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Łódź Ghetto

The Łódź Ghetto or Litzmannstadt Ghetto (after the Nazi German name for Łódź) was a Nazi ghetto established by the German authorities for Polish Jews and Roma following the Invasion of Poland. It was the second-largest ghetto in all of German-occupied Europe after the Warsaw Ghetto. Situated in the city of Łódź, and originally intended as a preliminary step upon a more extensive plan of creating the Judenfrei province of Warthegau,[1] the ghetto was transformed into a major industrial centre, manufacturing war supplies for Nazi Germany and especially for the Wehrmacht.[2] The number of people incarcerated in it was increased further by the Jews deported from Nazi-controlled territories.

Łódź Ghetto
Ghetto Litzmannstadt
Jewish children inside the Łódź Ghetto, 1940
Map of the Łódź Ghetto within the city. The walled-off area is shown in blue in the inset. The Jewish cemetery is at 16; Radegast train station at the top right at 17; Kinder KZ for Polish children is at 15.
LocationŁódź, German-occupied Poland
PersecutionImprisonment, forced labor, starvation
OrganizationsSchutzstaffel (SS)
Ordnungspolizei
Death campChełmno extermination camp
Auschwitz-Birkenau
Victims210,000 Polish Jews

On 30 April 1940, when the gates closed on the ghetto, it housed 163,777 residents.[3] Because of its remarkable productivity, the ghetto managed to survive until August 1944. In the first two years, it absorbed almost 20,000 Jews from liquidated ghettos in nearby Polish towns and villages,[4] as well as 20,000 more from the rest of German-occupied Europe.[5] After the wave of deportations to Chełmno extermination camp beginning in early 1942,[5] and in spite of a stark reversal of fortune, the Germans persisted in eradicating the ghetto: they transported the remaining population to Auschwitz and Chełmno extermination camps, where most were murdered upon arrival. It was the last ghetto in occupied Poland to be liquidated.[6] A total of 210,000 Jews passed through it;[3] but only 877 remained hidden when the Soviets arrived. About 10,000 Jewish residents of Łódź, who used to live there before the invasion of Poland, survived the Holocaust elsewhere.[7]

Establishment

When German forces occupied Łódź on 8 September 1939, the city had a population of 672,000 people. Over 230,000 of them were Jewish,[8] or 31.1% according to statistics.[9] Nazi Germany annexed Łódź directly to the new Warthegau region and renamed the city Litzmannstadt in honour of a German general, Karl Litzmann, who had led German forces in the area in 1914. The Nazi German authorities intended to "purify" the city. All Polish Jews were to be expelled to the Generalgouvernement eventually, while the non-Jewish population of Polish people reduced significantly, and transformed into a slave labour force for Germany.[8]

 
Resettlement of Jews to the ghetto area c. March 1940. Old Synagogue in the far background (no longer existing).

The first known record of an order for the establishment of the ghetto, dated 10 December 1939,[10] came from the new Nazi governor Friedrich Übelhör, who called for the cooperation of major policing bodies in the confinement and mass transfer of the local Jews.[8] By 1 October 1940, the relocation of the ghetto inmates was to have been completed, and the city's downtown core declared Judenrein (cleansed of its Jewish presence). The German occupiers pressed for the ghetto size to be shrunk beyond all sense in order to have their factories registered outside of it.[2] Łódź was a multicultural mosaic before the war began, with about 8.8% ethnic German residents on top of Austrian, Czech, French, Russian and Swiss business families adding to its vibrant economy.[9]

The securing of the ghetto system was preceded by a series of anti-Jewish measures as well as anti-Polish measures meant to inflict terror. The Jews were forced to wear the yellow badge. Their businesses were expropriated by the Gestapo.[2] After the invasion of Poland, many Jews, particularly the intellectual and political elite, had fled the advancing German army into the Soviet-occupied eastern Poland and to the area of future General Government in the hope of the Polish counter-attack which never came.[11] On 8 February 1940, the Germans ordered the Jewish residence to be limited to specific streets in the Old City and the adjacent Bałuty quarter, the areas that would become the ghetto. To expedite the relocation, the Orpo Police launched an assault on 5–7 March 1940, [12] known as "Bloody Thursday", in which 350 Jews were fatally shot in their homes, and outside. Over the next two months, wooden and wire fences were erected around the area to cut it off from the rest of the city. Jews were formally sealed within the ghetto walls on 1 May 1940.[2]

As nearly 25 percent of the Jews had fled the city by the time the ghetto was set up, its prisoner population as of 1 May 1940 was 164,000.[13] Over the coming year, Jews from German-occupied Europe as far away as Luxembourg were deported to the ghetto on their way to the extermination camps.[5] A small Romany population was also resettled there.[2] By 1 May 1941, the population of the ghetto was 148,547.[14]

Ghetto policing

 
German and Jewish police guard at the entrance to the ghetto

To ensure no contact between the Jewish and non-Jewish populations of the city, two German Order Police battalions were assigned to patrol the perimeter of the ghetto, including the Reserve Police Battalion 101 from Hamburg.[15] Within the ghetto, a Jewish Police force was created to ensure that no prisoners tried to escape. On 10 May 1940 orders went into effect prohibiting any commercial exchange between Jews and non-Jews in Łódź. By the new German decree, those caught outside the ghetto could be shot on sight. The contact with people who lived on the "Aryan" side was also impaired by the fact that Łódż had a 70,000-strong ethnic German minority loyal to the Nazis (the Volksdeutsche),[4] making it impossible to bring food illegally. To keep outsiders out, rumours were also spread by Hitler's propaganda saying that the Jews were the carriers of infectious diseases.[4] For the week of 16–22 June 1941 (the week Nazi Germany launched Operation Barbarossa), the Jews reported 206 deaths and two shootings of women near the barbed wire.[16]

In other ghettos throughout Poland, thriving underground economies based on smuggling of food and manufactured goods developed between the ghettos and the outside world.[17] In Łódź, however, this was practically impossible due to heavy security. The Jews were entirely dependent on the German authorities for food, medicine and other vital supplies. To exacerbate the situation, the only legal currency in the ghetto was a specially created ghetto currency. Faced with starvation, Jews traded their remaining possessions and savings for this scrip, thereby abetting the process by which they were dispossessed of their remaining belongings.[17]

Food consumption and malnutrition

Jews within the Łódź Ghetto had an average daily intake of 1,000 to 1,200 calories which led directly to starvation and even to death. The process of purchasing food relied heavily on the quantity and quality of the goods that the ghetto citizens brought from their houses into the ghetto. Previous social class and wealth of ghetto inhabitants often determined the fate of food accessibility. While the wealthy could purchase additional food, many of the lower class Jewish inhabitants relied heavily on the ration card system. Food embezzlement by police forces within the ghetto encouraged hierarchy even amongst Jewish neighbors. Food became a means of control for the German forces and by the Jewish policing administration.

Food deprivation often caused strain on family relations but parents, siblings, and spouses would also hold out on their portion of food for the benefit of loved ones. People would trade furniture and clothing to receive food for their family members or themselves. Jewish women invented new ways of cooking in order to make food and supplies last longer. Tuberculosis and other diseases were widespread due to malnutrition. The physical attributes of malnutrition in the Łódź Ghetto led to sunken eyes, swollen abdomens and aged appearances while also stunting the growth of ghetto children.[18]

Since 1940, the ghetto used its own currency, the Lodz Ghetto mark, which had no value outside the ghetto. The use of other currency was prohibited.

Organization

Administratively, the Łódź ghetto was subject to the City Council. Initially, mayor Karol Marder separated from the provisioning and economy department the branch for the ghetto at Cegielniana street (today Jaracza 11), whose manager was first Johann Moldenhauer, and then a merchant from Bremen, Hans Biebow. From October 1940, the facility was raised to the rank of an independent department of the city council – Gettoverwaltung, reporting to Mayor Werner Ventzki. Initially, the main tasks of the ghetto board were supplying, supplying medicines and settling the ghetto with the city. Soon, however, the inhabitants began to be plundered and exploited to the maximum, transforming the ghetto into a forced labor camp in hunger for food rations and extreme living conditions. From 1942, Hans Biebow and his deputies Józef Haemmerle and Wilhelm Ribbe demonstrated in the selection and displacement of ghetto inhabitants, and Biebow and his commercial capabilities were quickly appreciated by the dignitaries of the central authorities of the Warta Country. Biebow became the real ruler of the ghetto, and Gettoverwaltung officials arrived at a rapid pace – from 24 people in May 1940 to 216 in mid-1942.[19]

 
Chaim Rumkowski delivering a speech in the ghetto, 1941–42

To organize the local population and maintain order, the German authorities established a Jewish Council commonly called the Judenrat or the Ältestenrat ("Council of Elders") in Łódź. The chairman of the Judenrat appointed by the Nazi administration was Chaim Rumkowski (age 62 in 1939). Even today, he is still considered one of the most controversial figures in the history of the Holocaust. Known mockingly as "King Chaim", Rumkowski was granted unprecedented powers by the Nazi officials, which authorized him to take all necessary measures to maintain order in the ghetto.[20]

Directly responsible to the Nazi Amtsleiter Hans Biebow, Rumkowski adopted an autocratic style of leadership in order to transform the ghetto into an industrial base manufacturing war supplies.[21] Convinced that Jewish productivity would ensure survival, he forced the population to work 12-hour days despite abysmal conditions and the lack of calories and protein;[20] producing uniforms, garments, wood and metalwork, and electrical equipment for the German military. By 1943, some 95 percent of the adult population was employed in 117 workshops, which – Rumkowski once boasted to the mayor of Łódź – were a "gold mine." It was possibly because of this productivity that the Łódź Ghetto managed to survive long after all the other ghettos in occupied Poland were liquidated. Rumkowski systematically singled out for expulsion his political opponents, or anyone who might have had the capacity to lead a resistance to the Nazis. Conditions were harsh and the population was entirely dependent on the Germans. Typical intake, made available, averaged between 700 and 900 calories per day, about half the calories required for survival.[22] People affiliated with Rumkowski received disproportionately larger deliveries of food, medicine, and other rationed necessities. Everywhere else starvation was rampant and diseases like tuberculosis widespread, fueling dissatisfaction with Rumkowski's administration, which led to a series of strikes in the factories. In most instances, Rumkowski relied on the Jewish police to quell the discontented workers, although at least in one instance, the German Order Police was asked to intervene. Strikes usually erupted over the reduction of food rations.[21]

 
Young girl working in the paper factory

Disease was a major feature of ghetto life with which the Judenrat had to contend. Medical supplies were critically limited, and the ghetto was severely overcrowded. The entire population of 164,000 people was forced into an area of 4 square kilometres (1.5 square miles), of which 2.4 square kilometres (0.93 square miles) were developed and habitable. Fuel supplies were severely short, and people burned whatever they could to survive the Polish winter. Some 18,000 people in the ghetto are believed to have died during a famine in 1942, and all together, about 43,800 people died in the ghetto from starvation and infectious disease.[23]

Deportations

 
Identity card Lodz Ghetto 19-4-1942

Overcrowding in the ghetto was exacerbated by the influx of some 40,000 Polish Jews forced out from the surrounding Warthegau areas, as well as by the Holocaust transports of foreign Jews resettled to Łódź from Vienna, Berlin, Cologne, Hamburg and other cities in Nazi Germany, as well as from Luxembourg, and the Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia including the citywide Theresienstadt concentration camp.[5] Heinrich Himmler visited the ghetto for the first time on 7 June 1941.[24] On 29 July 1941, following an inspection, most patients of the ghetto's psychiatric hospital were taken away never to return. "They understood, for example, why they had been injected with tranquilizers in the night. Injections of scopolamine were used, at the request of the Nazi authorities."[25] Situated 50 kilometres (31 mi) north of Łódź in the town of Chełmno, the Kulmhof extermination camp began gassing operations on 8 December 1941. Two weeks later, on 20 December 1941, Rumkowski was ordered by the Germans to announce that 20,000 Jews from the ghetto would be deported to undisclosed camps, based on selection by the Judenrat. An Evacuation Committee was set up to help select the initial group of deportees from among those who were labelled 'criminals': people who refused to or who could not work, and people who took advantage of the refugees arriving in the ghetto in order to satisfy their own basic needs.[5]

By the end of January 1942 some 10,000 Jews were deported to Chełmno (known as Kulmhof in German). The Chełmno extermination camp set up by SS-Sturmbannführer Herbert Lange, served as a pilot project for the secretive Operation Reinhard, the deadliest phase of the "Final Solution". In Chełmno, the inmates were murdered with the exhaust fumes of moving gas vans. The stationary gas chambers had yet to be built at Operation Reinhard death camps.[5] By 2 April 1942, an additional 34,000 victims were sent there from the ghetto, with 11,000 more by 15 May 1942, and over 15,000 more by mid September, for an estimated total of 55,000 people. The Germans planned that children, the elderly, and anyone deemed "not fit for work" would follow them.[5]

In September 1942, Rumkowski and the Jews of Łódź had realized the fate of the evacuees, because all baggage, clothing, and identification papers of their fellow inmates, were being returned to the ghetto for "processing". The slave workers began to strongly suspect that deportation meant death; even though they had never deduced that the annihilation of Jews was all-encompassing, as was intended.[26] They witnessed the German raid on a children's hospital where all patients were rounded up and put into trucks never to return (some thrown from windows). A new German order demanded that 24,000 Jews be handed over for deportation. A debate raged in the ghetto over who should be given up. Rumkowski sounded more convinced than ever that the only chance for Jewish survival lay in the ability to work productively for the Reich without interference.[27] As Rumkowski believed productivity was necessary for survival, he thought they should give their 13,000 children and their 11,000 elderly. He addressed the parents of Łódź as follows.

 
Children rounded up for deportation to the Chełmno death camp, September 1942

A grievous blow has struck the ghetto. They [the Germans] are asking us to give up the best we possess – the children and the elderly. I was unworthy of having a child of my own, so I gave the best years of my life to children. I've lived and breathed with children, I never imagined I would be forced to deliver this sacrifice to the altar with my own hands. In my old age, I must stretch out my hands and beg: Brothers and sisters! Hand them over to me! Fathers and mothers: Give me your children! — Chaim Rumkowski, September 4, 1942[27]

Despite their horror, parents had little choice but to turn over their children for deportation. Some families committed collective suicide to avoid the inevitable. The deportations slowed down, for a time, only after the purge of the ghetto was completed. Some 89,446 able-bodied prisoners remained. In October, the number of German troops was reduced, as no longer needed.[28] The German Reserve Police Battalion 101 left the ghetto to conduct anti-Jewish operations in Polish towns with direct lines to Treblinka, Bełżec, and Sobibór.[29] Meanwhile, a rare camp for the Christian children between 8 and 14 years of age was set up adjacent to the ghetto in December 1942, separated only by a high fence made of planks. Some 12,000–13,000 adolescent Poles with parents already dead went through the Kinder-KZ Litzmannstadt according to International Tracing Service.[30] Subjected to a selection process for Germanisation, the 1,600 children performed work closely connected with the industrial output of the ghetto, with help and advice from Jewish instructors.[31]

 
Jews clean and repair coats salvaged at Chełmno for redistribution among Volksdeutsche in accordance with the top secret August Frank memorandum. The yellow badge was removed.[32]

Since late 1942 the production of war supplies was coordinated by the autonomous German Management Board (Gettoverwaltung).[28] The ghetto was transformed into a giant labor camp where survival depended solely on the ability to work.[33] Two small hospitals were set up in 1943, nonetheless hundreds of tormented prisoners died each month. In April 1,000 Jews were transferred to labour camps in Germany.[28] In September 1943 Himmler ordered Greiser to get ready for a mass relocation of labour to the Nazi District of Lublin. Max Horn from the Ostindustrie arrived and made an assessment, which was damning.[34] The ghetto was too large in his opinion, badly managed, not profitable, and it had the wrong products. From his perspective the presence of children was unacceptable. The relocation idea was abandoned, but the immediate consequence of his report was an order to reduce the size of the ghetto.[34] By January 1944, there were around 80,000 Jewish workers still subsisting in Łódź.[33] In February, Himmler brought back Bothmann to reinstate operations at Chełmno.[35]

Camp for Polish children

On 28 November 1942, a camp for Polish children was opened.[36] The official name of the camp was "Security Police Litzmannstadt Isolation Camp for Polish Youth" (German: Polen-Jugendverwahrlager der Sicherheitspolizei in Litzmannstadt); however, the camp was referred to as the Camp on Przemyslowa Street. The camp housed children aged 8–16 who were orphans or accused of criminal activity such as theft.[37] More than 1,000 children lived there, separated from their parents, working eight hours a day. They were fed starvation rations and had no access to water, heating or bathrooms. They were subjected to torture and beaten by the guards. The camp operated until the Lodz ghetto was liquidated.[38]

Liquidation

 
The Gypsy quarter in the ghetto after its inhabitants had been transported to the Chełmno extermination camp

In early 1944, the ultimate fate of the Łódź Ghetto was debated among the highest-ranking Nazis. The initial wave of deportations to Chełmno ended in the autumn of 1942; over 72,000 people defined as "dispensable" were murdered.[39] Heinrich Himmler called for the final liquidation of the ghetto. Between 23 June and 14 July 1944, the first 10 transports of about 7,000 Jews were sent by Arthur Greiser from the Radegast train station to Chełmno.[39] Although the killing centre was partly razed in April 1943,[40] it had resumed gassing operations specifically for this purpose. Meanwhile, Armaments Minister Albert Speer proposed the ghetto be continued as a source of cheap labour for the front.[39]

On 15 July 1944 the transports paused for two weeks. On 1 August 1944 the Warsaw Uprising erupted, and the fate of the remaining inhabitants of the Łódź Ghetto was sealed. During the last phase of its existence, some 25,000 inmates were murdered at Chełmno, their bodies burned immediately after death.[40] As the front approached, German officials decided to deport the remaining Jews to Auschwitz-Birkenau aboard Holocaust trains, including Rumkowski. On 28 August 1944, Rumkowski's family were gassed along with thousands of others.

