Site hosted by Angelfire.com: Build your free website today!

Prominent Poles

Berek Joselewicz (Dow Baer Joselewicz) was a Jewish-Polish merchant and a colonel of the Polish Army during the Kościuszko Uprising. A wars' of Poland's independence hero. Joselewicz commanded the first Jewish military formation in modern history.,

Photo of portrait of Berek Joselewicz, Napoleonic wars hero

Born:   September 17, 1764, Kretinga, Samogitia,Troli Voivodeship, Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth

Died:  : May 5, 1809, Battle of Kock, Kock, Poland

Career. He worked as a financial agent for a local Polish magnate,Prince Massalski, the lord of Kretinga, and bishop of Wilno. With the fortune he amassed through entrepreneurial activities, Joselewicz settled in the Warsaw suburb of Praga, where he married his wife Rokhl around 1788 and became a supplier to the army.Joselewicz often traveled abroad in pursuit of various tasks, during which he learned to speak French. He spent some time in Paris during the beginning of the French Revolution, and it is thought that this may have later inspired him to join Tadeusz Kościuszko, who advocated similar causes of brotherhood and equality. Joselewicz initially served in the Polish militia before petitioning Kościuszko for permission to form an all-Jewish unit. On September 17, 1794, Kościuszko officially announced the creation of the unit. Joselewicz, along with another Jew named Joseph Aronowicz, issued a patriotic call-to-arms in Yiddish denouncing Russia and Prussia, eliciting hundreds of volunteers, mostly poor tradeworkers and artisans. Five hundred men were eventually accepted and formed into a cavalry regiment. At Joselewicz's request, they were allowed to keep their religious customs, including access to kosher food, abstaining from combat on the Sabbath when possible, and growing their beards. Joselewicz's unit was popularly known as "the Beardlings". They took part in the 1794 defence of Praga, in which the unit was wiped out, with only few men (including Joselewicz) surviving the battle. Joselewicz himself was taken prisoner by the Russians. After the defeat of the Kościuszko Uprising, Joselewicz left for Galicia and then for Italy. There he joined the Polish Legions under Henryk Dąbrowski. In 1803, Joselewicz was inducted as an officer into the Hanoverian Dragoons, under French command, with whom he participated in campaigns in France, Austria, and Italy.As a commander of a sabre company in Polish cavalry units, he fought in various battles of the Napoleonic period. Among them were the battles of Trevia, Novi, Hohenlinden, Austerlitz and Friedland. With the founding of the Duchy of Warsaw, he hurried back to Poland, where, initially as an officer and later as commander of a cavalry squadron, he took part in many battles. A mark of the respect in which Joselewicz was held during his lifetime was evident in his admission to the Masonic lodge of the United Polish Brothers. He remained in the army as squadron leader in the 5th Mounted Riflemen Regiment following the constitution of the Duchy of Warsaw (Księstwo Warszawskie) in 1807. From 1807 he fought in various battles in Poland. On 5 May 1809, he fell in clashes with the Hungarian Hussars in the vicinity of Kock, where a monument was erected in his honor. Today his grave has become a popular tourist attraction. Berek's son, Josef Berkowicz (1789–1846), also fought in the Battle of Kock, and later served as a squadron chief during the November Uprising of 1830, during which he also attempted to convince Jewish soldiers to desert the Russian army and join the Poles. Berkowicz later moved to England and wrote a novel. Berek's widow and son had received a pension until 1831. The common Polish expression "like Berek at Kock" ("Jak Berek pod Kockiem.") commonly describes a hopeless situation to this day.

Awards, honors. He was awarded the Knight's Cross of the Virtuti Militari medal and the Legion d’Honneur avec le Croix d’Or (France) for his merits. He was honored in 2009 by a postage stamp as a "A Jewish Fighter for Polish Freedom", issued jointly by Polish and Israeli postal services.

Based on an article that appears in Wikipedia
Wikipedia
Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License; additional terms may apply.

Other sources:
YIVO Encyclopedia

Publlshed on 8/9/15

Return to home page:
Prominent Poles