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Schneour Zalman Schneersohn

Schneour Zalman Schneersohn[1][2] (1898–1980) was a Lubavitch Hasidic Chief Rabbi who was active in France during World War II.During the Nazi occupation of France, he ran homes for children who had been separated from their families, providing them with food, shelter and a Jewish education. Later, as the situation in France worsened, he smuggled many of them to safety.

Biography

Schneour Zalman Schneersohn was born in Gomel, Russian Empire (currently in Belarus) in 1898.[3] He belonged to the Lubavitch hassidic dynasty.

Schneersohn was descended on both sides from prestigious Hasidic families. He was the son of Menachem Mendel Schneersohn, grandson of Levi Yitzchak Schneersohn, great grandson of Baruch Shalom Schneersohn, the oldest son of the Tzemach Tzedek (Menachem Mendel Schneersohn, the third Rebbe of the Lubavitch dynasty). His mother, Liba Leah, was the granddaughter of Levi Yitzchok of Berditchev, one of the main disciples of Dov Ber of Mezeritch, himself one of the main disciples and successor of the Baal Shem Tov, the founder of Hasidism.[4] His daughter, Hadassah, married Eli Chaim Carlebach in 1949.

Schneersohn was active in the Jewish religious resistance in the USSR, distributing funds and prayer books with the help of the Political Red Cross.[3] In 1935, after receiving his semikhah from the Lubavitch yeshiva in Russia, he immigrated to Mandatory Palestine but after a few months, left for France on his way to the United States. In the end, he remained in France.[5]

In 1936, he created the Association des Israélites Pratiquants (AIP) (also Kehillat Haharedim), an association of Orthodox Jews promoting religious and educational activities throughout France.[6][7] The organization "provided material relief to needy Jewish refugees...founded Hebrew schools and synagogues, set up kosher soup kitchens and distributed clothing and money."[8]

Léon Poliakov, a French historian close with Rabbi Schneersohn, claims that "his orthodoxy, of an absolute intransigence, or his working methods, as flexible as they were, were disconcerting, not to mention his manners and his dress which did not appeal to his French colleagues."[3] He thus focused his attention on teaching children, opening eight Talmud Torah schools attended by several hundreds of children.

Jewish children's homes

When the Nazis invaded France in May 1940, Schneersohn was forced to leave Paris. Wherever he went, he relocated the AIP with him. From February 1940 to March 1944, he opened a series of homes for children in cooperation with the AIP and the OSE (Œuvre de Secours aux Enfants). The first was established in Chateau des Morelles in Brout-Vernet.

In 1941, he traveled to Marseilles. In the wooded and hilly east of the city, he rented la Maison de Beaupin as a home for children whose parents had been arrested. After the arrest of several children in Marseilles on 12 August 1942, he moved the children to a property in Dému, in the southwest of France.

In 1943, when the Germans expanded their territory in France., Schneersohn moved the children to Voiron, near Saint-Etienne-de-Crosse, in the Italian-occupied zone of l'Isere.

On 6 September 1943, the children were taken to Nice in the belief it would be safer since the Italians had changed sides to the Allies. But the Germans were waiting and on 10 September, invaded, rounding up and deporting 6,000 people. The children were smuggled back to Isère. Two members of the party were caught and the rabbi and his family were forced into hiding.

That winter, the children who remained were hidden in five locations in the area. On the l night of 22 March, one of these locations, La Martelliere, was raided. Sixteen boys and one woman, the mother of two brothers in the group, were arrested and deported. Only one of the boys survived the war. The same afternoon, Sara Schneerson, the rabbi's wife, was arrested in La Manche, close to Voiron, where the rabbi and some of his students had found a hiding place. She was taken to the French Millice headquarters, interrogated and tortured, but she maintained that the rabbi had escaped to Switzerland, not giving away his true hiding place. After her release, she walked around for miles instead of going straight to her husband's hideaway in order to mislead her torturers. Her ploy worked and the hiding place was not discovered.

As Chana Arnon-Benninga describes, "From then on, until the liberation of Grenoble, on 22 August 1944, the children, the rabbi, his wife and the young adults, were hidden at different places in the Voiron area, some not seeing the light of day for weeks on end. At liberation, the Schneerson family returned to Paris, taking some of the survivors with them; others went back to La Manoir to take care of some of the orphans helped by students who wanted to stay on. In September 1946, the youth home closed its doors definitely, the last members relocating to Boissy-Saint-Leger, in the Paris area."[5]

Much of what is known about Rabbi Schneersohn is thanks to the historian Léon Poliakov, who was the rabbi's personal secretary, and became secretary of the AIP in 1943.[9][10][11] Poliakov would tell in 1997[12] that he became acquainted with of Chief Rabbi Schneersohn when he was looking for a rabbi to officiate at his father's funeral. Later, on the Canebière in Marseille, he met Chief Rabbi Schneersohn who offers him the position of secretary. Their collaboration lasted several months until Poliakov gave up following ideological differences – he opposed the idea to contact Joseph Goebbels[13] – and religious differences. Poliakov later went on to found, together with Rabbi Schneersohn's cousin, Isaac Schneersohn, the Shoah Memorial, Center of Contemporary Jewish Documentation.