On 17 August 1944, The Gestapo announced the exclusion of the following streets from the ghetto: Wolborska, Nad Łódką, Zgierska, Dolna, Łagiewnicka, Brzezińska, Smugowa and the Old Market Square, Kościelny Square and Bałucki Rynek. The presence of Jews in these areas was punishable by death.[41]

A handful of people were left alive in the ghetto to clean it up.[39] Others remained in hiding with the Polish rescuers.[42] When the Soviet army entered Łódź on 19 January 1945, only 877 Jews were still alive, 12 of whom were children. Of the 223,000 Jews in Łódź before the invasion, only 10,000 survived the Holocaust in other places.[7]

Forms of resistance

 
Jewish prisoners of the Gestapo KZ Radogoszcz in Łódź, 1940

The peculiar situation of the Łódź Ghetto prevented armed resistance, which occurred within other ghettos in Nazi-occupied Poland, such as the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising, the Białystok Ghetto Uprising, the revolt at the Wilno Ghetto, the Częstochowa Ghetto Uprising, or similar rebellions in other Polish cities.[43] Rumkowski's overbearing autocracy including his periodic crackdowns, and the resulting failure of Jewish attempts to smuggle food – and consequently, arms – into the ghetto, as well as misleading confidence that productivity would ensure survival, precluded attempts at an armed revolt.[44]

The distinct forms of defiance included instead the symbolic, polemic and defensive resistance.[a] Throughout the early period, the symbolic resistance was evident in the rich cultural and religious life that the people maintained in the ghetto. Initially, they created 47 schools and daycare facilities which continued to operate despite harsh conditions. Later, when the school buildings were converted to new living quarters for some 20,000 inmates brought in from outside occupied Poland, alternatives were established, particularly for younger children whose mothers were forced to work. Schools tried to provide children with adequate nourishment despite meager rations. After the schools were shut down in 1941, many of the factories continued to maintain illegal daycare centres for children whose mothers were working.[45]

Political organizations also continued to exist, and engaged in strikes when rations were cut. In one such instance, a strike got so violent that the German Orpo police were called upon to suppress it. At the same time, the rich cultural life included active theatres, concerts, and banned religious gatherings, all of which countered official attempts at dehumanization. Much information about the Jewish day-to-day life in that period can be found in the ghetto archive of Lucjan Dobroszycki from YIVO.[46]

 
Photographs such as this served to record the horrors of ghetto life for posterity.

The photographers of the statistical department of the Judenrat, besides their official work, illegally took photos of everyday scenes and atrocities. One of them, Henryk Ross, managed to bury the negatives and dig them up after liberation, at 12 Jagielonska Street. Because of this archive, the reality of the ghetto was recorded and preserved. The archivists also began creating a ghetto encyclopedia and a lexicon of the local slang that emerged in their daily lives. The Jewish population maintained several illegal radios with which they kept abreast of events in the outside world. At first, the radio could only receive German broadcast, which is why it was codenamed the "Liar" in the diaries. Among the news that quickly spread around the ghetto was the Allied invasion of Normandy on the day it occurred.[44]

Since production was essential to the German war effort, the slowing down of work was also a form of resistance. In the later years, leftist workers adopted the slogan P.P. (pracuj powoli, or "work slowly") to hinder their own output on behalf of the Wehrmacht.[47]

Escape and rescue efforts

 
The Polish rescuers and the Jewish survivors plant Trees of Memory during the ceremony at the Park of the Rescued Park Ocalałych w Łodzi [pl] inaugurated in Łódź in August 2009.

A number of Poles from Łódź were awarded titles of Righteous among the Nations by Yad Vashem in Jerusalem.[42] On their and their families initiative, a Survivors' Park adorned with monuments was built in Łódź, measuring 3,660 square metres (39,400 sq ft). It was inaugurated in August 2009 by the President of Poland Lech Kaczyński in the presence of prominent dignitaries.[48] A year later, the Park was awarded a medal for top urban design by the Towarzystwo Urbanistów Polskich.[49]

One of the Poles who helped the Jews in Łódź was a Catholic midwife Stanisława Leszczyńska. She and her family provided food, clothing and fake documents to many Jewish fugitives. Eventually, however, she and her family were arrested by the Germans. She and her daughter were deported to Auschwitz. Later on she became known for her effort to save many Jewish children; her sons were sent to stone quarries of Mauthausen. [50][51][52][53][54][55]

Notable inmates

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Swiss sociologist, Werner Rings, identifies four distinct forms of ghetto resistance: symbolic, polemic, and defensive; with offensive resistance (including sabotage) constituting its final form.[citation needed]

References

  1. ^ Horwitz 2009, p. 27. Plan hammered out by Friedrich Uebelhoer.
  2. ^ a b c d e Horwitz, Gordon J. (2009). Ghettostadt: Łódź and the making of a Nazi city. Harvard University Press; Cambridge, Massachusetts. pp. 27, 54–55, 62. ISBN 978-0-674-03879-0. Retrieved 21 March 2015.
  3. ^ a b The United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Encyclopedia of Camps and Ghettos, 1933–1945, Geoffrey P. Megargee, Martin C. Dean, and Mel Hecker, Volume II, part A, pp. 75–82.
  4. ^ a b c Biuletyn Informacyjny Obchodów 60. Rocznicy Likwidacji Litzmannstadt Getto. Nr 1-2. "The establishment of Litzmannstadt Ghetto", Torah Code website. Retrieved 21 March 2015.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g Shirley Rotbein Flaum (2007). "Lodz Ghetto Deportations and Statistics". Timeline. JewishGen Home Page. Retrieved 26 March 2015. Source: Encyclopedia of the Holocaust (1990), Baranowski, Dobroszycki, Wiesenthal, Yad Vashem Timeline of the Holocaust, others.
  6. ^ The statistical data, compiled on the basis of . Archived from the original on 8 February 2016. by Virtual Shtetl Museum of the History of the Polish Jews, as well as "Getta Żydowskie" by Gedeon  (in Polish) and "Ghetto List" by Michael Peters  (in English). Accessed 25 March 2015.
  7. ^ a b Abraham J. Peck (1997). "The Agony of the Łódź Ghetto, 1941–1944". The Chronicle of the Łódź Ghetto, 1941–1944 by Lucjan Dobroszycki, and The United States Holocaust Memorial Museum, Washington D.C. The Simon Wiesenthal Center. Retrieved 25 March 2015.
  8. ^ a b c Jennifer Rosenberg (2006). . Part 1 of 2. 20th Century History, About.com. Archived from the original on 30 April 2006. Retrieved 19 March 2015. Lodz Ghetto: Inside a Community Under Siege by Adelson, Alan and Robert Lapides (ed.), New York, 1989; The Documents of the Łódź Ghetto: An Inventory of the Nachman Zonabend Collection by Web, Marek (ed.), New York, 1988; The Holocaust: The Fate of European Jewry by Yahil, Leni, New York, 1991.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  9. ^ a b Mariusz Kulesza, Struktura narodowościowa i wyznaniowa ludności Łodzi 8 April 2020 at the Wayback Machine PDF file, direct download.
  10. ^ Journals and footage on YouTube of the establishment of Łódź Ghetto by Nazi occupants.
  11. ^ Holocaust Encyclopedia (20 June 2014). "Jewish Refugees, 1939". German Invasion of Poland. United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. Retrieved 21 March 2015.
  12. ^ Horwitz 2009, page 49
  13. ^ Horwitz 2009, page 62.
  14. ^ Dobroszycki 1987, 1984; p. 52.
  15. ^ Holocaust Encyclopedia (2014). . United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. Archived from the original on 15 August 2012. Retrieved 23 March 2015.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  16. ^ Dobroszycki 1987, 1984; p. 61.
  17. ^ a b Emmanuel Ringelblum, Polish-Jewish Relations During the Second World War, Northwestern University Press, 1992, p.86. ISBN 0-8101-0963-8.
  18. ^ Sinnreich, Helene J. (27 November 2017), "Hunger in the ghettos", The Ghetto in Global History, Routledge, pp. 110–126, doi:10.4324/9781315099774-9, ISBN 978-1-315-09977-4
  19. ^ Ilustrowana Encyklopedia Historii Łódźi, p. 18
  20. ^ a b Carmelo Lisciotto (2007). "Chaim Mordechai Rumkowski". The Łódź Ghetto. Holocaust Education & Archive Research Team. Retrieved 22 March 2015.
  21. ^ a b Trunk & Shapiro 2008, p. xlii.
  22. ^ Trunk & Shapiro 2008, p. 117, Minimal need.
  23. ^ Trunk & Shapiro 2008, p. 223, "Natural" death.
  24. ^ Dobroszycki 1987, 1984; p. 59.
  25. ^ Dobroszycki 1987, 1984; pp. 68–69.
  26. ^ Trunk & Shapiro 2008, p. 52: Łódź Ghetto: A History
  27. ^ a b Simone Schweber; Debbie Findling (2007). Teaching the Holocaust. Torah Aura Productions. p. 107. ISBN 978-1-891662-91-1. Retrieved 24 March 2015.
  28. ^ a b c Michal Latosinski. "Litzmannstadt Ghetto – The Calendar 1942–1945" (Traces of the Litzmannstadt Getto. A Guide to the Past). LodzGhetto.com home.
  29. ^ Struan Robertson. . Archived from the original on 22 February 2008. Retrieved 24 September 2009.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  30. ^ ITS, International Tracing Service. Internet Archive. Retrieved 29 March 2015.
  31. ^ Michal Latosinski. "The camp for Polish children at Przemystowa Street (Gewerbestrasse)" (Traces of the Litzmannstadt Getto. A Guide to the Past). LodzGhetto.com home. Retrieved 21 March 2015.
  32. ^ Frank, August, , United States of America v. Oswald Pohl, et al. (Case No. 4, the "Pohl Trial), vol. V, pp. 965–967, archived from the original on 22 November 2004 – via The Mazal Library{{citation}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  33. ^ a b Yechiam Weitz (2006), "Working against time," book review. Haaretz.com.
  34. ^ a b Dobroszycki 1987, 1984; p. lxi.
  35. ^ Dobroszycki 1987, 1984; p. lxii.
  36. ^ "The camp for Polish children". Litzmannstadt Ghetto. Retrieved 16 April 2019.
  37. ^ "The establishment of Litzmannstadt Ghetto". Litzmannstadt-Getto. Retrieved 17 April 2019.
  38. ^ Bałulis, Sabina. . Centrum Dialogu. Archived from the original on 2 October 2020. Retrieved 17 April 2019.
  39. ^ a b c d SJ (2007). "Chronicle: 1940 – 1944". The Łódź Ghetto. Holocaust Education & Archive Research Team. Retrieved 22 March 2015.
  40. ^ a b Golden, Juliet (2006). "Remembering Chelmno". In Vitelli, Karen D.; Colwell-Chanthaphonh, Chip (eds.). Archeological Ethics (2nd ed.). AltaMira Press. p. 189. ISBN 0-7591-0963-X. Retrieved 25 March 2015.
  41. ^ "1944: W Warszawie powstanie, w Łodzi likwidacja getta". Wyborcza. 1 August 2014. Retrieved 6 October 2019.
  42. ^ a b Archives (2015). "Polish Righteous". Łódź. POLIN Museum of the History of Polish Jews. Retrieved 25 March 2015.
  43. ^ Trunk & Shapiro 2008, p. 53, Częstochowa.
  44. ^ a b Trunk & Shapiro 2008, p. 53.
  45. ^ Heberer, Patricia. Children During the Holocaust. Plymouth: AltaMira Press, 2011. The Łódź Ghetto had "some forty-three elementary schools, two high schools, and one vocational training facility, serving some 63 percent of the ghettos school aged youngsters." [page needed]
  46. ^ Dobroszycki 1987.
  47. ^ Trunk & Shapiro 2008, pp. 53–56, "Pracuj powoli".
  48. ^ . Archived from the original on 21 April 2016. Retrieved 27 March 2015.
  49. ^ Pomnik Polaków odznaczonych Medalem Sprawiedliwych Wśród Narodów Świata w Łodzi. Dom i Miasto. (in Polish)
  50. ^ Matthew M. Anger (4 January 2005). "Midwife at Auschwitz: The Story of Stanislawa Leszczynska". Seattle Catholic. Retrieved 21 June 2015.
  51. ^ Almanach Polonii. Wydawn. Interpress. 1984. p. 60. "W czasach okupacji dom Leszczyńskich był baz dla ściganych, przede wszystkim dla Żydów. Tu otrzymywali żywność, ubranie, dokumenty, które potajemnie wyrabiał mąż Stanisławy" (During the occupation, the house of Leszczyńscy was a base for the fugitives, particularly Jews. There, they received food, clothes, and documents, secretly forged by Stanisława's husband.
  52. ^ "Stanisława Leszczyńska". www.mp.pl.
  53. ^ "Did You Know: The Polish Catholic midwife of Auschwitz". Sydney Jewish Museum. 7 May 2018.
  54. ^ "Stanisława Leszczyńska". www3.archidiecezja.lodz.pl.
  55. ^ Kazimierz Gabryel (1989). Stanisława Leszczyńska: 1896–1974. Diecezjalne Wydawn. Łodzkie. p. 30. ISBN 978-83-85022-04-6. Dom przy ul. Wspólnej 3, gdzie obecnie zamieszkali Leszczyńscy, stał się miejscem skąd bez przerwy płynęła pomoc dla Żydów" (The House at Wspólna 3 street, where currently Leszczyńscy lived, became a place from which aid constantly reached out to the Jews
  56. ^ Hoffman, Allison (10 April 2013). "How an NYU Scholar Became the Keeper of Poland's Jewish Heritage". Tablet Magazine. Retrieved 18 January 2019.
  57. ^ Grimes, William (9 December 2010). "Heda Kovaly, Czech Who Wrote of Totalitarianism, Dies at 91". The New York Times. Retrieved 18 January 2019.
  58. ^ The Holocaust: a history of the Jews of Europe during the Second World War (1st American ed.). Holt, Rinehart, and Winston. 1986. p. 346. ISBN 0-03-062416-9. Retrieved 3 June 2020.
  59. ^ The chronicle of the Łódź ghetto, 1941-1944 (English ed.). Yale University Press. 1984. p. 176. ISBN 0-300-03924-7.

