Early life Gluck was born on 4 March 1916 in
Zürich,
Switzerland, the daughter of Pinhas Gluck-Friedman (1886–1964) and Henia Shipper (1887–1968). Her father was a direct descendant of
Hasidic Masters, going back to the
Magid Dov Ber of Mezeritch (1704–1772), the disciple and successor of the
Baal Shem Tov (1698–1760). She had two sisters,
Antoinette Feuerwerker (1912-2003) and Hendel (Hedwig) Naftalis (1913-?), and a brother
Salomon Gluck (born 1914-died during WWII).
Strasbourg and Paris Her parents had moved from
Tarnów in
Galicia,
Poland, to Belgium, then to Switzerland, during World War I. The family moved further to Germany, and finally to France in 1921, settling in
Strasbourg. There she went to the famous Lycée des Pontonniers, now called Lycée International des Pontonniers. After moving to Paris, with her family, she studied in 1941 and 1942 to become a nurse, in the modern Ecole de puériculture, 26, boulevard Brune, in Paris 14. She worked before World War II at the COJASOR, a Jewish social service organization, together with Lucie Dreyfus (née Hadamard; 1869–1945), the widow of
Alfred Dreyfus.
French Resistance During World War II, she joined her sister, Antoinette Feuerwerker, and her husband, Rabbi
David Feuerwerker, in
Brive-la-Gaillarde. They worked together with
Edmond Michelet, the future Senior Minister of
Charles de Gaulle, in the major Movement of the French Resistance,
Combat. In Michelet's Memoirs, she is mentioned as one of the active agents for Combat. Her name in the Résistance was Marie Rose Girardin. She was arrested in the
Synagogue of Brive in March 1944, taken to
Drancy internment camp, and from there, on convoy 72, on 29 April 1944, to Auschwitz concentration camp. Her sister Antoinette Feuerwerker succeeded in getting her a nurse's uniform when she was at Drancy internment camp. She wore that uniform on her arrival in Auschwitz. Dr
Josef Mengele, the infamous Nazi doctor, singled her out for survival. Later, he operated on her, without anesthesia. She survived three selections in Auschwitz concentration camp (Auschwitz-Birkenau), and later was transferred to the
Gross-Rosen concentration camp, before being liberated by the
Russian Army in February 1945. The number tattooed on her arm at Auschwitz was 80598. Underneath there is a triangle, meaning she is a Jew.
Auschwitz Convoy 72 took her to Auschwitz on 29 April 1944.
Serge Klarsfeld described the convoy:
This convoy takes 1004 Jews, and includes 398 men and 606 women. Among them were 174 children below 18. The poet Itzak Katznelson (Itzhak Katzenelson) is among the deportees of this convoy, as well as many Poles, arrested as he was in Vittel, after having been transferred from Poland. There are families: the children Dodelzak, Ita 12, Georges 3 and Arkadius 3 months; the Rottenberg, Naphtalie 7, Nathan 5, Esther 4, Frantz 2,... On arrival at Auschwitz, 48 men were selectioned with the numbers 186596 to 186643 and 52 women, whose numbers are around 80600. In 1945, there were 37 survivors, including 25 women. Her brother, Dr.
Salomon Gluck was deported on the next convoy, convoy 73, leaving Drancy internment camp on 15 May 1944. At
Birkenau, she was assigned to a group of 50 women who were forced by a
kapo to knit undershirts for German newborns. She worked hard, and was well thought-of, but when they were asked to knit socks for men, she resisted by making big knots inside the garments so as to render them unusable. In her block in Auschwitz was another detainee that she saw daily, the future politician
Simone Veil.
Gross-Rosen The Gross-Rosen concentration camp was situated near
Breslau (called today
Wrocław in Poland) railway station. There Warfman was made to work in a munitions factory from six in the evening to six in the morning, with one half-hour break, and regular beatings.
Later life After the war, she returned to Paris. She became the first employee of the new Israeli Airlines,
El Al, when it opened in Paris, with a director, Mr. Massis. She welcomed and guided many Israeli leaders during their stays in Paris, including
Golda Meir, and
David Ben-Gurion. In 1947 she forged identity cards for
Mossad LeAliyah Bet to issue to Jewish refugees to embark aboard
1947. Together with Abbé Alexandre Glasberg, recognized posthumously as a
Righteous Among the Nations by the
Yad Vashem,
Jerusalem,
Israel, for saving Jews during the war. ==Honors==