LEYZER (ELIEZER) GELER (September 17, 1918-October 1943)
He
was born in Opotshne (Opoczno), Poland, into a
commercial household. He received a
religious Zionist education. He studied
in a public school, later in a middle school in Lodz. At age fifteen he joined the Zionist
socialist youth movement Gordonia. He
was later the most active leader of the Lodz circle and an editor for the
Gordonia publications in Yiddish, Polish, and Hebrew. He contributed pieces to: Dos folk (The people), Słowo młodych, pismo socjalistycznej
młodzieży chalucowej “Gordonia-Hamakabi Hacair” (Word of youth, socialist
youth magazine of the pioneer “Gordonia-Maccabee Youth”), Gordonia, and Davar hatseirim
(Matters of youth), as well as in other publications of Gordonia and Poale
Tsiyon Hitaḥadut (Labor Zionist organization) in Poland. During the war, he was captured by Germans as
a Polish soldier. Later, he settled in
Warsaw, where he was one of the leaders in the underground Gordonia movement
and one of the most active in the realm of self-defense, and he participated in
organizing the Warsaw Ghetto uprising.
He was also one of the organizers of the Jewish uprising group in
Zaglembie where he came as an emissary from the Jewish fighters’ organization
under the Aryan name of “E. Kowalski.”
He was the commandant of a fighting group during the first uprising in
Warsaw in January 1943, and later commandant-in-chief of the groups at Tobbens
Workshop, and he succeeded with a group in surviving via the sewer system on
the Aryan side. Until the summer of
1943, he remained active on the Aryan side of city. He was later sent to Bergen-Belsen. On October 21, 1943 he and 1800 Jews were transported
allegedly to Bergau camp which was in fact his last stop before Auschwitz or
Birkenau where he was murdered.
Sources: N. Ek,
in Idisher kemfer (New York)
(September 27, 1946); M. Nayshtat, Khurbn
un oyfshtand fun di yidn in varshe (Holocaust and uprising of the Jews in
Warsaw) (Tel Aviv, 1948), pp. 403-8.
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