Sources

  • Dobroszycki, Lucjan, ed. (1987) [1984]. The Chronicle of the Łódź Ghetto, 1941–1944. Translated by Richard Lourie; Joachim Neugroschel; et al. Yale University Press. Abridged edition, Hardcover. ISBN 978-0-300-03924-5 – via Google Books. ISBN 0-300-03208-0; Paperback, 1987.
  • Horwitz, Gordon J. (2009). Ghettostadt: Łódź and the making of a Nazi city. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press. pp. 27, 54–55, 62. ISBN 978-0-674-03879-0. Retrieved 21 March 2015 – via Google Books, preview.
  • Trunk, Isaiah; Shapiro, Robert Moses (2008) [2006]. Łódź Ghetto: A History. Bloomington, Ind.: Indiana University Press. ISBN 978-0-253-34755-8. Retrieved 29 September 2015 – via Google Books, preview.
  • Online Exhibit: (Internet Archive), United States Holocaust Memorial Museum.
  • Library Bibliography: Łódź Ghetto, United States Holocaust Memorial Museum
  • Archiwum Państwowe w Łodzi (Polish State Archive in Lodz) Ghetto collection 25 June 2014 at the Wayback Machine
  • "Haunting Voices From Łódź Ghetto", Never Again! online Holocaust memorial.
  • David Graham (17 March 2002), with index and commentary by David Graham. Retrieved 28 July 2015.
  • Dr. B. Lee Hobbs, American university students discuss the implications of the Holocaust. 30 September 2011 at the Wayback Machine From Diary of Łódź Ghetto inmate Dawid Sierakowiak. ISBN 0-19-512285-2.
  • Aerial photos of the ghetto from May 1942 (rotated so that north is to the right): 1 5 September 2011 at the Wayback Machine, 2. 20 September 2011 at the Wayback Machine For orientation, note the Jewish Cemetery bottom right on second photo, which formed the easternmost portion of the ghetto.
  • "I Completely Forgot that I Was Hungry," Youth Groups in the Łódź Ghetto, 1 October 2012 at the Wayback Machine online exhibition by Yad Vashem.
  • Yad Vashem (2015), Łódź Ghetto, Yad Vashem website. Overview. Selected photographs. Retrieved 28 July 2015.
  • Simon Says Project, a memoir of Holocaust survivor Simon Lewenberg 2012, homepage.
  • Colour slides from the German ghetto administration in Łódź in the Jewish Museum Frankfurt
  • The Łódź Ghetto Photographs of Henryk Ross at the Art Gallery of Ontario. LodzGhetto.ago.net collection of Holocaust photographs, interactive.

Further reading

  • Alan Adelson and Robert Lapides, Łódź Ghetto : A Community History Told in Diaries, Journals, and Documents, Viking, 1989. ISBN 0-670-82983-8
  • Bostock, William, "Language policy and use in the Łódź ghetto", Web Journal of Modern Language Linguistics, 3/98, (June 1998)
  • Bethke, Svenja (2020). "Attempts to Take Action In a Coerced Community? Petitions to the Jewish Council in the Lodz Ghetto during World War II". In Kaplan, Thomas Pegelow; Gruner, Wolf (eds.). Resisting Persecution: Jews and Their Petitions during the Holocaust. Berghahn Books. ISBN 978-1-78920-720-0.
  • Peter Klein, Die "Gettoverwaltung Litzmannstadt", 1940–1944. Eine Dienststelle im Spannungsfeld von Kommunalbürokratie und staatlicher Verfolgungspolitik, Hamburg: Hamburger Edition, 2009, ISBN 978-3-86854-203-5.
  • Andrea Löw, Juden im Getto Litzmannstadt: Lebensbedingungen, Selbstwahrnehmung, Verhalten, Wallstein: Göttingen, 2006
  • Xenia Modrzejewska-Mrozowska, Andrzej Różycki, Marek Szukalak (eds.), Terra Incognita: the Struggling Art of Arie Ben Menachem and Mendel Grosman, Łódź: Oficyna Bibliofilow, 2009. ISBN 978-83-61743-16-3
  • Michal Unger (ed.), The Last Ghetto: Life in the Łódź Ghetto 1940–1944, Yad Vashem, 1995. ISBN 965-308-045-8
  • Horwitz, Gordon J., Ghettostadt: Łódź and the Making of a Nazi City. Cambridge: The Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, 2008. Terrace Books. ISBN 0-299-22124-5.

