YUDE
(YEHUDA) YEFET (1905-summer 1942)
The pen name of Dovid Shapiro, he
was born in the town of Pokshivtse, Lublin district, Poland, into a family that
drew its pedigree back to the Kozhenitser Magid [Rabbi Yisroel Hofsztajn]. He was the son of the Blendover Rebbe and
himself received rabbinical ordination.
In 1922 he became active in the Mizrachi Party in Warsaw. He was a member of the Mizrachi central
committee in Poland. He was one of the
principal leaders of the “Torah veavoda” (Torah and labor) movement. He was a creator of the Mizrachi school
system and editor at its public library Yavne in Warsaw. He began his literary pursuits with
translations from the work of Schneur Zalman into Yiddish, as well as with
Hebrew and Yiddish poetry. He initially
published a series of articles on Hassidism in Hayom (Today) and was later a contributor in Hebrew to Hatsfira (The siren) and in Yiddish to Haynt (Today)—in Warsaw (1925); among
other items, he published in the latter a series of articles entitled “Shmuesn
un mesholim fun rov r’ bunem fun pshiskhe” (Chats and fables from Rabbi Bunem
of Przysucha) and in 1934 his first historical novel, Don yosef hanasi (Don Joseph the prince). From 1936 he was an internal contributor to Moment (Moment) and Radyo (Radio) in Warsaw, in which he published his historical
novels: Der troym fun a yidisher medine
(The dream of a Jewish state) (1936) and Yerusholaim
in flamen (Jerusalem ablaze) (1938), among others. He was a cofounder of the Mizrachi weekly
newspaper Di idishe shtime (The
Jewish voice) in Warsaw, which he edited (1932) and in which he published his
historical tale “Bruria” [the wife of R. Meir of the Talmud]. He contributed as well to: Zaglembyer
tsaytung (Zagłębie newspaper) in Będzin (1919-1939), Diglenu
(Our banner) in Warsaw, and Hatsofe
(The spectator) in Jerusalem. He also
edited the following collections: Khanike-bukh
(Hanukkah book) (Warsaw, 1938), 64 pp.; Shvues-bukh
(Shavuot book) (Warsaw, 1938), 50 pp.; Sukes-bukh
(Sukkot book) (Warsaw, 1938), 64 pp.; Peysekh-bukh
(Passover book) (Warsaw, 1939), 63 pp.; Shuhlen in fayer fun doyres, tsu der martirologie fun di yudishe heyligṭimer
(Synagogues ablaze over the generation, toward a martyrology of holy Jewish sites)
(Warsaw, 1939), 64 pp. He was also co-editor
of the Hebrew-language publication Gevilin
(Scrolls) (Warsaw, 1937). He published
under such pen names as: Akhishem, D. Shapir, Yedidye, and Khian. In the Warsaw Ghetto, he ran illegal
educational work for Mizrachi. He founded
a string of secret religious schools and “children’s corners.” He belonged to the initiators of an illegal
Jewish community. On July 19, 1942, he
took part in a meeting of Warsaw leaders concerning the anticipated expulsion
from Warsaw. On August 1, 1942 at the
time of the great Aktion in the Warsaw Ghetto, he was seized at Umschlagplatz (the
collection point in Warsaw for deportation), sent to Treblinka, and murdered
there.
Sources:
Dr. M. Shulvas, Datn un khronik fun der
toyre-veavode-bavegung in poyln (Dates and chronicle of the Tora veavoda
movement in Poland) (Warsaw, 1937); Shulvas, in Yivo-bleter (Vilna) 14.1-2 (1939); Dr. R. Feldshuh, Idishe gezelshaftlikher leksikon (Jewish communal handbook),
vol. 1 (Warsaw, 1939), p. 807; H. Zaydman, in Unzer veg (Paris) (November 13, 1947); Yonas Turkov, Azoy iz es geven (That’s how it was) (Buenos Aires, 1948), p.
246; B. Mark, Umgekumene shrayber
fun di getos un lagern (Murdered writers from the ghettos and camps)
(Warsaw, 1954), p. 59; M. Prager, Antologye fun religyeze lider
un dertseylungen (Anthology of religious poems
and stories) (New York, 1955), pp. 466-76; M. Mozes, in Fun noentn over (New York) 2 (1956), see index; L.
Shpigelman, in Pinkes bendin (Records
of Będzin) (Tel Aviv, 1959), pp. 338-39.
Khayim Leyb Fuks
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