16 Friday, September 4, 1961 WIDE LAPELS MADE NARROW 00) 11ES LW only . 7. $5 $ 39 ) f \' L 0, SUITS BY: '; LIVIA MOIRE 1 LARGOS-11:11EER 1. - 20% OFF ki - SETT COMAS WOE NARROW A S 8 Wide Pal Lets . Made Weyer ale s12 7 We art mastered Me art et istrietate fitting L Wain F13 evall3 NITA CLOTHES & CUSTOM TAILORS LADIES' & YEWS ALTERATIONS SPECIALIST TUXEDO RENTALS Lowest Prices Tel-Ea Plaza . Telegraph N. of 10 MIN • 357•1722 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS A Ghetto Fighter Dies Among His Compatriots By GITTA AMIPAZ-SILBER World Zionist Press Service A lone survivor of the mil- lions is no more. He died suddenly, while more than 10,000 survivors, coming from Israel and from the four corners of the world, met in Jerusalem for the four day World Gathering of Holocaust Survivors in June. Perhaps Yitzhak Zuc- kerman could not take it anymore. His heart, failed him. Was it emotionally too much for this 66-year-old fighter to meet his fellow survivors and relive so viv- idly what they had gone through in the Nazi hell? Zuckerman, known by his underground name "An- tek," would have found it easy, because of his Slavic features, to pass himself off as an Aryan during the German occupation of Po- land. But instead of this he devoted himself completely to underground activities, to saving Jews and to fight- ing the Nazis. In 1941, after half a mil- lion /Jews had been herded into the Warsaw Ghetto and sealed off from the outside world, Zuckerman organized them for self-help and for eventual resistance. Sur- vival was the main prob- lem. Mass unemploy- ment, overcrowding, hunger and cold were de- liberately inflicted on the ghetto by the Nazis. Epidemics were ram- pant. Less than two years later, more than 100,000 Jews had died, not count- ing those who had been sent to slave labor camps, where few remained alive. By the end of 1941, Zuc- kerman and his friends, who had organized defense squads among the ghetto Jews, received the first news of the destruction of Vilna Jewry. Those Jews were being taken to the Ponar forests and mas- sacred, said an emissary re- turning to the Warsaw Ghetto. The few who had managed to escape from the YOU WERE SMART t SAVE f ---' You've waited til now to join Hamilton Place. Now, when our fall program is gearing'up with aerobic exercise, indoor swimming, indoor track, Nautilus equipment, gourmet restaurant and more. There's never been a better time to join, because now you can save 1/2 off initiation at Hamilton Place. Get everything you ever wonted at the most complete health facility in Southfield. CALL 646-8990 NOW and save 1/2* 30333 Southfield Rd. (Between 12 & 13 Mile Rds.) Call or drop in anytime between 9:00 a.m. St — , ima. -.7.110% 9:00 p.m. HURRY! OFFER ENDS LABOR DAY 1711TON PLACE ATHLETIC CLUB Presented By HALL REAL ESTATE GROUP • . off offer oopbes to toil vngie coupe P fomly membership inhohon only death pits, and other emis- saries, amongst them Hayka Grossman, today a member of Kibutz Evron and a Knesset member, con- firmed these accounts. These were the first re- ports of total extermination. A few weeks later, more horrible news came from a Jew who had been a gravedigger in Chelinno and had managed to escape. There the Germans pushed the Jews, young and old, women and children, into cars where they were gas- sed. Then they were driven to a forest where the pile of corpses were thrown into pits. Up to then, the Youth Movement had devoted their energies to preserving lives and human dignity. Yitzhak had taken upon himself to organize cultural activities: schools were op- erated, although education of children was forbidden; scientific lectuies were de- livered; public worship was not allowed but still, reli- gious services were held; underground periodicals appeared. It was now clear to Yit- zhak that new ways had to be found to organize defense. They would not go helplessly to the slaughter. He proposed the formation of a Jewish fighting organization for active resistance. The Jewish Fighting Organization was estab- lished in the Ghetto. Antek was also active in the Aryan sector trying to get assis- tance from the Polish un- derground, but in vain. The Jews' arsenal contained only two small pistols! They felt they were isolated from the world. - And so, in the course of two months, 300,000 out of the 370,000 ghetto inhabi- tants were exterminated. The resistance movement suffered severe losses when members were caught in ac- tion. Yitzhak did his best to encourage the fighters. Military training started. Molotov cocktails, hand grenades and bombs were produced secretly in the ghetto. Bunkers and un- derground tunnels were built. Some hand grenades and pistols, bought with their own money with the aid of the Polish under- ground, were smuggled into the ghetto. The task of organizing the uprising in the Warsaw Ghetto was assigned to five youngsters from the Jewish Fighting Organinzation, at the head of which stook Mordechai AnileNCcz and his deputy Antek, who was also in charge of maintain- ing communication with the Jewish Fighting Organiza- tions in other cities. fighting, although the Jewish partisans knew that they would all be kil- led. The Polish underground, full of admiration for the Jews who had dared resist the Germans with so few weapons, sent them a new shipment of arms. In the meantime, the Jewish resis- tance prepared feverishly for the next battle and Zuc- kerman was chosen to go to the Aryan side of Warsaw to be the fighters' representa- tive to the Polish under- ground. Then, on April 19, 1943, a German force with tanks and artillery attacked. However it retreated in great confusion after suffer- ing heavy losses and leav- ing many dead behind. The ghetto defenders were over- joyed at having forced the Germans to flee the Ghetto twice. The Germans • then burned the houses, one after the other. The ghetto burned for days and nights. And so the Jewish fighters perished, except for about 50 who escaped, a number of them through the sewer canals -- and continued to fight the Germans in the forest. Altogether, 56,000 ghetto Jews were destroyed during the one month's fighting. Three hundred Germans were killed and about 1,000 wounded. The Warsaw Ghetto up- , rising was the biggest Jewish revolt against Nazis and the first armed uprising in occupied Europe. Of it, the 24-year-old leader Mor- dechai Anilewicz wrote be- fore his death: "The dream of my life. has been fulfilled. I have lived to see Jewish defense in all its greatness and glory." U.S. Disagrees With Ambassador WASHINGTON (JTA) — The State Department stressed Tuesday that it did not agree with the assertion by a retiring U.S. ambas- sador that peace could not be achieved in the Middle East as long as Premier Menahem Begin remains in office. Department spokesman . Dean Fischer said that Tal- cott Seelye was "not speak- ing for the Administration" when he made his state- ments in Damascus just prior to leaving his post as U.S. ambassador to Syria. "He was reflecting his own personal views," Fischer said. Mandel Chair NEW YORK —A chair in cognitive social psychology and education has been es- tablished by Barbara and Morton L. Mandel, of Cleve- Meanwhile the ghetto ' land, Ohio, at the National defenders had received a Council of Jewish Women small supply of arms Research Institute for Inno- from their comrades on vation in Education, at the School of Education of the — the Aryan side of War- saw. Then, the second Hebrew University of wave of deportation Jerusalem. Dr. Michael In- came in January 1943. bar, a professor at the He- Stiff resistance was put brew University, has been up in four days cif' street named the rust incumbent.,