Israel Kaplan

Israel Kaplan, educator, author, and historian, who was active in the American Zone of postwar Germany. 
Israel Kaplan (April 1902 - September 2003) was one of the founders of the systematic collecting of testimonies about the Holocaust and the documentation of the grim folklore of the Jews in ghettos and camps.
As early as August 1941, with the sealing off of the ghetto in Kaunas (Kovno), Kaplan undertook the assignment to surreptitiously record the goings - on in the ghetto.
In February 1942, Kaplan was deported to the Riga ghetto. From there, he succeeded in transmitting to Kovno a detailed report of his circumstances and the fate of his group of 450 fellow deportees.
Throughout his internments in a series of camps in Latvia, Lithuania, Poland, and Germany, and despite the personal dangers involved, Kaplan never ceased his clandestine documentation of the sayings and black humor of the tortured inmates and those going to their deaths.
Directly following the liberation, he began recording the testimonies of survivors and the collecting of documentation of the Holocaust that had just come to an end. Together with M.Y. Feigenbaum, he was among the founders of the "Tsentraler Historisher Komisye" [Yiddish: Central Historical Commission] that operated in conjunction with the "Central Committee of the Liberated Jews in the American Zone" of postwar Germany. Kaplan served as historiographer for the committee. He edited the journal, "Fun Letztn Khurbm" [Yiddish: From the last ruins], that represented the first collecting of Holocaust material from diverse places, that summed these up in an academic manner. (A total of ten collections were published, during the years 1946 - 1948.) Along with this, he brought out a significant collection of Jewish folklore from the camps: "Dos Folksmoyl in Natsi Klem" [The people's language in the Nazi vise], published in Muenchen (Munich) in 1949 and reissued in Israel by the Ghetto Fighters' House, in two editions (Jewish Folk-Expressions under the Nazi Yoke, 1982 and 1987)..
The material collected by a network of local committees in the various DP camps was collected in Muenchen, and upon the establishment of the State of Israel was transferred to Jerusalem. There it formed the basis for Yad Vashem, Israel's Holocaust remembrance authority.
Israel Kaplan immigrated to Israel in early 1949. He participated in editing the "Yahadut Lita" [Hebrew: Lithuanian Jewry] memorial books and pursued his literary activities, primarily in Yiddish. His notable literary achievements included the Itsik Manger Prize. He wrote nine books that were published between the years 1964 - 1999. Shortly after his death in 2003, his article "Fun Folksmoyl un Mayns" [From the people's language and mine] was published. 

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Association of Jews of Vilna and vicinity in Israel
Directions: Beit Vilna, 30 Sderot Yehudit, Tel-Aviv.

Mailing address: P.O.Box 1005, Ramat Hasharon, 4711001. [email protected].
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