Gédéon Geismar

Gédéon Geismar (10 January 1863 – 28 June 1931) was a French-Jewish brigadier general and Zionist. He was the first president of the Jewish National Fund and a president of the Eclaireurs Israélites de France. He was the uncle of French politicians Léon Geismar and Max Hymans.

Gédéon Geismar
Born10 January 1863
Died28 June 1931(1931-06-28) (aged 68)
EducationÉcole Polytechnique
Military career
AllegianceFrance
Battles/warsWorld War One
AwardsLegion of Honour
Croix de guerre 1914-1918

Life

Early life

Gédéon Geismar was born in Dambach-la-Ville on 10 January 1864 in the German Empire to Marx Geismar and Jeanne Léopold. He studied in Dambach-la-Ville's small Jewish school, where he learned German and Hebrew.[lower-alpha 1][1]

In 1874, his father sent him to a boarding school in Belfort in order "to be French". He studied there until 1882.[1]

Geismar graduated from Paris' École Polytechnique on 1 November 1883. Upon his graduation, he decided to pursue a military career, deciding to work with artillery.[1]

Military career

On 1 October 1885 he entered as a second-lieutenant at the School of Artillery and Engineering Application (French: École d'application de l'artillerie et du génie) in Versailles. On 1 October 1887 he was promoted to lieutenant in the 5th Artillery Regiment.[1]

In 1894, Geismar became captain in the Second Foot Artillery Battalion.[1] He was made a squadron leader in 1905 for the 40th artillery regiment.[2]

Assigned to the staff of the Third Artillery Corps in Rouen on 1907, he progressed upwards to the position of lieutenant-colonel, becoming the leader of the corps.[2]

World War One

Geismar served for the French Army during the First World War, and in 1915, led the 44th Artillery Regiment against the Germans.[2] In May of that year he was appointed colonel. He is said to have participated in the Battle of Charleroi.[3]

In 1918,he led the 21st Army Corps' artillery regiment in Strasbourg. On February 7 of that year, he received the rank of brigadier general, the highest he would ever achieve in the army.[2]

Zionist activism

When Geismar finally retired in January 1923, he became increasingly active in the Zionist movement, assisting the development of Keren Hayesod (Reconstruction Fund), with André Spire. He then became honorary president of the K.K.l (Keren Kayemeth Leisrael or Jewish National Fund)'s Central Commission. His knowledge of Hebrew made him able to read Mandatory Palestine's press. He participated and was a member of the steering committee for France-Palestine, a Zionist advocacy group founded in 1926 by Joseph Paul-Boncour et Justin Godart.[2] His fellow members included Édouard Herriot, Paul Painlevé, Jules Cambon, Aristide Briand, Raymond Poincaré, Alexandre Barthou, and Gaston Doumergue. The society's Secretary-General was Henri Hertz.[4] In 1927, he was elected to the executive committee of the de la Zionist Federation of France.[5] He helped found the Franco-Palestinian Centre of Commerce. In 1928, he accepted the presidency of the Éclaireuses et éclaireurs israélites de France (EEIF), saying he was "training the young recruits of the Jewish people."[6]

Death

Gédéon Geismar died on 28 June 1931 in the 14th arrondissement of Paris.[1] He is buried in Montmartre Cemetery.

Personal life

Geismar, who was raised in a devout family, was deeply religious, and refused to garrison in cities without synagogues.[6]

Family and ancestry

Geismar's father, Marx (c.1817-1898) was born in Grussenheim, Haut-Rhin. His mother Jeanne Léopold was from Pfaffenhoffen, and died in Paris.[1][6]

He married Parisian-born Marthe Léa Lévy on October 16, 1903. They had two children : Yvonne Geismar, a lawyer and the 15th deputy mayor of Paris, and Jean Gabriel, a business magnate.

He had two notable nephews : Léon Geismar, governor of French West Africa, and Max Hymans, CEO of Air France.[6]

Works

  • Instruction for the observation service in the German foot artillery. translated by G. Geismar, published in 1891.
  • Instructions for the direction of fire in the German foot artillery published 1892.
  • Organization of Objectives for German Artillery Fire Schools published in 1895.

Decorations

Legacy

A road in his hometown, Dambach-la-Ville, is named after him.[1][6]

Citations

Notes

  1. He was familiar with the Alsatian dialect of German.

References

  1. Job 2006, p. 137.
  2. Job 2006, p. 138.
  3. "La Famille GEISMAR - 3". judaisme.sdv.fr. Retrieved 2022-01-13.
  4. Catherine Nicault (2006). "L'acculturation des israélites français au sionisme après la Grande Guerre". Archives Juives. 39 (1): 26.
  5. Job 2006, p. 139.
  6. "Gideon Geismar, Brigadier General". cairn.info. Retrieved January 12, 2022.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)

Bibliography

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