Draft:David Biderman
Zionist activist and jewish underground fighter
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
David Biderman (דוד בידרמן, sometimes transcribed Bidermanas; 1915 – July 1944) was a Lithuanian Revisionist Zionist activist and member of Betar. Identified before the war in Betar photographs in Kaunas (Kovno), he is cited in archival documents as one of the organisers of the armed underground in the Kovno Ghetto, where he was killed during its liquidation in July 1944.[1][2]
Review waiting, please be patient.
This may take 2 months or more, since drafts are reviewed in no specific order. There are 4,287 pending submissions waiting for review.
Where to get help
How to improve a draft
You can also browse Wikipedia:Featured articles and Wikipedia:Good articles to find examples of Wikipedia's best writing on topics similar to your proposed article. Improving your odds of a speedy review To improve your odds of a faster review, tag your draft with relevant WikiProject tags using the button below. This will let reviewers know a new draft has been submitted in their area of interest. For instance, if you wrote about a female astronomer, you would want to add the Biography, Astronomy, and Women scientists tags. Editor resources
Reviewer tools
|
Biography
Early life
David Biderman was born in 1915 in Marijampolė, into a Jewish family from Lithuania.[3]
He joined Betar, the youth movement of Revisionist Zionism, at a young age.
Betar involvement (Kaunas)
Archival photographs from the Jabotinsky Institute show him in 1936 among the “Betar Kovno members near Netzivut Betar Lithuania office”, the caption identifying D. Biderman alongside E. Rick, S. Rudnick, Dina Dilion, Z. Kleinman, and Y. Dilion.[4]
Another entry from the same archives lists him among the “Members of Yordenia Corporation in Kovno” (a Revisionist Zionist student corporation active in Kaunas), where he is named explicitly.[5]
Internal Betar lists from Lithuania in the 1930s also cite his name in Kaunas.[6]
Biderman also contributed as an editor to the Revisionist daily Our Moment, published in Kaunas in the 1930s.[7]
Kovno Ghetto and resistance
After the German invasion in 1941, the Jews of Kaunas were confined to the Kovno Ghetto. Hebrew archival documents attribute to David Biderman a role as an initiator:
- “his energetic call to organise an armed underground in the Kovno Ghetto”;[1]
- the same source describes the arrival of an emissary who left the next day “for security reasons”, her report being passed on to members of the underground.[1]
In another testimony, the resister Mordechai Kranovsky notes explicitly: “at Biderman’s place, I saw weapons” (Hebrew: אצל בידרמן ראיתי נשק).[2]
These elements place Biderman at the heart of the underground’s preparation, liaison, and arming network in the ghetto, alongside other groups (Zionists of various tendencies and communists) that formed a unified fighting organisation in 1943.
Death
The ghetto was liquidated by the Nazis in July 1944. Several thousand people were deported or perished in the burning and systematic destruction of clandestine shelters. Biderman is believed to have died during these events.[3] The available archival sources do not provide the exact day.
Legacy and sources
- Pre-war (1936) Betar photographs in Kaunas where he is identified as D. Biderman.[4]
- Yordenia (Kaunas) notice mentioning David Biderman.[5]
- Hebrew dossier at the Jabotinsky Institute with a nominal entry (title: David Biderman) recounting his initiating role in the armed underground.[1]
- Hebrew testimony by M. Kranovsky linking Biderman to weapons storage.[2]
- Entry in Yad Vashem’s database of Shoah victims (civil data and locations: Marijampolė, Kaunas/ghetto).[3]
