. . . . "4317"^^ . . . . . . . . . . "Yvonne Jospa (n\u00E9e Have Groisman, February 3, 1910 in Poputi, Bessarabia \u2013 January 20, 2000 in Brussels) was a cofounder and leading organizer of the Comit\u00E9 de D\u00E9fense des Juifs in September 1942 with her husband Hertz Jospa, which saved over 3,000 Jewish children from deportation and death. Yvonne Jaspar was her pseudonym in the Belgian Resistance. In January 2003 Jospa's name was given to a road in Brussels, rue Yvonne Jospa."@en . . . . . "24866576"^^ . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . "1014034931"^^ . . . "Yvonne Jospa, n\u00E9e Hava Groisman, est n\u00E9e \u00E0 Popouti (P\u0103p\u0103u\u0163i, pr\u00E8s de Rezina), en Bessarabie, le 3 f\u00E9vrier 1910 et est d\u00E9c\u00E9d\u00E9e \u00E0 Bruxelles, le 20 janvier 2000. En septembre 1942, elle fondera, avec son mari, Hertz Jospa, le Comit\u00E9 de D\u00E9fense des Juifs, qui sauvera plus de 3000 enfants juifs de la d\u00E9portation et de la mort. Yvonne Jaspar \u00E9tait son pseudonyme pour la r\u00E9sistance belge."@fr . . . . . "Yvonne Jospa, n\u00E9e Hava Groisman, est n\u00E9e \u00E0 Popouti (P\u0103p\u0103u\u0163i, pr\u00E8s de Rezina), en Bessarabie, le 3 f\u00E9vrier 1910 et est d\u00E9c\u00E9d\u00E9e \u00E0 Bruxelles, le 20 janvier 2000. En septembre 1942, elle fondera, avec son mari, Hertz Jospa, le Comit\u00E9 de D\u00E9fense des Juifs, qui sauvera plus de 3000 enfants juifs de la d\u00E9portation et de la mort. Yvonne Jaspar \u00E9tait son pseudonyme pour la r\u00E9sistance belge."@fr . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . "Yvonne Jospa"@en . . . . . . . . . . . "Yvonne Jospa (n\u00E9e Have Groisman, February 3, 1910 in Poputi, Bessarabia \u2013 January 20, 2000 in Brussels) was a cofounder and leading organizer of the Comit\u00E9 de D\u00E9fense des Juifs in September 1942 with her husband Hertz Jospa, which saved over 3,000 Jewish children from deportation and death. Yvonne Jaspar was her pseudonym in the Belgian Resistance. Born in a well-to-do Bessarabian Jewish family, Groisman attended the Jewish gymnasium in Chi\u015Fin\u0103u (present-day Moldova), coming to Belgium with the intention to study at the University of Li\u00E8ge, in the Philosophy and Letters section. However, she changed direction, studying to become a social worker. In 1933 she married Hertz Jospa, and they both became activists, first in the Belgian Communist Party, then in 1936 in the anti-racism organisation Ligue contre le racisme et l'antis\u00E9mitisme, the Belgian section of the Ligue internationale contre l'antis\u00E9mitime. She took part in hosting child refugees from the Spanish Civil War and in arranging secret passage through Belgium of volunteers for the International Brigades. Jospa's husband Herz Jospa was arrested in June 1943, detained in Fort Breendonk, then deported to Buchenwald concentration camp in May 1944. She thought he had died there, but he came back on May 8, 1945, after the camp was liberated by American troops. In 1964 Jospa co-founded the Union des Anciens R\u00E9sistants Juifs de Belgique (Union of former Jewish resistance members of Belgium), of which she remained honorary chairperson until her death in 2000. She was also a cofounder, with her husband and others, of the Belgian chapter of the communist-led Mouvement contre le racisme, l'antis\u00E9mitisme et pour la paix (M.R.A.P., \"Movement against racism and antisemitism, and for peace\") founded in Paris in 1949. The Belgian branch was renamed in 1966 to (M.R.A.X., \"Movement against racism, antisemitism and xenophobia\"). She was a staunch communist but at the same time refused to endorse anti-zionist stances after 1947. She was made an honorary member of the L'Enfant Cach\u00E9 association (\"The hidden child\"). In January 2003 Jospa's name was given to a road in Brussels, rue Yvonne Jospa."@en . . "Yvonne Jospa"@fr . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .