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Lucien Lublin

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Lucien Lublin (1909, Brest-Litovsk – 1995) was a French electrical engineer.[1] A socialist Zionist who became a leader of the French Jewish Resistance during World War II with Abraham Polonski and David Knout.[2] Lublin had been a member of the Zionist Labor Movement before the war.[3]

After the World War II, Lublin created the Society for Protecting Jewish Children, a charity which helped Jewish children who had survived the Holocaust and took them to the State of Israel.

References

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  • Abraham Polonski and the Jewish resistance in France during the Second World War by Yehuda Ben-David, Yaʻel Zaidman, Miśrad ha-bitaḥon, 2002
  • L'armée juive clandestine en France: 1940-1945 by Raphaël Delpard, Page après page, 2002.
  • Les Juifs dans la résistance et la libération: histoire, témoignages, débats by Yves-Claude Aouate, Anne Grynberg, 1985.
  • Contribution à l'histoire de la résistance juive en France, 1940-1944 by David Knout. Editions du Centre, 1947.
  1. ^ Les juifs à Toulouse entre 1945 et 1970: une communauté toujours recommencée By Colette Zytnicki, 1998.
  2. ^ Rescue and Resistance: Portraits of the Holocaust. MacMillan Reference Books 1999
  3. ^ Jews in France during World War II By Renée Poznanski, Nathan Bracher, 2001.