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Jewish historian and founder and director of the secret
Oneg Shabbat Archive in the
Warsaw
Ghetto. Ringelblum
was born in Buczacz,
Poland
(now Ukraine). He earned a doctorate in history at the
University of Warsaw in 1927. From a young age, Ringelblum
belonged to the Po'alei Zion and was active in public
affairs. For a while he taught high school and subsequently
commenced working for the
Joint Distribution Committee in Poland. In November 1938
the JDC sent him to the border town of
Zbaszyn,
where 6,000 Jewish refugees from
Germany were gathered. These people had been forced out
of Germany and not allowed into Poland. Ringelblum spent 5
weeks in Zbaszyn as the person in charge of the refugees and
his experiences there had a great impact on him. After the
Germans invaded Poland in September 1939, Ringelblum
continued working for the JDC. He ran welfare programs and
soup kitchens for the Jews of the Warsaw Ghetto. He
instituted House Committees, which attempted to deal with
the growing deprivation within the ghetto.
Along with his friend Menahem Linder, Ringelblum also
founded a society for the advancement of Yiddish culture (Yidishe
Kultur Organizatsye) in the ghetto. In 1923,
several Jewish historians in Poland had formed a historical
society, with Ringelblum as one of its leaders and prominent
scholars. The group was eventually associated with the
Institute for Jewish Research (Yidisher Visenshaftlikher
Institut, YIVO). Ringelblum was one of the editors of
the society's publications, and by 1939, he himself had
published 126 scholarly articles. His efforts within that
group were just a preview of what he would later accomplish
in the Warsaw Ghetto. Within the
first few months of the war, Ringelblum launched his
greatest feat: the secret Oneg Shabbat Archive. The
name means "Sabbath pleasure," and usually refers to
cultural gatherings taking place on Sabbath. Thus,
Ringelblum's archive was aptly named because its members met
in secret on Saturday afternoons. Initially, the archivists
would collect reports and testimonies by Jews who had come
to the ghetto to seek help from the self-aid organizations.
Ringelblum would collect information during the day, and
write notes at night. He knew that what was happening to the
Jews was unprecedented, and he was determined to record a
complete description of the time and place for future
historians. He and his colleagues collected data and wrote
articles about towns, villages, the ghetto, and the
resistance movement. They also documented the
deportation
and extermination of Polish Jewry. Near the end of the
ghetto's existence, the archivists sent every bit of
information they had about the murders, to the Polish
underground, which in turn smuggled it out of the country.
Thus, Ringelblum helped expose the Nazis' atrocities. The Oneg
Shabbat materials were preserved in three milk cans. One
of the sites was uncovered in 1946 and a second in 1950; the
other has yet to be located. The archive materials and
Ringelblum's own written chronicles constitute the most
comprehensive and valuable source of information we have,
concerning the Jews in German-occupied Poland and the
significance of the events taking place. In March
1943, Ringelblum and his family escaped the ghetto and went
into hiding in the non-Jewish area of Warsaw. During
Passover of that year, he returned to the ghetto, which was
in the midst of an uprising. He was deported to the
Trawniki labor camp, but escaped with the help of a
Polish man and Jewish woman. He went back into hiding with
his family. However, in March 1944 their hideout was
discovered. Soon after, Ringelblum, his family, and the
other Jews he had been hiding with were taken to the ruins
of the ghetto and murdered.
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