MOYSHE
ZIGLER (MOSHE SIEGLER) (April 14, 1914-mid-March 1985)
He was born in Sasov (Sasów),
eastern Galicia, the brother of Dovid Zigler.
He graduated from a commercial school and then became a bank
official. He was active in the pioneer
movement. He published his first article
in Morgn (Morning) in Lemberg (1929),
and from that point published (also using the name Henekhzon) articles, travel
narratives, and reportage pieces in: Lemberger
togblat (Lemberg daily newspaper); Unzer
ekspres (Our express), Hayntige nayes
(Today’s news), and Der radyo (The
radio)—in Warsaw; Lodzher tageblat
(Lodz daily newspaper); and Idishe bilder
(Jewish images) in Riga;
among other serials. He also placed
articles in the Polish Jewish Ruch spółdzielczy (Cooperative
movement) in Warsaw and Nowy
Dziennik (New daily) in Cracow. In
1939 he published serially in Morgn
and in Unzer ekspres chapters from a
book entitled Di kayzerlekhe dinastye
(The imperial dynasty). With the
outbreak of WWII, he escaped from Poland, was arrested and deported to Pechora
in the distant Russian north. After the
war he was in camps for survivors in Italy and Germany. He contributed to the survivors’ press and
took an active part in Zionist organizations among the refugees. He was the founder of Mobilization Abroad in
Italy, and in 1948, together with a group of 800 members of this association,
made aliya to Israel. He participated in
the war against the Arab states. He died
in Tel Aviv. The manuscript of Di kayzerlekhe dinastye was consumed in
a fire at a Warsaw publishing house in late 1939. He lived in Jerusalem and published articles
in the Yiddish-language press in Israel as well as in the Diaspora, especially
in Unzer vort (Our word) in Paris and
the daily newspaper Haynt (Today) in
Montevideo, in which he published a series of thirty-two articles on Jerusalem,
entitled “Fun dovid hameylekh biz dovid ben-guryon” (From King David to David
Ben-Gurion). He was the author of: Tife vortslen fun sasov biz yerusholaim
(Deep roots from Sasov [Sasów] to Jerusalem) (Jerusalem, 1981), 439 pp.
Zaynvl Diamant
[Additional
information from: Berl Kagan, comp., Leksikon
fun yidish-shraybers (Biographical dictionary of Yiddish writers) (New
York, 1986), cols. 259-60.]
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