Timeline of locations

  • February 1940 – January 1941:
  • April 1942:
    • Villa Beaupin, in the Vieille Chapelle district of Marseilles
  • November 1942:
  • 1942–1944: successively :
    • Grenoble.
    • Château du Manoir, hameau de L'Étang-Dauphin, Saint-Étienne-de-Crossey (Isère),[14] Beginning in March 1943.
    • pension Cavalier and Hôtel Rivoli, at Nice. 1943 (...-October 1943).
    • Château du Manoir (return) from October 1943 to December 1943, then dispersal of the children in three hamlets close to Voiron (Isère):
      • La Manche, hameau de Saint-Jean-de-Moirans (Isère), in December 1943.
      • La Martellière, Voiron (Isère),[15][16][17][18][19] also in December 1943. 16 children, aged 7 to 21, and two adults are arrested there by the milice during the night of 23 March to March 1944, following a denunciation. The children are deported in the Convoi 71[20] of 13 April 1944[21][22] and the Convoi n° 73 of 15 May 1944.[23][24][25][26]
      • hameau de Chirens (Isère) and Saint-Étienne-de-Crossey (a room), starting in October 1943.

Descriptions of Schneersohn

In his book on Jewish Résistance in France, Lucien Lazare[27] describes the role of Schneersohn:

Having moved to Vichy, then to Marseille, the AIP had gathered together a community of sixty or so persons, composed of a Synagogue, a welfare office, a Yeshiva, a home for children and a workshop for vocational placement.[28] Chneerson intended his services to Orthodox Judaism. Placed in the marginality of the Jewish organizations, the AIP was the expression of a particular category of the Jewish identity. Very popular before the war in Central Europe and Eastern Europe as well as in Palestine, Hasidism counted fervent followers within the community of the Jewish immigrants in Paris. Rejecting at once emancipation, Zionism and Socialism, Chneerson only conceived Jewish existence in the jealous observance of rites and put up an impenetrable barrier against the influence of the environment and modernity. His experience of secular persecutions had taught him to respond by establishing a community with unfailing cohesion, devoting itself to the study of sacred texts and the observance of the Mitzvot in the enthusiastic atmosphere of the hassidic tradition. It is in this framework that he himself and his follower felt safe, leaving it to Providence. Chneerson had not discerned the novel and fatal character of the nazi threat, and the AIP was particularly vulnerable to the deportations.

In "L'Auberge des musiciens",[29] Léon Poliakov describes Schneersohn ("red beard, limping slightly in his caftan according to the Polish custom") and his activities at Marseille:

About a hundred or so persons prayed in the oratory of the rue Sylvabelle in a rich-looking building in of the most beautiful neighborhoods at Marseille [...] [There] two large rooms and a hall in the first floor, a kitchen and two rooms in the mezzanine [...]. The rabbi taking refuge with his family on the first floor. The kitchen doesn't stay empty either: furtive shadows appeared in the evening and vanished in the morning; these are escapees of the internment camps of Vichy to whom the rabbi gives refuge. One of the rooms of the first floor serves as an office and as a function room – a never-ending stream of Jewish miseries -, the other, the office of the rabbi, is at the same time a synagogue and a classroom; there weddings are celebrated and divorces are settled and even financial disputes.

In his private diary, Raymond-Raoul Lambert, who headed the UGIF-Sud, the Vichy government's Union of French Jews, writes on 17 August 1943:

The 28 (28 July 1943) I go, with Simone and the children, to visit a home for children close to Voiron, headed by an orthodox rabbin who resembles Rasputin. In such a milieu I feel Christian and Latin.[30]

The Israeli historian Richard Cohen thus explains[31] Lambert's reaction:

It's about rabbi Isaac Chneerson [sic][32] who was responsible of an ultra-orthodox charitable organization (Association des Israélites pratiquants de France, Kehillath Haharedim), affiliated to the 3e Direction de l'UGIF (Santé). The "assimilated" response by RRL [Raymond-Raoul Lambert] is not surprising, considering the content of the letter by the latter (2 August 1943, YIVO: RG 340, dossier 3) which deals into the details of his fantastic project to establish a Jewish State based on strictly orthodox principles.

In a recent book entitled Les enfants de la Martellière, Delphine Deroo reconstitues the life of this institution.[33] She is openly admiring of the rabbi's work:

To each threat corresponds a defense. To the wish of physical and spiritual elimination of the "Jewish Race", these men and women opposed themselves as Jews, assuming with pride their endangered Jewishness. And this moral resistance, that on my part I encounter in the insistence of rabbi Chneerson [Schneour Zalman Schneersohn] to strictly observe the religious laws – showing for him the very essence of his directly threatened Judaism -, strikes me and dazzles me by its strength and by its heroism.