External links

51°47′35″N 19°27′50″E / 51.79306°N 19.46389°E / 51.79306; 19.46389

Łódź, ghetto, litzmannstadt, ghetto, after, nazi, german, name, Łódź, nazi, ghetto, established, german, authorities, polish, jews, roma, following, invasion, poland, second, largest, ghetto, german, occupied, europe, after, warsaw, ghetto, situated, city, Łód. The Lodz Ghetto or Litzmannstadt Ghetto after the Nazi German name for Lodz was a Nazi ghetto established by the German authorities for Polish Jews and Roma following the Invasion of Poland It was the second largest ghetto in all of German occupied Europe after the Warsaw Ghetto Situated in the city of Lodz and originally intended as a preliminary step upon a more extensive plan of creating the Judenfrei province of Warthegau 1 the ghetto was transformed into a major industrial centre manufacturing war supplies for Nazi Germany and especially for the Wehrmacht 2 The number of people incarcerated in it was increased further by the Jews deported from Nazi controlled territories Lodz GhettoGhetto LitzmannstadtJewish children inside the Lodz Ghetto 1940Map of the Lodz Ghetto within the city The walled off area is shown in blue in the inset The Jewish cemetery is at 16 Radegast train station at the top right at 17 Kinder KZ for Polish children is at 15 LocationLodz German occupied PolandPersecutionImprisonment forced labor starvationOrganizationsSchutzstaffel SS OrdnungspolizeiDeath campChelmno extermination camp Auschwitz BirkenauVictims210 000 Polish Jews On 30 April 1940 when the gates closed on the ghetto it housed 163 777 residents 3 Because of its remarkable productivity the ghetto managed to survive until August 1944 In the first two years it absorbed almost 20 000 Jews from liquidated ghettos in nearby Polish towns and villages 4 as well as 20 000 more from the rest of German occupied Europe 5 After the wave of deportations to Chelmno extermination camp beginning in early 1942 5 and in spite of a stark reversal of fortune the Germans persisted in eradicating the ghetto they transported the remaining population to Auschwitz and Chelmno extermination camps where most were murdered upon arrival It was the last ghetto in occupied Poland to be liquidated 6 A total of 210 000 Jews passed through it 3 but only 877 remained hidden when the Soviets arrived About 10 000 Jewish residents of Lodz who used to live there before the invasion of Poland survived the Holocaust elsewhere 7 Contents 1 Establishment 2 Ghetto policing 3 Food consumption and malnutrition 4 Organization 5 Deportations 6 Camp for Polish children 7 Liquidation 7 1 Forms of resistance 8 Escape and rescue efforts 9 Notable inmates 10 See also 11 Notes 12 References 13 Sources 14 Further reading 15 External linksEstablishmentWhen German forces occupied Lodz on 8 September 1939 the city had a population of 672 000 people Over 230 000 of them were Jewish 8 or 31 1 according to statistics 9 Nazi Germany annexed Lodz directly to the new Warthegau region and renamed the city Litzmannstadt in honour of a German general Karl Litzmann who had led German forces in the area in 1914 The Nazi German authorities intended to purify the city All Polish Jews were to be expelled to the Generalgouvernement eventually while the non Jewish population of Polish people reduced significantly and transformed into a slave labour force for Germany 8 nbsp Resettlement of Jews to the ghetto area c March 1940 Old Synagogue in the far background no longer existing The first known record of an order for the establishment of the ghetto dated 10 December 1939 10 came from the new Nazi governor Friedrich Ubelhor who called for the cooperation of major policing bodies in the confinement and mass transfer of the local Jews 8 By 1 October 1940 the relocation of the ghetto inmates was to have been completed and the city s downtown core declared Judenrein cleansed of its Jewish presence The German occupiers pressed for the ghetto size to be shrunk beyond all sense in order to have their factories registered outside of it 2 Lodz was a multicultural mosaic before the war began with about 8 8 ethnic German residents on top of Austrian Czech French Russian and Swiss business families adding to its vibrant economy 9 The securing of the ghetto system was preceded by a series of anti Jewish measures as well as anti Polish measures meant to inflict terror The Jews were forced to wear the yellow badge Their businesses were expropriated by the Gestapo 2 After the invasion of Poland many Jews particularly the intellectual and political elite had fled the advancing German army into the Soviet occupied eastern Poland and to the area of future General Government in the hope of the Polish counter attack which never came 11 On 8 February 1940 the Germans ordered the Jewish residence to be limited to specific streets in the Old City and the adjacent Baluty quarter the areas that would become the ghetto To expedite the relocation the Orpo Police launched an assault on 5 7 March 1940 12 known as Bloody Thursday in which 350 Jews were fatally shot in their homes and outside Over the next two months wooden and wire fences were erected around the area to cut it off from the rest of the city Jews were formally sealed within the ghetto walls on 1 May 1940 2 As nearly 25 percent of the Jews had fled the city by the time the ghetto was set up its prisoner population as of 1 May 1940 was 164 000 13 Over the coming year Jews from German occupied Europe as far away as Luxembourg were deported to the ghetto on their way to the extermination camps 5 A small Romany population was also resettled there 2 By 1 May 1941 the population of the ghetto was 148 547 14 Ghetto policing nbsp German and Jewish police guard at the entrance to the ghetto To ensure no contact between the Jewish and non Jewish populations of the city two German Order Police battalions were assigned to patrol the perimeter of the ghetto including the Reserve Police Battalion 101 from Hamburg 15 Within the ghetto a Jewish Police force was created to ensure that no prisoners tried to escape On 10 May 1940 orders went into effect prohibiting any commercial exchange between Jews and non Jews in Lodz By the new German decree those caught outside the ghetto could be shot on sight The contact with people who lived on the Aryan side was also impaired by the fact that Lodz had a 70 000 strong ethnic German minority loyal to the Nazis the Volksdeutsche 4 making it impossible to bring food illegally To keep outsiders out rumours were also spread by Hitler s propaganda saying that the Jews were the carriers of infectious diseases 4 For the week of 16 22 June 1941 the week Nazi Germany launched Operation Barbarossa the Jews reported 206 deaths and two shootings of women near the barbed wire 16 In other ghettos throughout Poland thriving underground economies based on smuggling of food and manufactured goods developed between the ghettos and the outside world 17 In Lodz however this was practically impossible due to heavy security The Jews were entirely dependent on the German authorities for food medicine and other vital supplies To exacerbate the situation the only legal currency in the ghetto was a specially created ghetto currency Faced with starvation Jews traded their remaining possessions and savings for this scrip thereby abetting the process by which they were dispossessed of their remaining belongings 17 Food consumption and malnutritionJews within the Lodz Ghetto had an average daily intake of 1 000 to 1 200 calories which led directly to starvation and even to death The process of purchasing food relied heavily on the quantity and quality of the goods that the ghetto citizens brought from their houses into the ghetto Previous social class and wealth of ghetto inhabitants often determined the fate of food accessibility While the wealthy could purchase additional food many of the lower class Jewish inhabitants relied heavily on the ration card system Food embezzlement by police forces within the ghetto encouraged hierarchy even amongst Jewish neighbors Food became a means of control for the German forces and by the Jewish policing administration Food deprivation often caused strain on family relations but parents siblings and spouses would also hold out on their portion of food for the benefit of loved ones People would trade furniture and clothing to receive food for their family members or themselves Jewish women invented new ways of cooking in order to make food and supplies last longer Tuberculosis and other diseases were widespread due to malnutrition The physical attributes of malnutrition in the Lodz Ghetto led to sunken eyes swollen abdomens and aged appearances while also stunting the growth of ghetto children 18 Since 1940 the ghetto used its own currency the Lodz Ghetto mark which had no value outside the ghetto The use of other currency was prohibited OrganizationAdministratively the Lodz ghetto was subject to the City Council Initially mayor Karol Marder separated from the provisioning and economy department the branch for the ghetto at Cegielniana street today Jaracza 11 whose manager was first Johann Moldenhauer and then a merchant from Bremen Hans Biebow From October 1940 the facility was raised to the rank of an independent department of the city council Gettoverwaltung reporting to Mayor Werner Ventzki Initially the main tasks of the ghetto board were supplying supplying medicines and settling the ghetto with the city Soon however the inhabitants began to be plundered and exploited to the maximum transforming the ghetto into a forced labor camp in hunger for food rations and extreme living conditions From 1942 Hans Biebow and his deputies Jozef Haemmerle and Wilhelm Ribbe demonstrated in the selection and displacement of ghetto inhabitants and Biebow and his commercial capabilities were quickly appreciated by the dignitaries of the central authorities of the Warta Country Biebow became the real ruler of the ghetto and