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Famous Sons of Rokiskis
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Below are the brief biographies of some of
Rokiskis' finest who achieved fame beyond the shtetl.
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Joseph
Harmatz, son of Abram and Dora Baron Harmatz, born in Rokiskis on
January 23, 1925, was one of the leading activists in the Vilna Ghetto.
He escaped from the ghetto in 1943 as it was being liquidated and became
a partisan. He smuggled weapons for the FPO, the Fareinikte
Partisaner Organizatzie (United Partisan Organization) and was involved
in high level work for FPO. After the war he moved to Israel and eventually became the General Director of World ORT in 1980 (ORT is
the world's largest Jewish education and vocational training
non-governmental organization), till his retirement in 1994. He is
the author of From the Wings, Sussex:
Book Guild, 1998 and Life with ORT, ORT Israel, 2002..
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Rabbi
Shmuel Levitin, distinguished Chassidic scholar, was born in
Rokiskis. In the years right before and during World War I, the 5th
Lubavitcher Rebbe, Sholom Dober Schneersohn, sent Rabbi Levitin to the
Caucasus to set up institutions to bring the Jews of Azerbaijan,
Georgia, and area closer to traditional Judaism. He founded
religious schools and Talmudic seminaries there.
After
serving a prison term in Siberia for his Jewish activities, he came to
the United States in 1938, where he became a teacher in the Chabad
movement. He was the provost of the Central Chabad Lubavitch Yeshiva in
New York from its inception in 1940 until his death at age 91 in 1974
and was a well-know mashpia, or "person of influence"
or spiritual mentor in the Chabad movement.

Rokiskis SIG
member Shirley Saunders writes " ... Shmuel Levitan, known as Shmuel
Rakishker .... Rabbi Itzik Shneerson, Menachem Mendel Shneerson's
father-in-law, met Shmuel Levitan in Rokishok when he stayed on
the third floor of Pesach Ruch's house during his visit to
Rokishok in the 1930s. Shneerson brought Levitan to the United
States as his personal secretary when he was able to leave Europe during World
War II. Levitan's name is recorded on my aunt's Birth
Record from 1898."
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Rabbi
Zelig Ruch, known as Zelig Rakishker, born in Rokiskis in
1879 to Michel and Pere Ruch, became the head or
Rosh Yeshiva of the famous Lomza Yeshiva in Poland. Although of a
Lubavitch Chassidic family, he chose to study at the Slabodka Yeshiva,
near Kovno, Lithuania, showing his intellectual independence.
During World War I he evacuated, with many students, from Lomza to
Prilucki in Ukraine. He returned to Lomza, where he taught for
many years. He helped to found a branch of the Lomza Yeshiva in
Israel, where he served as Rosh Yeshiva, but returned to Poland.
Although he managed to escape from Poland to Lithuania when World War II
broke out, he met his death in the Vilna ghetto.
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Yakov Shmushkevich,
born in Rokiskis on April 14, 1902, joined the Communist Party in 1918.
He served in the Russian Civil War from 1918 to 1920, graduated from the
Kachinsk Military Aviation School in 1931, and in 1936 took part in the
Spanish Civil War under the name of General Douglas. He returned
to Russia in 1937 and was awarded the title "Hero of the Soviet
Union" for his service in Spain. He became chief of the
Russian Air Force in 1939 and distinguished himself in battle against
the Japanese. For these services he received his second "Hero
of the Soviet Union" award. Nevertheless, in 1941 he
was arrested during a purge of air force senior commanders and in
October of 1941 was executed. After Stalin's death in 1953, Shmushkevich
was 'rehabilitated' in the Soviet Union.
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Solly Cope in front of the statue honoring Yakov
Shmushkevich in Rokiskis
(On the weekend of May 24-25, 2008, this
statue was vandalized with paint.)
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Shmuel Aba Snieg,
born in Rokiskis, studied in the Slabodka Yeshiva. As a rabbi, he
devoted himself to communal work and was chairman of the Vaad Kehile (Communal
Council) and of the People's Bank. During independent Lithuania,
Reb Shmuel Aba was the chief rabbi of the Lithuanian army and was
awarded the rank of colonel. He often wrote for the Lithuanian press and
the Lithuanian army newspaper. During World War II he served on
the Kovno Ghetto Judenrat. He survived the war and was a rabbi in
Germany after the war. |
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