After the war

After the war, Schneersohn worked to promote non-consistorial Orthodox Judaism from his office at 10 rue Dieu, in the 10th arrondissement of Paris near Place de la République. He continued to direct the AIP, organizing religious services and Jewish schools, as well as locating and rehabilitating children hidden in Christian homes during the war.

Several personalities later attested to the influence of his teaching, including Olga Katunal,[34] according to whom Zalman Schneurson was her greatest teacher,[35]

In the 1960s, Schneour Zalman Schneersohn immigrated to the United States, and continued to work as a teacher in Brooklyn, New York.

He died in New York at the age of 82.

References

  1. ^ The name is also spelled Schneerson (Nathan, 2008), and according to the daughter of the rabbi, Hadassa Carlebach (ibid.) he was called Chneerson during World War II.
  2. ^ Zuccotti (1993, p. 341, note 14) gives another version of the name. She writes: "The AIP was founded in Paris in 1936 by Grand Rabbi Zalman Chneersohn".
  3. ^ a b c Le rav Schneor Zalman Schneerson en France (1936-19470 (extrait) 20 November 2008 at the Wayback Machine, un article de Kountrass Online, Iyar 5763 / Mai 2003.
  4. ^ genealogical inscriptions on his tomb (Kevarim of Tzadikim in North America. Photo of the tomb of Schneour Zalman Schneersohn, with its biographical data. 4 August 2010 at the Wayback Machine), The Tsemah Tzedek Family Tree. 25 September 2010 at the Wayback Machine
  5. ^ a b Arnon-Benninga, Chana (September 2010). "SCHNEERSON, SCHNEUR ZALMAN 1898–1980" (PDF). World Federation of Jewish Child Survivors of the Holocaust and Descendants. (PDF) from the original on 3 March 2016.
  6. ^ Lazare, 1987, p. 139.
  7. ^ "Kehillat Haharedim". yivoarchives.org. from the original on 19 October 2020. Retrieved 11 February 2016.
  8. ^ holocaustchild.org
  9. ^ According to Lazare, 1987, p. 357, note 38, Poliakov was secretary of the AIP from November 1941 to August 1942.
  10. ^ Lazare, ibid., underlines that "A voluminous collection of archives of the AIP was entrusted by Z. Chneerson to YIVO – collection 340."
  11. ^ According to Poznansky, 1994, p. 203 : "All the Jewish organizations employed Jews who, before the war, hardly knew the existence of Jewish institutions. The most surprising example is may be the one of Léon Poliakov, an agnostic if there was one, who ended up, overnight, secretary of the Association des Israélites Pratiquants – an ultra-orthodox organization – headed at Marseille by the rabbi Zalman Chneerson."
  12. ^ "Léon Poliakov, l'un des premiers historiens de la Shoah". Le Monde, 26 September 2005 – interview given to 'Survivors of the Shoah Visual History Foundation', 28 April 1997 in Massy.
  13. ^ Chief Rabbi Schneersohn doesn't grasp then that the separation of the Jews from the remainder of the population advocated by the Nazis is in fact the prelude to their extermination, the "Final Solution". He had known the communist regime and its limitations to the practice of religion. Mankind had not known yet a systematic genocide, country after country, this "Final Solution".
  14. ^ Lazare, 1987, p. 227, writes: "There is on the other hand the refusal by Schneerson of the AIP to scatter individually, under cover of a full "aryanisation", the wards of the home of Saint-Étienne-de-Crossey." Note in passing, that in the index of his book (p.419), Lazare mixes up the names of the two cousins: Isaac Schneersohn and Schneour Zalman Schneersohn.
  15. ^ Voiron dans la Shoah. Voiron en ligne. 21 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine
  16. ^ Benoit, Floriane (25 August 1997) "Rafle des enfants juifs: Voiron retourne son passé" 25 October 2007 at the Wayback Machine. L'Humanité
  17. ^ Deroo, Delphine Les enfants de la Martellière. Chapitre premier. Chronique de recherches 24 December 2009 at the Wayback Machine
  18. ^ Duchêne, Laurence (Vacarme 04/05/actualités). Vous reprendrez bien quelques juifs.
  19. ^ Bakour, Manon (30 March 2009). "Hommage poignant hier à Voiron" 21 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine. Culture. mGrenoble.fr.
  20. ^ This Convoi 71 includes Simone Jacob, aged 16 ans, who will be known later as Simone Veil. Serge Klarsfeld, 1978.
  21. ^ "rafle de seize enfants juifs", L'Humanité, 23 August 1997
  22. ^ See, L'histoire. Erwin Uhr, unique survivant de la rafle de Voiron, en 1944 27 September 2012 at the Wayback Machine. Libération, 15 September 1997.
  23. ^ See,Eve Line Blum-Cherchevsky. Convoi 73. Abraham Rosenzweig. 25 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine
  24. ^ Zuccotti, 1993, p. 193, talks about 18 children ; in reality, there are 16 children and two adults—cf. "La ville de Voiron découvre la rafle de seize enfants juifs" 2 December 2008 at the Wayback Machine, L'Humanité, 23 August 1997
  25. ^ "L'histoire" 27 September 2012 at the Wayback Machine. Erwin Uhr, unique survivant de la rafle de Voiron, en 1944. Libération, 15 September 1997.
  26. ^ See, Eve Line Blum-Cherchevsky. Convoi 73. Abraham Rosenzweig. 25 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine
  27. ^ Lazare 1987, pp. 139–140.
  28. ^ Regarding the activities of Schneour Zalman Schneersohn at Marseille, Renée Dray-Bensousan writes: "Furthermore workshops had been created by the ORT and the Association des Israélites Pratiquants (AIP) within the second department of the UGIF. The impetuous rabbi Zalman Chneerson [sic] had put up a vocational school at the headquarters of his association, meaning in the cellar of his apartment, rue Sylvabelle; it transformed into a «workers company» when Vichy decided to incorporate in it the foreign Juifs. He had integrated there for a while Joseph Bass, the future head of the Réseau Bass, as a teacher of draughtsmanship next to secretary Léon Poliakov. A course in electricity and radio was given there to forty two students by Dr Radzowitz, a famous Viennese physicist."
  29. ^ Dray-Bensousan, Renée "L'éducation juive à Marseille sous Vichy (1940–1943): Une renaissance circonstancielle." 14 March 2012 at the Wayback Machine Jewish Archives, vol.35, 2002/2, p. 49-59.
  30. ^ See, Lambert, 1985, p. 236.
  31. ^ See, Lambert, 1985, p. 289, note 207.
  32. ^ Cohen mixes up the two cousins: ‘’’Isaac Schneersohn’’’ and Schneour Zalman Schneersohn.
  33. ^ See, Delphine Deroo, 1999, Chapitre premier.Chronique de recherches.
  34. ^ On Olga Katunal, see Haddad, 2007. Jacques Lacan climbed the seven floors without elevator of her building in the 9th arrondissement of Paris to consult the books on Kabbalah that she owned. Olga Katunal introduces Oscar Goldberg (one of those saved by Varian Fry) to Chief Rabbi Schneersohn.
  35. ^ See, Friedlander, 1990, p. 173-174: "The greatest teacher she ever had, she claimed was Zalman Schneurson, a man many expected to inherit the position of chief rabbi of the Lubavitcher Hassidim, but he never did. A formidable scholar, Schneurson attracted a large following of intellectual Jews in Paris during the early postwar years.".