Gettoverwaltung officials arrived at a rapid pace from 24 people in May 1940 to 216 in mid 1942 19 nbsp Chaim Rumkowski delivering a speech in the ghetto 1941 42 To organize the local population and maintain order the German authorities established a Jewish Council commonly called the Judenrat or the Altestenrat Council of Elders in Lodz The chairman of the Judenrat appointed by the Nazi administration was Chaim Rumkowski age 62 in 1939 Even today he is still considered one of the most controversial figures in the history of the Holocaust Known mockingly as King Chaim Rumkowski was granted unprecedented powers by the Nazi officials which authorized him to take all necessary measures to maintain order in the ghetto 20 Directly responsible to the Nazi Amtsleiter Hans Biebow Rumkowski adopted an autocratic style of leadership in order to transform the ghetto into an industrial base manufacturing war supplies 21 Convinced that Jewish productivity would ensure survival he forced the population to work 12 hour days despite abysmal conditions and the lack of calories and protein 20 producing uniforms garments wood and metalwork and electrical equipment for the German military By 1943 some 95 percent of the adult population was employed in 117 workshops which Rumkowski once boasted to the mayor of Lodz were a gold mine It was possibly because of this productivity that the Lodz Ghetto managed to survive long after all the other ghettos in occupied Poland were liquidated Rumkowski systematically singled out for expulsion his political opponents or anyone who might have had the capacity to lead a resistance to the Nazis Conditions were harsh and the population was entirely dependent on the Germans Typical intake made available averaged between 700 and 900 calories per day about half the calories required for survival 22 People affiliated with Rumkowski received disproportionately larger deliveries of food medicine and other rationed necessities Everywhere else starvation was rampant and diseases like tuberculosis widespread fueling dissatisfaction with Rumkowski s administration which led to a series of strikes in the factories In most instances Rumkowski relied on the Jewish police to quell the discontented workers although at least in one instance the German Order Police was asked to intervene Strikes usually erupted over the reduction of food rations 21 nbsp Young girl working in the paper factory Disease was a major feature of ghetto life with which the Judenrat had to contend Medical supplies were critically limited and the ghetto was severely overcrowded The entire population of 164 000 people was forced into an area of 4 square kilometres 1 5 square miles of which 2 4 square kilometres 0 93 square miles were developed and habitable Fuel supplies were severely short and people burned whatever they could to survive the Polish winter Some 18 000 people in the ghetto are believed to have died during a famine in 1942 and all together about 43 800 people died in the ghetto from starvation and infectious disease 23 Deportations nbsp Identity card Lodz Ghetto 19 4 1942 Overcrowding in the ghetto was exacerbated by the influx of some 40 000 Polish Jews forced out from the surrounding Warthegau areas as well as by the Holocaust transports of foreign Jews resettled to Lodz from Vienna Berlin Cologne Hamburg and other cities in Nazi Germany as well as from Luxembourg and the Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia including the citywide Theresienstadt concentration camp 5 Heinrich Himmler visited the ghetto for the first time on 7 June 1941 24 On 29 July 1941 following an inspection most patients of the ghetto s psychiatric hospital were taken away never to return They understood for example why they had been injected with tranquilizers in the night Injections of scopolamine were used at the request of the Nazi authorities 25 Situated 50 kilometres 31 mi north of Lodz in the town of Chelmno the Kulmhof extermination camp began gassing operations on 8 December 1941 Two weeks later on 20 December 1941 Rumkowski was ordered by the Germans to announce that 20 000 Jews from the ghetto would be deported to undisclosed camps based on selection by the Judenrat An Evacuation Committee was set up to help select the initial group of deportees from among those who were labelled criminals people who refused to or who could not work and people who took advantage of the refugees arriving in the ghetto in order to satisfy their own basic needs 5 By the end of January 1942 some 10 000 Jews were deported to Chelmno known as Kulmhof in German The Chelmno extermination camp set up by SS Sturmbannfuhrer Herbert Lange served as a pilot project for the secretive Operation Reinhard the deadliest phase of the Final Solution In Chelmno the inmates were murdered with the exhaust fumes of moving gas vans The stationary gas chambers had yet to be built at Operation Reinhard death camps 5 By 2 April 1942 an additional 34 000 victims were sent there from the ghetto with 11 000 more by 15 May 1942 and over 15 000 more by mid September for an estimated total of 55 000 people The Germans planned that children the elderly and anyone deemed not fit for work would follow them 5 In September 1942 Rumkowski and the Jews of Lodz had realized the fate of the evacuees because all baggage clothing and identification papers of their fellow inmates were being returned to the ghetto for processing The slave workers began to strongly suspect that deportation meant death even though they had never deduced that the annihilation of Jews was all encompassing as was intended 26 They witnessed the German raid on a children s hospital where all patients were rounded up and put into trucks never to return some thrown from windows A new German order demanded that 24 000 Jews be handed over for deportation A debate raged in the ghetto over who should be given up Rumkowski sounded more convinced than ever that the only chance for Jewish survival lay in the ability to work productively for the Reich without interference 27 As Rumkowski believed productivity was necessary for survival he thought they should give their 13 000 children and their 11 000 elderly He addressed the parents of Lodz as follows nbsp Children rounded up for deportation to the Chelmno death camp September 1942 A grievous blow has struck the ghetto They the Germans are asking us to give up the best we possess the children and the elderly I was unworthy of having a child of my own so I gave the best years of my life to children I ve lived and breathed with children I never imagined I would be forced to deliver this sacrifice to the altar with my own hands In my old age I must stretch out my hands and beg Brothers and sisters Hand them over to me Fathers and mothers Give me your children Chaim Rumkowski September 4 1942 27 Despite their horror parents had little choice but to turn over their children for deportation Some families committed collective suicide to avoid the inevitable The deportations slowed down for a time only after the purge of the ghetto was completed Some 89 446 able bodied prisoners remained In October the number of German troops was reduced as no longer needed 28 The German Reserve Police Battalion 101 left the ghetto to conduct anti Jewish operations in Polish towns with direct lines to Treblinka Belzec and Sobibor 29 Meanwhile a rare camp for the Christian children between 8 and 14 years of age was set up adjacent to the ghetto in December 1942 separated only by a high fence made of planks Some 12 000 13 000 adolescent Poles with parents already dead went through the Kinder KZ Litzmannstadt according to International Tracing Service 30 Subjected to a selection process for Germanisation the 1 600 children performed work closely connected with the industrial output of the ghetto with help and advice from Jewish instructors 31 nbsp Jews clean and repair coats salvaged at Chelmno for redistribution among Volksdeutsche in accordance with the top secret August Frank memorandum The yellow badge was removed 32 Since late 1942 the production of war supplies was coordinated by the autonomous German Management Board Gettoverwaltung 28 The ghetto was transformed into a giant labor camp where survival depended solely on the ability to work 33 Two small hospitals were set up in 1943 nonetheless hundreds of tormented prisoners died each month In April 1 000 Jews were transferred to labour camps in Germany 28 In September 1943 Himmler ordered Greiser to get ready for a mass relocation of labour to the Nazi District of Lublin Max Horn from the Ostindustrie arrived and made an assessment which was damning 34 The ghetto was too large in his opinion badly managed not profitable and it had the wrong products From his perspective the presence of children was unacceptable The relocation idea was abandoned but the immediate consequence of his report was an order to reduce the size of the ghetto 34 By January 1944 there were around 80 000 Jewish workers still subsisting in Lodz 33 In February Himmler brought back Bothmann to reinstate operations at Chelmno 35 Camp for Polish childrenOn 28 November 1942 a camp for Polish children was opened 36 The official name of the camp was Security Police Litzmannstadt Isolation Camp for Polish Youth German Polen Jugendverwahrlager der Sicherheitspolizei in Litzmannstadt however the camp was referred to as the Camp on Przemyslowa Street The camp housed children aged 8 16 who were orphans or accused of criminal activity such as theft 37 More than 1 000 children lived there separated from their parents working eight hours a day They were fed starvation rations and had no access to water heating or bathrooms They were subjected to torture and beaten by the guards The camp operated until the Lodz ghetto was liquidated 38 Liquidation nbsp The Gypsy quarter in the ghetto after its inhabitants had been transported to the Chelmno extermination camp In early 1944 the ultimate fate of the Lodz