The following are excerpts from the NY Times: When Yitta Schwartz died last month at 93, she left behind 15 children, more than 200 grandchildren and so many great- and great-great-grandchildren that, by her family’s count, she could claim perhaps 2,000 living descendants.
Mrs. Schwartz was a member of the Satmar Hasidic sect, whose couples have nine children on average and whose ranks of descendants can multiply exponentially. But even among Satmars, the size of Mrs. Schwartz’s family is astonishing. A round-faced woman with a high-voltage smile, she may have generated one of the largest clans of any survivor of the Holocaust — a thumb in the eye of the Nazis.
Her descendants range in age from a 75-year-old daughter named Shaindel to a great-great-granddaughter born Feb. 10 named Yitta in honor of Mrs. Schwartz and a great-great-grandson born Feb. 15 who will be named at a bris on Monday. Their numbers include rabbis, teachers, merchants, plumbers and truck drivers. But these many apples have not fallen far from the tree: With a few exceptions, like one grandson who lives in England, they mostly live in local Satmar communities, like Williamsburg in Brooklyn and Kiryas Joel, near Monroe, N.Y., where Mrs. Schwartz lived for the last 30 years of her life.
Mrs. Schwartz had a zest for life and a devotion to Hasidic rituals, faithfully attending the circumcisions, first haircuts, bar mitzvahs, engagements and weddings of her descendants. With 2,000 people in the family, such events occupied much of the year.
Whatever the occasion, she would pack a small suitcase and thumb a ride from her apartment in Kiryas Joel to Williamsburg or elsewhere.
There were so many occasions that, to avoid scheduling conflicts, one of her sons was assigned to keep a family calendar. But her family insists that Mrs. Schwartz had no trouble remembering everyone’s name and face.
Like many Hasidim, Mrs. Schwartz considered bearing children as her tribute to God. A son-in-law, Rabbi Menashe Mayer, a lushly bearded scholar, said she took literally the scriptural command that “You should not forget what you saw and heard at Mount Sinai and tell it to your grandchildren.”
“And she wanted to do that,” he said, without needing to add her belief that the more grandchildren, the more the commandment is fulfilled. Mrs. Schwartz gave birth 18 times, but lost two children in the Holocaust and one in a summer camp accident here.
She was born in 1916 into a family of seven children in the Hungarian village of Kalev, revered as the hometown of a founder of Hungarian Hasidism. During World War II, the Nazis sent Mrs. Schwartz, her husband, Joseph, and the six children they had at the time to the Bergen-Belsen concentration camp.
When the war ended, the family made its way to Antwerp, Belgium. There, Mrs. Schwartz put up refugees in makeshift beds in her own bombed-out apartment.
In 1953, the Schwartzes migrated to the United States, settling into the Satmar community in Williamsburg. She arrived with 11 children — Shaindel, Chana, Dinah, Yitschok, Shamshon, Nechuma, Nachum, Nechemia, Hadassah, Mindel and Bella — and proceeded to have five more: Israel, Joel, Aron, Sarah and Chaim Shloime, who died in summer camp at age 8. Sarah came along after Mrs. Schwartz had already married off two other daughters.
Mrs. Schwartz did not want her children to collect photographs of her and, given that modesty, her family was reluctant to provide more than one to accompany this article. “Just keep me in your heart,” she used to say. “If you leave a child or grandchild, you live forever.”
(READ MORE: http://www.nytimes.com/)
6 Responses
A true Tzadekis we can all be nispoel from and seek to emulate.
I saw the article in the NY Times this morning and I had to laugh.
The article is a long one – the only one on the page – and the picture of the nifteres is not of Mrs. Schwartz z”l, but of the Satmar Rebetzin a”h.
If this is typical of the accuracy of the Times, it is no wonder they are losing readership so rapidly.
That being said, Mrs. Schwartz was a sharp, witty, loving woman who will be missed not only by her family, but by everyone who knew her!
People like Mrs. Schwartz are the reason that the hareidi community will ultimately be the majority of what remains of Klal Yisroel.
The others are engaged in various p[olitically-correct shenanigans, which keeps their birthrate below the “replacement level.”
What a wonderful legacy. We see how just one Jew can make a big difference. Let’s all contribute to our Jewish growth, as Mrs Shhwartz A” H did.
Ezra Hanon
What does a woman have to do or achieve to rate her picture on your site? If Sarah Imeinu came back to us, you probably wouldn’t show her picture. C’mon show our young daughters a picture of a role model of a yiddishe woman they can emulate.
#2-that actually is a picture of Yitta Schwartz. She looked like that 20 years ago, 10 years ago, 5 years ago. A timeless look.
#5-I can’t imagine that you would raise your duaghters to wear a head covering like she wore (in addition to shaving!).
I don’t know if anyone noticed her children’s names in the NYT article. The first 3 children born after the War were named Nechama, Nechemia and Nachum She understood that the only Nechama (comforting) that we can get after such an unprecedented destruction of Klal Yisroel is to rebuild and repopulate, which she did with great pride. TNZB”H.