Submitted by: Dan Rich
Rose Zar
July 27, 1922 - Nov. 1, 2001
South Bend Tribune 11/4/2001
Rose Zar, 81, of Whitcomb Avenue,
South Bend, Ind., died Thursday, Nov. 1, in her residence.
She was born on July 27, 1922, in Piotrokow
Tribunalski, Poland, the seat of the Polish Supreme Court. She
was descendant of the Pevel family of Warsaw, Poland, who had
served as the model of prosperous Polish Jews in a number of
stories by Sholom Aleichem. Her ancestors had probably lived in
the Jewish community of Poland since the Renaissance.
As Rose Guterman, she married her
high school sweetheart, Mayer Zar, in Krakow, Poland, on Sept.
17, 1945. Rose and Mayer Zar had been among the only members of
their family to survive the Second World War. Mr. Zar survives.
She is also survived by her children, Regina Gonek of
Rochester, N.Y., Harvey Zar, M.D., of Chapel Hill, N.C., and
Howard Zar of New York, N.Y.; as well as her grandchildren, Sarah
and Michael Gonek. She was preceded in death by her son, Aviram Zarnowiecki.
During the Second World War, Mrs. Zar had
been active in Hashomer Hatzair, a Polish Zionist youth movement
that ultimately became responsible for Jewish armed resistance
against the Nazis in the Warsaw ghetto uprising. Mrs. Zar acted
on numerous occasions as an operative of the resistance movement
and had frequently smuggled its leader, Mordechai Anielewicz,
through Nazi lines. She was also responsible for smuggling
weapons, money and information to Tosia Altman, another leader of
the Warsaw ghetto uprising. During the remaining years of the
war, Mrs. Zar lived undercover as a nanny for one of the senior
SS officers in the German occupation forces in Krakow, Poland.
Her experiences during that time were recounted in her
autobiography, In the Mouth of the Wolf , published by the Jewish
Publication Society of Philadelphia, Pa. It received the A.J.L.
Book Award of the Association of Jewish Libraries in 1983.
Following World War II, Mrs. Zar, in
conjunction with her husband, organized an orphanage for children
who survived the Holocaust. In 1946, following pogroms in Kielce,
Poland, the Zars smuggled more than 150 orphans out of Poland via
Czechoslovakia into southern Germany, where they led an orphanage
under the auspices of International Relief Agencies. Starting in
1947, many of these children were smuggled into Palestine via
illegal immigration boats including the original ship
"Exodus" that served as a model for the Leon Uris novel
of the same name.
Mrs. Zar came to South Bend, Ind., in 1951,
in part because as an orphanage worker she had received a
beautiful dressing gown which came from Milady Shop in South
Bend, which she took as an omen that she should resettle in that
city. For more than 30 years she served as a teacher and
principal of the Sunday School at the Sinai Synagogue and as head
of Jewish Education for the Jewish Federation of South Bend. In
this capacity, she was the first woman in the South Bend
community to prepare Jewish children for their Bar and Bat
Mitzvah.
In lieu of flowers, contributions may be
made in memory of Mrs. Zar to the United States Holocaust
Memorial Museum, 100 Raoul Wollenberg Place, SW, Washington, DC
20024-2126. Funeral services will be held at 4 p.m. today, Nov.
4, in the Sinai Synagogue, 1102 E. LaSalle Ave., South Bend. The
Forest G. Hay Funeral Home is arranging Mrs. Zar's services.