Ghetto was debated among the highest ranking Nazis The initial wave of deportations to Chelmno ended in the autumn of 1942 over 72 000 people defined as dispensable were murdered 39 Heinrich Himmler called for the final liquidation of the ghetto Between 23 June and 14 July 1944 the first 10 transports of about 7 000 Jews were sent by Arthur Greiser from the Radegast train station to Chelmno 39 Although the killing centre was partly razed in April 1943 40 it had resumed gassing operations specifically for this purpose Meanwhile Armaments Minister Albert Speer proposed the ghetto be continued as a source of cheap labour for the front 39 On 15 July 1944 the transports paused for two weeks On 1 August 1944 the Warsaw Uprising erupted and the fate of the remaining inhabitants of the Lodz Ghetto was sealed During the last phase of its existence some 25 000 inmates were murdered at Chelmno their bodies burned immediately after death 40 As the front approached German officials decided to deport the remaining Jews to Auschwitz Birkenau aboard Holocaust trains including Rumkowski On 28 August 1944 Rumkowski s family were gassed along with thousands of others On 17 August 1944 The Gestapo announced the exclusion of the following streets from the ghetto Wolborska Nad Lodka Zgierska Dolna Lagiewnicka Brzezinska Smugowa and the Old Market Square Koscielny Square and Balucki Rynek The presence of Jews in these areas was punishable by death 41 A handful of people were left alive in the ghetto to clean it up 39 Others remained in hiding with the Polish rescuers 42 When the Soviet army entered Lodz on 19 January 1945 only 877 Jews were still alive 12 of whom were children Of the 223 000 Jews in Lodz before the invasion only 10 000 survived the Holocaust in other places 7 Forms of resistance nbsp Jewish prisoners of the Gestapo KZ Radogoszcz in Lodz 1940 The peculiar situation of the Lodz Ghetto prevented armed resistance which occurred within other ghettos in Nazi occupied Poland such as the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising the Bialystok Ghetto Uprising the revolt at the Wilno Ghetto the Czestochowa Ghetto Uprising or similar rebellions in other Polish cities 43 Rumkowski s overbearing autocracy including his periodic crackdowns and the resulting failure of Jewish attempts to smuggle food and consequently arms into the ghetto as well as misleading confidence that productivity would ensure survival precluded attempts at an armed revolt 44 The distinct forms of defiance included instead the symbolic polemic and defensive resistance a Throughout the early period the symbolic resistance was evident in the rich cultural and religious life that the people maintained in the ghetto Initially they created 47 schools and daycare facilities which continued to operate despite harsh conditions Later when the school buildings were converted to new living quarters for some 20 000 inmates brought in from outside occupied Poland alternatives were established particularly for younger children whose mothers were forced to work Schools tried to provide children with adequate nourishment despite meager rations After the schools were shut down in 1941 many of the factories continued to maintain illegal daycare centres for children whose mothers were working 45 Political organizations also continued to exist and engaged in strikes when rations were cut In one such instance a strike got so violent that the German Orpo police were called upon to suppress it At the same time the rich cultural life included active theatres concerts and banned religious gatherings all of which countered official attempts at dehumanization Much information about the Jewish day to day life in that period can be found in the ghetto archive of Lucjan Dobroszycki from YIVO 46 nbsp Photographs such as this served to record the horrors of ghetto life for posterity The photographers of the statistical department of the Judenrat besides their official work illegally took photos of everyday scenes and atrocities One of them Henryk Ross managed to bury the negatives and dig them up after liberation at 12 Jagielonska Street Because of this archive the reality of the ghetto was recorded and preserved The archivists also began creating a ghetto encyclopedia and a lexicon of the local slang that emerged in their daily lives The Jewish population maintained several illegal radios with which they kept abreast of events in the outside world At first the radio could only receive German broadcast which is why it was codenamed the Liar in the diaries Among the news that quickly spread around the ghetto was the Allied invasion of Normandy on the day it occurred 44 Since production was essential to the German war effort the slowing down of work was also a form of resistance In the later years leftist workers adopted the slogan P P pracuj powoli or work slowly to hinder their own output on behalf of the Wehrmacht 47 Escape and rescue efforts nbsp The Polish rescuers and the Jewish survivors plant Trees of Memory during the ceremony at the Park of the Rescued Park Ocalalych w Lodzi pl inaugurated in Lodz in August 2009 A number of Poles from Lodz were awarded titles of Righteous among the Nations by Yad Vashem in Jerusalem 42 On their and their families initiative a Survivors Park adorned with monuments was built in Lodz measuring 3 660 square metres 39 400 sq ft It was inaugurated in August 2009 by the President of Poland Lech Kaczynski in the presence of prominent dignitaries 48 A year later the Park was awarded a medal for top urban design by the Towarzystwo Urbanistow Polskich 49 One of the Poles who helped the Jews in Lodz was a Catholic midwife Stanislawa Leszczynska She and her family provided food clothing and fake documents to many Jewish fugitives Eventually however she and her family were arrested by the Germans She and her daughter were deported to Auschwitz Later on she became known for her effort to save many Jewish children her sons were sent to stone quarries of Mauthausen 50 51 52 53 54 55 Notable inmatesThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Lodz Ghetto news newspapers books scholar JSTOR January 2020 Learn how and when to remove this message Lucjan Dobroszycki 1919 1995 scientist and historian 56 Mendel Grossman 1913 1945 photographer died during the Death Marches Georg John 1879 1941 actor from films such as M and The Last Laugh died November 1941 Heda Margolius Kovaly 1919 2010 author of an autobiography Under a Cruel Star 57 Yisrael Kristal 1903 2017 the world s oldest living man in 2016 2017 and among the ten oldest verified men ever Was deported from the Lodz Ghetto to Auschwitz in August 1944 but barely managed to survive with him being severely emaciated and near death at the time of his liberation by Red Army troops in January 1945 He subsequently recovered and died over 70 years later in August 2017 just a month before what would have been his 114th birthday Rywka Lipszyc 1929 1945 diarist deported to Auschwitz in 1944 then to Bergen Belsen in 1945 presumed to have died September 1945 Rudolf Margolius 1913 1952 victim of the Slansky trial Chava Rosenfarb 1923 2011 writer Oskar Rosenfeld 1884 1944 writer ghetto chronicler killed at Auschwitz Henryk Ross 1910 1991 photographer who documented conditions in the camp Mordechai Chaim Rumkowski 1877 1944 Judenalteste Elder of the Jews head of the Judenrat killed at Auschwitz Ruth Minsky Sender born 1926 author The Cage set partly in the ghetto Jakob Edmund Speyer 1872 1942 medicinal chemist co inventor of oxycodone Eukodal died on 5 May 1942 58 59 Salomon Szapiro aka Dr Szeffer 1882 1941 medical doctor and chess master died in the ghetto 18 November 1941 Jack Tramiel 1928 2012 founder of Commodore International owner of Atari Maurycy Trebacz 1861 1941 painter died of hunger in the ghetto on 29 January 1941See also nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Lodz Ghetto Jewish ghettos in German occupied Poland Kinder KZ German concentration camp for Polish children inside the Lodz Ghetto The Story of Chaim Rumkowski and the Jews of Lodz a 1982 documentary runtime 55 min Notes Swiss sociologist Werner Rings identifies four distinct forms of ghetto resistance symbolic polemic and defensive with offensive resistance including sabotage constituting its final form citation needed References Horwitz 2009 p 27 Plan hammered out by Friedrich Uebelhoer a b c d e Horwitz Gordon J 2009 Ghettostadt Lodz and the making of a Nazi city Harvard University Press Cambridge Massachusetts pp 27 54 55 62 ISBN 978 0 674 03879 0 Retrieved 21 March 2015 a b The United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Encyclopedia of Camps and Ghettos 1933 1945 Geoffrey P Megargee Martin C Dean and Mel Hecker Volume II part A pp 75 82 a b c Biuletyn Informacyjny Obchodow 60 Rocznicy Likwidacji Litzmannstadt Getto Nr 1 2 The establishment of Litzmannstadt Ghetto Torah Code website Retrieved 21 March 2015 a b c d e f g Shirley Rotbein Flaum 2007 Lodz Ghetto Deportations and Statistics Timeline JewishGen Home Page Retrieved 26 March 2015 Source Encyclopedia of the Holocaust 1990 Baranowski Dobroszycki Wiesenthal Yad Vashem Timeline of the Holocaust others The statistical data compiled on the basis of Glossary of 2 077 Jewish towns in Poland Archived from the original on 8 February 2016 by Virtual Shtetl Museum of the History of the Polish Jews as well as Getta Zydowskie by Gedeon in Polish and Ghetto List by Michael Peters in English Accessed 25 March 2015 a b Abraham J Peck 1997 The Agony of the Lodz Ghetto 1941 1944 The Chronicle of the Lodz Ghetto 1941 1944 by Lucjan Dobroszycki and The United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Washington D C The Simon Wiesenthal Center Retrieved 25 March 2015 a b c Jennifer Rosenberg 2006 The Lodz Ghetto Part 1 of 2 20th Century History About com Archived from the original on 30 April 2006 Retrieved 19 March 2015 Lodz Ghetto Inside a Community Under Siege by Adelson