Bibliography

  • Lambert, Raymond-Raoul [in French] (15 October 2007). Cohen, Richard I. (ed.). Diary of a witness 1940-1943: The experience of French Jews in The Holocaust. Translated by Best, Isabel. Ivan R. Dee. ISBN 1-56663-740-6.
  • Lucien Lazare (1987). La Résistance juive en France. ISBN 978-2-234-02080-1.
  • Judith Friedlander (1990). Vilna on the Seine: Jewish Intellectuals in France Since 1968. ISBN 978-0-300-04703-5.
  • Susan Zuccotti (1993). The Holocaust, the French, and the Jews. Basic Books. ISBN 0-465-03034-3.
  • Renée Poznanski (1994). Être juif en France pendant la Seconde Guerre mondiale. Hachette Book Group USA. ISBN 978-2-01-013109-7.
  • Donna F. Ryan (1996). The Holocaust & the Jews of Marseille: The Enforcement of Anti-Semitic Policies in Vichy France. ISBN 978-0-252-06530-9.
  • Delphine Deroo (1999). Les enfants de La Martellière. Grasset & Fasquelle. ISBN 978-2-246-56921-3.
  • Anne Grynberg (1999). Les camps de la honte: Les internés juifs des camps français (1939-1944). Editions La Découverte. ISBN 978-2-7071-3046-4.
  • Claude Muller (2003). Les sentiers de la liberté: Dauphiné, 1939-1945 : les témoignages de nombreux résistants et déportés. Editions De Borée. ISBN 978-2-84494-195-4.
  • Renée Dray-Bensousan (2004). Les juifs à Marseille pendant La Seconde Guerre mondiale: août 1939--août 1944. Belles Lettres. ISBN 978-2-251-38066-7.
  • Limor Yagil (2005). Chrétiens et Juifs sous Vichy (1940-1944): Sauvetage et désobéissance civile. Cerf. ISBN 978-2-204-07585-5.
  • Ḥanah Sheneʼursohn (April 2003). A mother in Israel: the life and memoirs of Rebbetzin Chana Schneerson of blessed memory : mother of Rabbi Menachem M. Schneerson, the Lubavitcher Rebbe, z. ts. ṿe-ḳ. l.l.h.h.] Kehot Publication Society. ISBN 0-8266-0099-9.
  • Gérard Haddad (2007). Le péché originel de la psychanalyse: Lacan et la question juive. Seuil. ISBN 978-2-02-091253-2.
  • Joan Nathan. Bread of Freedom in Times of Despair. The New York Times, 16 April 2008 (Section Dining & Wine).
  • Samuel Heilman; Menachem Friedman (30 May 2010). The Rebbe: The Life and Afterlife of Menachem Mendel Schneerson. Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-0-691-13888-6.
  • Elie Feuerwerker. "Further Corrections". Hamodia. New York. 13 October 2010.

