Pierre Trouille Journal D Un Prefet Pendant L Occupation nrf Gallimard Paris 1964 Roger Peyreffite Les Juifs Flammarion Paris 1964 Roger Peyreffite The Jews A Fictional Venture into the Follies of Antisemitism The Bobbs Merrill Company New York City 1967 Lucien Steinberg Not As a Lamb The Jews Against Hitler Saxon House England 1974 ISBN 0 347 00003 7 Ruth Blau Les Gardiens De La Cite Histoire D une Guerre Sainte Flammarion Paris 1978 ISBN 2 08 064118 2 Edmond Michelet Rue de La Liberte Dachau 1943 1945 Seuil Paris 1983 First Edition was in 1955 Lettre Preface de Charles de Gaulle aussi avec Preface pour l edition allemande de Konrad Adenauer ISBN 2 02 003025 X Raymond Aron Memoires 50 ans de reflexion politique Julliard Paris 1983 ISBN 2 260 00332 X ISBN 2 266 01500 1 amp ISBN 2 266 01501 X Bernard Lecornu Un Prefet Sous L Occupation Allemande Chateaubriant Saint Nazaire Tulle Editions France Empire Paris 1984 Preface de Maurice Schumann de l Academie Francaise ISBN 2 7048 0372 2 Allen Gotheil Les Juifs Progressistes Au Quebec Editions Par Ailleurs Montreal 1988 ISBN 2 9801242 0 6 Raymond Aron Memoirs Fifty Years of Political Reflection Holmes amp Meier New York City 1990 Foreword by Henry A Kissinger ISBN 0 8419 1113 4 amp ISBN 0 8419 1114 2 Ysrael Gutman and Avital Saf Editors She erit Hapletah 1944 1948 Rehabilitation and Political Struggle Proceedings of the Sixth Yad Vashem International Historical Conference Jerusalem October 1985 Yad Vashem Jerusalem 1990 Roger Berg Histoire du rabbinat francais Patrimoines Judaisme Cerf Paris 1992 Preface du grand rabbin Jacob Kaplan membre de l Institut ISBN 2 204 04252 8 Nicolas Baverez Raymond Aron Flammarion Paris 1993 Renee Poznanski Etre juif en France pendant la Seconde Guerre Mondiale Hachette Paris 1994 ISBN 2 01 013109 6 Asher Cohen History of the Holocaust France Yad Vashem Jerusalem 1996 ISBN 965 308 053 9 Donna F Ryan The Holocaust amp the Jews of Marseille The Enforcement of Anti Semitic Policies in Vichy France University of Illinois Press Urbana And Chicago 1996 ISBN 0 252 06530 1 Anne Grynberg Les camps de la honte Les internes juifs des camps francais 1939 1944 La Decouverte Paris 1999 ISBN 2 7071 3046 X Georges Vadnai Grand Rabbin de Lausanne Jamais la lumiere ne s est eteinte un destin juif dans les tenebres du siecle L Age d homme 1999 p 84 ISBN 2 8251 1241 0 ISBN 978 2 8251 1241 0 Catherine Poujol Aime Palliere 1868 1949 Un chretien dans le judaisme Desclee de Brouwer Paris 2003 ISBN 2 220 05316 4 Benoit M Mandelbrot The Fractalist Memoir of a Scientific Maverick First Vintage Books Edition New York 2013 ISBN 978 0 307 38991 6Among the articles written about David Feuerwerker are Elie Feuerwerker Le Rabbin Dr David Feuerwerker ZT L 2 Octobre 1912 20 Juin 1980 21 Tichri 5673 6 Tamouz 5740 Le Combat d Une Vie Revue d Histoire de la Medecine Hebraique Paris 1980 Mentioned in Gad Freudenthal amp Samuel S Kottek editors Melanges D Histoire De La Medecine Hebraique Etudes Choisies De La Revue D Histoire De La Medecine Hebraique 1948 1985 Brill Netherlands 2003 p 573 ISBN 978 90 04 12522 3 Francois Perroux Souvenir de David Feuerwerker Revue d Histoire de la Medecine Hebraique Paris 1981 Catherine Poujol David Feuerwerker Rabbin Resistant Enseignant Historien Archives Juives Paris 2002 Valery Bazarov In The Cross Hairs HIAS And The French Resistance The Hidden Child Vol XXI 2013 p 8 11 Published by Hidden Child Foundation ADL New York External links EditSynagogue de la rue des Tournelles Jack Meyer Moog Loup par Alain Kahn juin 2006 Historique de la synagogue et de la communaute de Neuilly Archived 2011 02 24 at the Wayback MachineSee also Feuerwerker Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title David Feuerwerker amp oldid 1155609230, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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