Alan and Robert Lapides ed New York 1989 The Documents of the Lodz Ghetto An Inventory of the Nachman Zonabend Collection by Web Marek ed New York 1988 The Holocaust The Fate of European Jewry by Yahil Leni New York 1991 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint unfit URL link a b Mariusz Kulesza Struktura narodowosciowa i wyznaniowa ludnosci Lodzi Archived 8 April 2020 at the Wayback Machine PDF file direct download Journals and footage on YouTube of the establishment of Lodz Ghetto by Nazi occupants Holocaust Encyclopedia 20 June 2014 Jewish Refugees 1939 German Invasion of Poland United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Retrieved 21 March 2015 Horwitz 2009 page 49 Horwitz 2009 page 62 Dobroszycki 1987 1984 p 52 Holocaust Encyclopedia 2014 Ghettos United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Archived from the original on 15 August 2012 Retrieved 23 March 2015 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint unfit URL link Dobroszycki 1987 1984 p 61 a b Emmanuel Ringelblum Polish Jewish Relations During the Second World War Northwestern University Press 1992 p 86 ISBN 0 8101 0963 8 Sinnreich Helene J 27 November 2017 Hunger in the ghettos The Ghetto in Global History Routledge pp 110 126 doi 10 4324 9781315099774 9 ISBN 978 1 315 09977 4 Ilustrowana Encyklopedia Historii Lodzi p 18 a b Carmelo Lisciotto 2007 Chaim Mordechai Rumkowski The Lodz Ghetto Holocaust Education amp Archive Research Team Retrieved 22 March 2015 a b Trunk amp Shapiro 2008 p xlii Trunk amp Shapiro 2008 p 117 Minimal need Trunk amp Shapiro 2008 p 223 Natural death Dobroszycki 1987 1984 p 59 Dobroszycki 1987 1984 pp 68 69 Trunk amp Shapiro 2008 p 52 Lodz Ghetto A History a b Simone Schweber Debbie Findling 2007 Teaching the Holocaust Torah Aura Productions p 107 ISBN 978 1 891662 91 1 Retrieved 24 March 2015 a b c Michal Latosinski Litzmannstadt Ghetto The Calendar 1942 1945 Traces of the Litzmannstadt Getto A Guide to the Past LodzGhetto com home Struan Robertson Hamburg Police Battalions during the Second World War Archived from the original on 22 February 2008 Retrieved 24 September 2009 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint unfit URL link ITS Erecting the Lodz Ghetto February 1940 International Tracing Service Internet Archive Retrieved 29 March 2015 Michal Latosinski The camp for Polish children at Przemystowa Street Gewerbestrasse Traces of the Litzmannstadt Getto A Guide to the Past LodzGhetto com home Retrieved 21 March 2015 Frank August Translation of Document No 724 Prosecution Exhibit 472 Letter by Frank to SS Garrison Administration and Concentration Camp Auschwitz 26 September 1942 Concerning Utilization of Property of Jews United States of America v Oswald Pohl et al Case No 4 the Pohl Trial vol V pp 965 967 archived from the original on 22 November 2004 via The Mazal Library a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint unfit URL link a b Yechiam Weitz 2006 Working against time book review Haaretz com a b Dobroszycki 1987 1984 p lxi Dobroszycki 1987 1984 p lxii The camp for Polish children Litzmannstadt Ghetto Retrieved 16 April 2019 The establishment of Litzmannstadt Ghetto Litzmannstadt Getto Retrieved 17 April 2019 Balulis Sabina Raport 2017 Children THE CAMP AT PRZEMYSLOWA STREET Centrum Dialogu Archived from the original on 2 October 2020 Retrieved 17 April 2019 a b c d SJ 2007 Chronicle 1940 1944 The Lodz Ghetto Holocaust Education amp Archive Research Team Retrieved 22 March 2015 a b Golden Juliet 2006 Remembering Chelmno In Vitelli Karen D Colwell Chanthaphonh Chip eds Archeological Ethics 2nd ed AltaMira Press p 189 ISBN 0 7591 0963 X Retrieved 25 March 2015 1944 W Warszawie powstanie w Lodzi likwidacja getta Wyborcza 1 August 2014 Retrieved 6 October 2019 a b Archives 2015 Polish Righteous Lodz POLIN Museum of the History of Polish Jews Retrieved 25 March 2015 Trunk amp Shapiro 2008 p 53 Czestochowa a b Trunk amp Shapiro 2008 p 53 Heberer Patricia Children During the Holocaust Plymouth AltaMira Press 2011 The Lodz Ghetto had some forty three elementary schools two high schools and one vocational training facility serving some 63 percent of the ghettos school aged youngsters page needed Dobroszycki 1987 Trunk amp Shapiro 2008 pp 53 56 Pracuj powoli Uroczystosci w Lodzi 28 sierpnia 2009 Polin Archived from the original on 21 April 2016 Retrieved 27 March 2015 Pomnik Polakow odznaczonych Medalem Sprawiedliwych Wsrod Narodow Swiata w Lodzi Dom i Miasto in Polish Matthew M Anger 4 January 2005 Midwife at Auschwitz The Story of Stanislawa Leszczynska Seattle Catholic Retrieved 21 June 2015 Almanach Polonii Wydawn Interpress 1984 p 60 W czasach okupacji dom Leszczynskich byl baz dla sciganych przede wszystkim dla Zydow Tu otrzymywali zywnosc ubranie dokumenty ktore potajemnie wyrabial maz Stanislawy During the occupation the house of Leszczynscy was a base for the fugitives particularly Jews There they received food clothes and documents secretly forged by Stanislawa s husband Stanislawa Leszczynska www mp pl Did You Know The Polish Catholic midwife of Auschwitz Sydney Jewish Museum 7 May 2018 Stanislawa Leszczynska www3 archidiecezja lodz pl Kazimierz Gabryel 1989 Stanislawa Leszczynska 1896 1974 Diecezjalne Wydawn Lodzkie p 30 ISBN 978 83 85022 04 6 Dom przy ul Wspolnej 3 gdzie obecnie zamieszkali Leszczynscy stal sie miejscem skad bez przerwy plynela pomoc dla Zydow The House at Wspolna 3 street where currently Leszczynscy lived became a place from which aid constantly reached out to the Jews Hoffman Allison 10 April 2013 How an NYU Scholar Became the Keeper of Poland s Jewish Heritage Tablet Magazine Retrieved 18 January 2019 Grimes William 9 December 2010 Heda Kovaly Czech Who Wrote of Totalitarianism Dies at 91 The New York Times Retrieved 18 January 2019 The Holocaust a history of the Jews of Europe during the Second World War 1st American ed Holt Rinehart and Winston 1986 p 346 ISBN 0 03 062416 9 Retrieved 3 June 2020 The chronicle of the Lodz ghetto 1941 1944 English ed Yale University Press 1984 p 176 ISBN 0 300 03924 7 SourcesDobroszycki Lucjan ed 1987 1984 The Chronicle of the Lodz Ghetto 1941 1944 Translated by Richard Lourie Joachim Neugroschel et al Yale University Press Abridged edition Hardcover ISBN 978 0 300 03924 5 via Google Books ISBN 0 300 03208 0 Paperback 1987 Horwitz Gordon J 2009 Ghettostadt Lodz and the making of a Nazi city Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press pp 27 54 55 62 ISBN 978 0 674 03879 0 Retrieved 21 March 2015 via Google Books preview Trunk Isaiah Shapiro Robert Moses 2008 2006 Lodz Ghetto A History Bloomington Ind Indiana University Press ISBN 978 0 253 34755 8 Retrieved 29 September 2015 via Google Books preview Online Exhibit Give Me Your Children Voices from the Lodz Ghetto Internet Archive United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Library Bibliography Lodz Ghetto United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Archiwum Panstwowe w Lodzi Polish State Archive in Lodz Ghetto collection Archived 25 June 2014 at the Wayback Machine Haunting Voices From Lodz Ghetto Never Again online Holocaust memorial David Graham 17 March 2002 Full text of Rumkowski s Give Me Your Children speech with index and commentary by David Graham Retrieved 28 July 2015 Dr B Lee Hobbs American university students discuss the implications of the Holocaust Archived 30 September 2011 at the Wayback Machine From Diary of Lodz Ghetto inmate Dawid Sierakowiak ISBN 0 19 512285 2 Aerial photos of the ghetto from May 1942 rotated so that north is to the right 1 Archived 5 September 2011 at the Wayback Machine 2 Archived 20 September 2011 at the Wayback Machine For orientation note the Jewish Cemetery bottom right on second photo which formed the easternmost portion of the ghetto I Completely Forgot that I Was Hungry Youth Groups in the Lodz Ghetto Archived 1 October 2012 at the Wayback Machine online exhibition by Yad Vashem Yad Vashem 2015 Lodz Ghetto Yad Vashem website Overview Selected photographs Retrieved 28 July 2015 Simon Says Project a memoir of Holocaust survivor Simon Lewenberg 2012 homepage Colour slides from the German ghetto administration in Lodz in the Jewish Museum Frankfurt The Lodz Ghetto Photographs of Henryk Ross at the Art Gallery of Ontario LodzGhetto ago net collection of Holocaust photographs interactive Further readingAlan Adelson and Robert Lapides Lodz Ghetto A Community History Told in Diaries Journals and Documents Viking 1989 ISBN 0 670 82983 8 Bostock William Language policy and use in the Lodz ghetto Web Journal of Modern Language Linguistics 3 98 June 1998 Bethke Svenja 2020 Attempts to Take Action In a Coerced Community Petitions to the Jewish Council in the Lodz Ghetto during World War II In Kaplan Thomas Pegelow Gruner Wolf eds Resisting Persecution Jews and Their Petitions during the Holocaust Berghahn Books ISBN 978 1 78920 720 0 Peter Klein Die Gettoverwaltung Litzmannstadt 1940 1944 Eine Dienststelle im Spannungsfeld von Kommunalburokratie und staatlicher Verfolgungspolitik Hamburg Hamburger Edition 2009 ISBN 978 3 86854 203 5 Andrea Low Juden im Getto Litzmannstadt Lebensbedingungen Selbstwahrnehmung Verhalten Wallstein Gottingen 2006 Xenia Modrzejewska Mrozowska Andrzej Rozycki Marek Szukalak eds Terra Incognita the Struggling Art of Arie Ben Menachem and Mendel Grosman Lodz Oficyna Bibliofilow 2009 ISBN 978 83 61743 16 3 Michal Unger ed The Last Ghetto Life in the Lodz Ghetto 1940 1944 Yad Vashem 1995 ISBN 965 308 045 8 Horwitz Gordon J Ghettostadt Lodz and the Making of a Nazi City Cambridge The Belknap Press of Harvard University Press 2008 Terrace Books ISBN 0 299 22124 5 External linksLodz Poland at JewishGen 51 47 35 N 19 27 50 E 51 79306 N 19 46389 E 51 79306 19 46389 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Lodz Ghetto amp oldid 1219280970, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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