schneour, zalman, schneersohn, confused, with, shneur, zalman, liadi, 1898, 1980, lubavitch, hasidic, chief, rabbi, active, france, during, world, during, nazi, occupation, france, homes, children, been, separated, from, their, families, providing, them, with,. Not to be confused with Shneur Zalman of Liadi Schneour Zalman Schneersohn 1 2 1898 1980 was a Lubavitch Hasidic Chief Rabbi who was active in France during World War II During the Nazi occupation of France he ran homes for children who had been separated from their families providing them with food shelter and a Jewish education Later as the situation in France worsened he smuggled many of them to safety Contents 1 Biography 2 Jewish children s homes 2 1 Timeline of locations 3 Descriptions of Schneersohn 4 After the war 5 References 6 BibliographyBiography EditSchneour Zalman Schneersohn was born in Gomel Russian Empire currently in Belarus in 1898 3 He belonged to the Lubavitch hassidic dynasty Schneersohn was descended on both sides from prestigious Hasidic families He was the son of Menachem Mendel Schneersohn grandson of Levi Yitzchak Schneersohn great grandson of Baruch Shalom Schneersohn the oldest son of the Tzemach Tzedek Menachem Mendel Schneersohn the third Rebbe of the Lubavitch dynasty His mother Liba Leah was the granddaughter of Levi Yitzchok of Berditchev one of the main disciples of Dov Ber of Mezeritch himself one of the main disciples and successor of the Baal Shem Tov the founder of Hasidism 4 His daughter Hadassah married Eli Chaim Carlebach in 1949 Schneersohn was active in the Jewish religious resistance in the USSR distributing funds and prayer books with the help of the Political Red Cross 3 In 1935 after receiving his semikhah from the Lubavitch yeshiva in Russia he immigrated to Mandatory Palestine but after a few months left for France on his way to the United States In the end he remained in France 5 In 1936 he created the Association des Israelites Pratiquants AIP also Kehillat Haharedim an association of Orthodox Jews promoting religious and educational activities throughout France 6 7 The organization provided material relief to needy Jewish refugees founded Hebrew schools and synagogues set up kosher soup kitchens and distributed clothing and money 8 Leon Poliakov a French historian close with Rabbi Schneersohn claims that his orthodoxy of an absolute intransigence or his working methods as flexible as they were were disconcerting not to mention his manners and his dress which did not appeal to his French colleagues 3 He thus focused his attention on teaching children opening eight Talmud Torah schools attended by several hundreds of children Jewish children s homes EditWhen the Nazis invaded France in May 1940 Schneersohn was forced to leave Paris Wherever he went he relocated the AIP with him From February 1940 to March 1944 he opened a series of homes for children in cooperation with the AIP and the OSE Œuvre de Secours aux Enfants The first was established in Chateau des Morelles in Brout Vernet In 1941 he traveled to Marseilles In the wooded and hilly east of the city he rented la Maison de Beaupin as a home for children whose parents had been arrested After the arrest of several children in Marseilles on 12 August 1942 he moved the children to a property in Demu in the southwest of France In 1943 when the Germans expanded their territory in France Schneersohn moved the children to Voiron near Saint Etienne de Crosse in the Italian occupied zone of l Isere On 6 September 1943 the children were taken to Nice in the belief it would be safer since the Italians had changed sides to the Allies But the Germans were waiting and on 10 September invaded rounding up and deporting 6 000 people The children were smuggled back to Isere Two members of the party were caught and the rabbi and his family were forced into hiding That winter the children who remained were hidden in five locations in the area On the l night of 22 March one of these locations La Martelliere was raided Sixteen boys and one woman the mother of two brothers in the group were arrested and deported Only one of the boys survived the war The same afternoon Sara Schneerson the rabbi s wife was arrested in La Manche close to Voiron where the rabbi and some of his students had found a hiding place She was taken to the French Millice headquarters interrogated and tortured but she maintained that the rabbi had escaped to Switzerland not giving away his true hiding place After her release she walked around for miles instead of going straight to her husband s hideaway in order to mislead her torturers Her ploy worked and the hiding place was not discovered As Chana Arnon Benninga describes From then on until the liberation of Grenoble on 22 August 1944 the children the rabbi his wife and the young adults were hidden at different places in the Voiron area some not seeing the light of day for weeks on end At liberation the Schneerson family returned to Paris taking some of the survivors with them others went back to