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Ruth
Gruber
Passover
is an appropriate holiday to honor Ruth Gruber, a woman
who dedicated her life to rescuing Jews from oppression.

Ruth
was born in 1911 in Brooklyn, NY, one of five children of
Russian Jewish immigrant parents David and Gussie (Rockower)
Gruber. She was a brilliant scholar, entering college at
the age of 15, and becoming the youngest person in the world
to obtain a PhD at age 20.

At the brink of World War II, Ruth Gruber started traveling
alone around the world, a remarkable feat for a 19 year
old single woman in the 1930's. She won a scholarship for
graduate study in Germany, and experienced first hand the
rising anti-Semitism there as Hitler came to power. Returning
home, she began a career as a journalist, writing for the
New York Times and the New York Herald Tribune. In 1935,
she won a Guggenheim Foundation Fellowship to study women
under fascism, communism, and democracy. She became the
first foreign correspondent, male or female, allowed to
fly into Siberia. She interviewed pioneers and prisoners
in Stalin's Soviet Gulag, many of them Jews, and wrote about
her experiences in a book entitled: I Went to the Soviet
Arctic.

In
1941, Secretary of the Interior Harold I. Ickes appointed
Ruth Gruber as his special assistant. Her first assignment
was to make a social and economic study of Alaska to open
it for homesteaders and returning veterans, and she covered
the territory by plane, truck, and dogsled for 18 months.
Next came a secret mission that was her most important life
task. Although the U.S. Congress refused to lift the quota
on Jewish immigration from Eastern Europe, President Roosevelt,
as a symbolic gesture, issued an executive order to permit
1,000 Jewish refugees from Naples, Italy to "visit" America
as "guests" of the President. They were to be lodged at
an army training base near Oswego, New York. Ruth Gruber
secretly met and escorted the refugees on their journey
to the United States. She was given an honorary rank of
"general," because if the Nazis were to capture her as a
civilian, they would kill her as a spy. But as a general,
at least the Nazis would have to feed and shelter her as
a prisoner of war. Throughout the long and treacherous voyage
across the Atlantic, Ruth recorded the refugees survival
stories. Upon arrival in the United States, they were held
for 18 months at the army base, and Gruber fought on their
behalf until they finally were granted U.S. citizenship.
Gruber's book about the experience, Haven, the Unknown
Story of 1,000 World War II Refugees, became a musical
play in 1993 and a CBS television miniseries in 2001.

From
that time on, Ruth Gruber's life was inextricably bound
with the rescue and survival of the Jewish people. After
the war, she worked as a foreign correspondent for the New
York Post. She covered the work of the Anglo-American Committee
of Inquiry on Palestine, touring and reporting on the horrible
conditions of the European Jewish refugees in the displaced
persons camps. Her articles helped develop American support
for the creation of a new Jewish state in Palestine. She
subsequently covered the United Nations Special Committee
on Palestine. While in Palestine, she learned that a ship
named Exodus had been attacked by British destroyers after
attempting to deliver 4,500 refugees. She followed the Jewish
prisoners from Exodus, to the squalid refugee camps in Cyprus,
and by prison ship back to southern France. The refugees
refused to disembark, despite enduring blistering heat aboard
the ship for 18 days. Finally, the British decided to ship
the Jews back to a refugee camp in Hamburg, Germany. The
world press was outraged, and while hundreds of journalists
were reporting the events, only Ruth Gruber was allowed
on the prison ship to accompany the Jewish refugees back
to Germany. Her photographs in Life magazine captured the
agony of the refugees, including a memorable picture of
the refugees raising a British Union Jack flag with a painted
swastika. Ruth's book about the incident, Destination
Palestine: The Story of the Haganah Ship Exodus 1947,
was used as source material for the movie and book Exodus.

In
1951, at the age of 40, Gruber decided to "settle down"
and get married. She was married and widowed twice, to Philip
Michaels and Henry Rosener, both lawyers and social activists.
She has two children and four grandchildren. Her daughter,
Celia, is a videotape editor who covered the war in Lebanon
in the 1980's, and her son, David, was U.S. assistant secretary
of energy in the Clinton administration. She continued working
as a special foreign correspondent for the New York Herald
Tribune, writing about each new wave of immigrants into
Israel, including the Iraqis, Yemenites, Romanians, Russians
and Ethiopians. She also wrote a popular column for Hadassah
Magazine, called "Diary of an American Housewife."

In
1978 she spent a year in Israel writing: Raquela: A Woman
of Israel, a biography about an Israeli nurse, Raquela Prywes,
who worked in a British detention camp and in a hospital
in the desert frontier of Beersheba. This book won the National
Jewish Book Award in 1979 for Best Book on Israel. In 1985,
at the age of 74, Ruth visited isolated Jewish villages
in Ethiopia to aid in rescuing the Ethiopian Jews. She recorded
her experiences in another book: Rescue: The Exodus of
the Ethiopian Jews. Ruth Gruber has received many awards
for her writing and humanitarian acts, including the Na'amat
Golda Meir Human Rights Award and awards from the Simon
Wiesenthal Center's Museum of Tolerance. In 1991, her autobiographic
novel was published: Ahead of my Time: My Early Years
as a Foreign Correspondent.

Ruth
Gruber truly is a twentieth century Moses, using her skills
as a photojournalist to help bring persecuted Jews from
all over the world into Israel. In 2001, she will be 90
years old, and has just finished a 20 city tour to publicize
the reprinting of four of her books. When asked the secret
of her success, Ruth Gruber replies, "Have dreams, have
visions, and let no obstacle stop you."

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