When the XIV Corps was deactivated in 1967, Levine was appointed commanding general of the U.S. Army's 84th Division (Training).
[1] In 1946, Levine, his brothers, and his cousins founded a small plastics company in Duluth that molded advertising and display signs.
[3] After his retirement, Levine served as the construction project manager for many north suburban Jewish organizations.
He supervised the building of the Solomon Schechter Day School in Northbrook as well as two synagogues in Deerfield, Moriah Congregation and B'nai Tikvah.
Levine also supervised the renovation of North Suburban Synagogue Beth El in Highland Park.
[3] The scenes Levine witnessed when he entered Dachau concentration camp on April 29, 1945, were so terrible that he refused to speak about them, even to his family.
[4] Levine attended a 40th anniversary memorial ceremony for the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising at Yad Vashem in Jerusalem.
While at the cemetery, Maurice Pirot, a Belgian Jew, recognized Levine as one of his saviors, the soldier who had rescued him by carrying him in his arms.
The flag circle and garden landscaping were dedicated on June 4, 2006, in the presence of then-US Congressman Mark Kirk and Illinois State Representative Karen May.