La Manoir to take care of some of the orphans helped by students who wanted to stay on In September 1946 the youth home closed its doors definitely the last members relocating to Boissy Saint Leger in the Paris area 5 Much of what is known about Rabbi Schneersohn is thanks to the historian Leon Poliakov who was the rabbi s personal secretary and became secretary of the AIP in 1943 9 10 11 Poliakov would tell in 1997 12 that he became acquainted with of Chief Rabbi Schneersohn when he was looking for a rabbi to officiate at his father s funeral Later on the Canebiere in Marseille he met Chief Rabbi Schneersohn who offers him the position of secretary Their collaboration lasted several months until Poliakov gave up following ideological differences he opposed the idea to contact Joseph Goebbels 13 and religious differences Poliakov later went on to found together with Rabbi Schneersohn s cousin Isaac Schneersohn the Shoah Memorial Center of Contemporary Jewish Documentation Timeline of locations Edit February 1940 January 1941 Chateau des Morelles Brout Vernet Allier April 1942 Villa Beaupin in the Vieille Chapelle district of Marseilles November 1942 Domaine de Seignebon at Demu Gers 1942 1944 successively Grenoble Chateau du Manoir hameau de L Etang Dauphin Saint Etienne de Crossey Isere 14 Beginning in March 1943 pension Cavalier and Hotel Rivoli at Nice 1943 October 1943 Chateau du Manoir return from October 1943 to December 1943 then dispersal of the children in three hamlets close to Voiron Isere La Manche hameau de Saint Jean de Moirans Isere in December 1943 La Martelliere Voiron Isere 15 16 17 18 19 also in December 1943 16 children aged 7 to 21 and two adults are arrested there by the milice during the night of 23 March to March 1944 following a denunciation The children are deported in the Convoi 71 20 of 13 April 1944 21 22 and the Convoi n 73 of 15 May 1944 23 24 25 26 hameau de Chirens Isere and Saint Etienne de Crossey a room starting in October 1943 Descriptions of Schneersohn EditIn his book on Jewish Resistance in France Lucien Lazare 27 describes the role of Schneersohn Having moved to Vichy then to Marseille the AIP had gathered together a community of sixty or so persons composed of a Synagogue a welfare office a Yeshiva a home for children and a workshop for vocational placement 28 Chneerson intended his services to Orthodox Judaism Placed in the marginality of the Jewish organizations the AIP was the expression of a particular category of the Jewish identity Very popular before the war in Central Europe and Eastern Europe as well as in Palestine Hasidism counted fervent followers within the community of the Jewish immigrants in Paris Rejecting at once emancipation Zionism and Socialism Chneerson only conceived Jewish existence in the jealous observance of rites and put up an impenetrable barrier against the influence of the environment and modernity His experience of secular persecutions had taught him to respond by establishing a community with unfailing cohesion devoting itself to the study of sacred texts and the observance of the Mitzvot in the enthusiastic atmosphere of the hassidic tradition It is in this framework that he himself and his follower felt safe leaving it to Providence Chneerson had not discerned the novel and fatal character of the nazi threat and the AIP was particularly vulnerable to the deportations In L Auberge des musiciens 29 Leon Poliakov describes Schneersohn red beard limping slightly in his caftan according to the Polish custom and his activities at Marseille About a hundred or so persons prayed in the oratory of the rue Sylvabelle in a rich looking building in of the most beautiful neighborhoods at Marseille There two large rooms and a hall in the first floor a kitchen and two rooms in the mezzanine The rabbi taking refuge with his family on the first floor The kitchen doesn t stay empty either furtive shadows appeared in the evening and vanished in the morning these are escapees of the internment camps of Vichy to whom the rabbi gives refuge One of the rooms of the first floor serves as an office and as a function room a never ending stream of Jewish miseries the other the office of the rabbi is at the same time a synagogue and a classroom there weddings are celebrated and divorces are settled and even financial disputes In his private diary Raymond Raoul Lambert who headed the UGIF Sud the Vichy government s Union of French Jews writes on 17 August 1943 The 28 28 July 1943 I go with Simone and the children to visit a home for children close to Voiron headed by an orthodox rabbin who resembles Rasputin In such a milieu I feel Christian and Latin 30 The Israeli historian Richard Cohen thus explains 31 Lambert s reaction It s about rabbi Isaac Chneerson sic 32 who was responsible of an ultra orthodox charitable organization Association des Israelites pratiquants de France Kehillath Haharedim affiliated to the 3e Direction de l UGIF Sante The assimilated response by RRL Raymond Raoul Lambert is not surprising