GERSHON
ZIBERT (December 1, 1888-August 8, 1946)
He was born in Warsaw, into a family
of business employees. He studied in a
Polish high school. He worked as a tutor
in wealthy homes, so as to study further.
Around 1906 he joined an illegal circle of students. From 1907 he was one of the important leaders
in the so-called “Komi Union”—of business and office employees in Warsaw. For a time he worked as a teacher of Polish
in Krinski’s High School in Warsaw.
During WWI he worked with particular energy in various areas of the Jewish
labor movement. In 1917 he was arrested
by the Germans and deported to a camp, from which he escaped to Berlin. He returned to Warsaw in 1918 and greatly developed
his activities in general politics and those of the Bund further. Over the course of ten years, he served on
the Warsaw city council and for a time was also secretary of the
presidium. He became known for a speech
in Yiddish in 1927 which caused a storm among anti-Semitic city
councilmen. In 1920 he was secretary of
the statistics division of the Joint Distribution Committee in Poland. He was active as well in HIAS (Hebrew
Immigrant Aid Society), ORT (Association for the Promotion of Skilled Trades),
and Tsisho (Central Jewish School Organization), on assignment for which in
1939 he traveled to South Africa, where he remained and looked into doing
something to establish help for the Polish Jews in the ghettos. He wrote for the local press, traveled around
giving speeches in Yiddish and English, participated in the Board of Deputies
in organizing a division on information on relatives, and upset the Board in
March 1945 by writing a call to local Jews to take an active role in
proclaiming a day of sadness on behalf of the murdered Jews. Zibert began his writing activities in Polish
and later switched to Yiddish. His first
article—the speech that he was to give at the grave of Bronisław Grosser in 1912—was published in Di tsayt (The times) in St. Petersburg,
that same year. He was later one of the revivers
of the Bundist press in Poland. He was a
regular contributor to: Lebns-fragn
(Life issues) in Warsaw (1916-1918); later to Folkstsaytung (People’s newspaper), which, aside from his work as a
Sejm correspondent, he published articles on general political and particularly
Jewish issues. He became ill on the
train, going from Cape Town to Johannesburg and was taken to De Aar, Cape
Province, where he died in the hospital.
The Johannesburg Bundists removed his body to Johannesburg and buried
him there.
Sources:
M. Sh., in Afrikaner idishe tsaytung
(Johannesburg) (August 6, 1946); Y. Lifshits, in Unzer tsayt (New York) (August-September 1946); S. Dubnov-Erlikh,
in Doyres bundistn (Generation of
Bundists), vol. 2 (New York, 1956), pp. 57-61.
Khayim Leyb Fuks
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