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Women played an unusually prominent role in the Jewish underground in German-occupied Eastern Europe. These women emerged from socialist egalitarian Jewish youth movements which continued their activities during the war. Between and , women occupied central leadership positions in these youth movements inside the ghettos. The establishment of ghettos also necessitated the creation of a new functionary — a delegate to central leadership who could move between ghettos.
These delegates were most often women, and they functioned like high-ranking staff officers in a military organization. Jewish fighting organizations relied on these delegates to deliver arms and military instructions between ghettos. Although men filled most of the fighting roles themselves, some women did serve as commanders. A dual leadership structure, composed of one man and one woman, was common within the Jewish underground.
The presence of so many young women in the Jewish Underground leadership and their unique role within this leadership are unusual phenomena, not only against the background of a pre-feminist era, but even in comparison with social and political organizations today. All of these women were active members of the leadership, had a significant influence on the decision-making processes and were at times leading figures in resistance operations.
In short, they were leaders. The first of Ha-Shomer ha-Zai'r's leadership to answer the call was the last to fall: Tosia Taube Altmann , a leader of the Jewish underground and organizer of the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising, died in the hands of the Gestapo on May 26, The roots of this unique phenomenon can be found in two overlapping traditions—respectively that of revolutionary Europe and that of the Jewish youth movements.