considering the content of the letter by the latter 2 August 1943 YIVO RG 340 dossier 3 which deals into the details of his fantastic project to establish a Jewish State based on strictly orthodox principles In a recent book entitled Les enfants de la Martelliere Delphine Deroo reconstitues the life of this institution 33 She is openly admiring of the rabbi s work To each threat corresponds a defense To the wish of physical and spiritual elimination of the Jewish Race these men and women opposed themselves as Jews assuming with pride their endangered Jewishness And this moral resistance that on my part I encounter in the insistence of rabbi Chneerson Schneour Zalman Schneersohn to strictly observe the religious laws showing for him the very essence of his directly threatened Judaism strikes me and dazzles me by its strength and by its heroism After the war EditAfter the war Schneersohn worked to promote non consistorial Orthodox Judaism from his office at 10 rue Dieu in the 10th arrondissement of Paris near Place de la Republique He continued to direct the AIP organizing religious services and Jewish schools as well as locating and rehabilitating children hidden in Christian homes during the war Several personalities later attested to the influence of his teaching including Olga Katunal 34 according to whom Zalman Schneurson was her greatest teacher 35 In the 1960s Schneour Zalman Schneersohn immigrated to the United States and continued to work as a teacher in Brooklyn New York He died in New York at the age of 82 References Edit The name is also spelled Schneerson Nathan 2008 and according to the daughter of the rabbi Hadassa Carlebach ibid he was called Chneerson during World War II Zuccotti 1993 p 341 note 14 gives another version of the name She writes The AIP was founded in Paris in 1936 by Grand Rabbi Zalman Chneersohn a b c Le rav Schneor Zalman Schneerson en France 1936 19470 extrait Archived 20 November 2008 at the Wayback Machine un article de Kountrass Online Iyar 5763 Mai 2003 genealogical inscriptions on his tomb Kevarim of Tzadikim in North America Photo of the tomb of Schneour Zalman Schneersohn with its biographical data Archived 4 August 2010 at the Wayback Machine The Tsemah Tzedek Family Tree Archived 25 September 2010 at the Wayback Machine a b Arnon Benninga Chana September 2010 SCHNEERSON SCHNEUR ZALMAN 1898 1980 PDF World Federation of Jewish Child Survivors of the Holocaust and Descendants Archived PDF from the original on 3 March 2016 Lazare 1987 p 139 Kehillat Haharedim yivoarchives org Archived from the original on 19 October 2020 Retrieved 11 February 2016 holocaustchild org According to Lazare 1987 p 357 note 38 Poliakov was secretary of the AIP from November 1941 to August 1942 Lazare ibid underlines that A voluminous collection of archives of the AIP was entrusted by Z Chneerson to YIVO collection 340 According to Poznansky 1994 p 203 All the Jewish organizations employed Jews who before the war hardly knew the existence of Jewish institutions The most surprising example is may be the one of Leon Poliakov an agnostic if there was one who ended up overnight secretary of the Association des Israelites Pratiquants an ultra orthodox organization headed at Marseille by the rabbi Zalman Chneerson Leon Poliakov l un des premiers historiens de la Shoah Le Monde 26 September 2005 interview given to Survivors of the Shoah Visual History Foundation 28 April 1997 in Massy Chief Rabbi Schneersohn doesn t grasp then that the separation of the Jews from the remainder of the population advocated by the Nazis is in fact the prelude to their extermination the Final Solution He had known the communist regime and its limitations to the practice of religion Mankind had not known yet a systematic genocide country after country this Final Solution Lazare 1987 p 227 writes There is on the other hand the refusal by Schneerson of the AIP to scatter individually under cover of a full aryanisation the wards of the home of Saint Etienne de Crossey Note in passing that in the index of his book p 419 Lazare mixes up the names of the two cousins Isaac Schneersohn and Schneour Zalman Schneersohn Voiron dans la Shoah Voiron en ligne Archived 21 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine Benoit Floriane 25 August 1997 Rafle des enfants juifs Voiron retourne son passe Archived 25 October 2007 at the Wayback Machine L Humanite Deroo Delphine Les enfants de la Martelliere Chapitre premier Chronique de recherches Archived 24 December 2009 at the Wayback Machine Duchene Laurence Vacarme 04 05 actualites Vous reprendrez bien quelques juifs Bakour Manon 30 March 2009 Hommage poignant hier a Voiron Archived 21 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine Culture mGrenoble fr This Convoi 71 includes Simone Jacob aged 16 ans who will be known later as Simone Veil Serge Klarsfeld 1978 rafle de seize enfants juifs L Humanite 23 August 1997 See L histoire Erwin Uhr unique survivant de la rafle de Voiron en 1944 Archived 27 September 2012 at the Wayback Machine Liberation 15 September 1997 See Eve Line Blum Cherchevsky Convoi 73 Abraham Rosenzweig Archived 25 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine Zuccotti 1993 p 193 talks about 18 children in reality there are 16 children and two adults cf La ville de Voiron decouvre la rafle de seize enfants juifs Archived 2 December 2008 at the Wayback Machine L Humanite 23 August 1997 L histoire Archived 27 September 2012 at the Wayback Machine Erwin Uhr unique survivant de la rafle de Voiron en 1944 Liberation 15 September 1997 See Eve Line Blum Cherchevsky Convoi 73 Abraham Rosenzweig Archived 25 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine Lazare 1987 pp 139 140 Regarding the activities of Schneour Zalman Schneersohn at Marseille Renee Dray Bensousan writes Furthermore workshops had been created by the ORT and the Association des Israelites Pratiquants AIP within the second department of the UGIF The impetuous rabbi Zalman Chneerson sic had put up a vocational school at the headquarters of his association meaning in the cellar of his apartment rue Sylvabelle it transformed into a workers company when Vichy decided to incorporate in it the foreign Juifs He had integrated there for a while Joseph Bass the future head of the Reseau Bass as a teacher of draughtsmanship next to secretary Leon Poliakov A course in electricity and radio was given there to forty two students by Dr Radzowitz a famous Viennese physicist Dray Bensousan Renee L education juive a Marseille sous Vichy 1940 1943 Une renaissance circonstancielle Archived 14 March 2012 at the Wayback Machine Jewish Archives vol 35 2002 2 p 49 59 See Lambert 1985 p 236 See Lambert 1985 p 289 note 207 Cohen mixes up the two cousins Isaac Schneersohn and Schneour Zalman Schneersohn See Delphine Deroo 1999 Chapitre premier Chronique de recherches On Olga Katunal see Haddad 2007 Jacques Lacan climbed the seven floors without elevator of her building in the 9th arrondissement of Paris to consult the books on Kabbalah that she owned Olga Katunal introduces Oscar Goldberg one of those saved by Varian Fry to Chief Rabbi Schneersohn See Friedlander 1990 p 173 174 The greatest teacher she ever had she claimed was Zalman Schneurson a man many expected to inherit the position of chief rabbi of the Lubavitcher Hassidim but he never did A formidable scholar Schneurson attracted a large following of intellectual Jews in Paris during the early postwar years Bibliography EditSerge Klarsfeld Le Memorial de la Deportation des Juifs de France Beate et Serge Klarsfeld Paris 1978 Leon Poliakov L Auberge des musiciens Memoires Paris 1981 Lambert Raymond Raoul in French 1985 Cohen Richard I ed Carnet d un temoin 1940 1943 in French Fayard ISBN 978 2 213 01549 1 Lambert Raymond Raoul in French 15 October 2007 Cohen Richard I ed Diary of a witness 1940 1943 The experience of French Jews in The Holocaust Translated by Best Isabel Ivan R Dee ISBN 1 56663 740 6 Lucien Lazare 1987 La Resistance juive en France ISBN 978 2 234 02080 1 Judith Friedlander 1990 Vilna on the Seine Jewish Intellectuals in France Since 1968 ISBN 978 0 300 04703 5 Susan Zuccotti 1993 The Holocaust the French and the Jews Basic Books ISBN 0 465 03034 3 Renee Poznanski 1994 Etre juif en France pendant la Seconde Guerre mondiale Hachette Book Group USA ISBN 978 2 01 013109 7 Donna F Ryan 1996 The Holocaust amp the Jews of Marseille The Enforcement of Anti Semitic Policies in Vichy France ISBN 978 0 252 06530 9 Delphine Deroo 1999 Les enfants de La Martelliere Grasset amp Fasquelle ISBN 978 2 246 56921 3 Anne Grynberg 1999 Les camps de la honte Les internes juifs des camps francais 1939 1944 Editions La Decouverte ISBN 978 2 7071 3046 4 Claude Muller 2003 Les sentiers de la liberte Dauphine 1939 1945 les temoignages de nombreux resistants et deportes Editions De Boree ISBN 978 2 84494 195 4 Renee Dray Bensousan 2004 Les juifs a Marseille pendant La Seconde Guerre mondiale aout 1939 aout 1944 Belles Lettres ISBN 978 2 251 38066 7 Limor Yagil 2005 Chretiens et Juifs sous Vichy 1940 1944 Sauvetage et desobeissance civile Cerf ISBN 978 2 204 07585 5 Ḥanah Sheneʼursohn April 2003 A mother in Israel the life and memoirs of Rebbetzin Chana Schneerson of blessed memory mother of Rabbi Menachem M Schneerson the Lubavitcher Rebbe z ts ṿe ḳ l l h h Kehot Publication Society ISBN 0 8266 0099 9 Gerard Haddad 2007 Le peche originel de la psychanalyse Lacan et la question juive Seuil ISBN 978 2 02 091253 2 Joan Nathan Bread of Freedom in Times of Despair The New York Times 16 April 2008 Section Dining amp Wine Samuel Heilman Menachem Friedman 30 May 2010 The Rebbe The Life and Afterlife of Menachem Mendel Schneerson Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0 691 13888 6 Elie Feuerwerker Further Corrections Hamodia New York 13 October 2010 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Schneour Zalman Schneersohn amp oldid 1132752663, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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