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Nowy Sącz Ghetto

The Nowy Sącz Ghetto known in German as Ghetto von Neu-Sandez and in Yiddish as צאנז (Tsanz; Zanc) or נײ-סאנץ (Nay-Sants; Nojzanc) was a World War II ghetto set up by Nazi Germany for the purpose of persecution and exploitation of Polish Jews in the city of Nowy Sącz pronounced [ˈnɔvɨ ˈsɔnt͡ʂ] during the occupation of Poland (1939–45).[2]

The Nowy Sącz Ghetto
Street in the Nowy Sącz Ghetto, c. 1941
Sącz
Nowy Sącz Ghetto
Location of Nowy Sącz in Poland today
Location49°38′00″N 20°43′00″E / 49.6333°N 20.7166°E / 49.6333; 20.7166
Date1939–1942
Incident typeImprisonment, mass shooting, forced labor, starvation, deportations to death camps
PerpetratorsNazi SS, Orpo police battalions
CampBełżec extermination camp[1]
Victims20,000 Polish Jews

The relocation of Jews continued ever since the German army rolled into Nowy Sącz on 6 September 1939 in the first week of the invasion of Poland. Synagogues and prayer houses were devastated and turned into storehouses.[3] The Ghetto was filled with 18,000 prisoners from the city and all neighbouring settlements and closed off from the outside officially in June 1941. It was liquidated one year later with all Jewish men, women and children rounded up and sent aboard Holocaust trains to Bełżec extermination camp in late August 1942.[2]

Background

According to records, historic Nowy Sącz was populated by the Jews at least since 1469.[4] Throughout centuries Jews contributed greatly to the town's overall economy. Most Jewish families lived in the Zakamienica neighbourhood by the Kamienica river. The first brick-and-mortar synagogue was built at Nowy Sącz in 1699, tax-exempt.[5] Nowy Sącz was an influential centre of Hasidic Judaism and the Zionist movement dating back to the 19th century. Some 30% of the total population of 34,000 residents of Nowy Sącz were Jewish before the German-Soviet invasion of Poland in 1939.[1] In the city centre 90% of tenement houses were owned by Jews.[4]

On 6 September 1939 the Germans took over Nowy Sącz and renamed it Neu-Sandez. The command of the city was given to SS-Obersturmführer Heinrich Hamann (de) (pl) from the Gestapo.[6] Nowy Sącz became the seat of Kreis Neu-Sandez in Distrikt Krakau of the General Government, in line with the Nazi-Soviet pact against Poland.[7] The persecution of Jews began soon thereafter.[2] The new German administration ordered all Jewish businesses closed pending confiscation proceedings.[2] In the spring of 1940 the Judenrat was formed on German orders.[2] The first mass execution of Jews and Poles took place in May 1940,[2] in the course of the German AB-Aktion in Poland.[8] The city block surrounding the German office of Sicherheitspolizei was cleared of all so-called undesirables.[9] Nearly 1,000 people were murdered.[1]

Ghetto history

Dispossessed Jews were resettled to Nowy Sącz in several major deportation actions from the neighbouring towns of Muszyna, Krynica (1,000–1,200),[10] Piwniczna, but also from Łódź, Sieradz, Kraków, Lwów and Bielsko.[2] The ghetto formation was pronounced by Hamann in June 1941 at which time a 2–3 metre wall was erected along its perimeter,[4][11] although the ghetto zone existed already since 12 July 1940.[4] It consisted of two interconnected parts of the city centre, both very small. One of them, around Kazimierza Wielkiego Street by the castle, and the second one on the other side of the river, in the so-called Piekło neighbourhood across the Lwowska Street bridge. Some 12,000 Jews were forced to relocate there. In the following months, more Jews were resettled to Nowy Sącz from the General Government and territories of Poland annexed by Nazi Germany; forced by the SS to subsist on little to nothing in extremely overcrowded conditions. Often 20 people were assigned to one room. The Ghetto was entirely dependent on the German authorities for food. Starvation rations were introduced. In the fall of 1941, some 30 Jews where caught and executed following failed escape attempt across the border to the Soviet occupied eastern part of Poland.[2] The total number of Jews in the ghetto grew to 18,000.[4]

 
SS-Obersturmführer Heinrich Hamann in charge of ghetto liquidation

A number of forced labour camps were set up in the vicinity of Nowy Sącz for the able-bodied prisoners, including the camp in Rożnów (improperly, Różanów) as well as camps in Stary Sącz, Chełmiec, Rytro, and Lipie. Several hundred men were sent to Rabka.[4] All Jewish slave labour was housed at the Zakamienica ghetto located between the river bank and the streets of Zdrojowa (to the north), Hallera, Barska, and Lwowska (to the south).[4] In total, 2,500 Jews were sent away.[1] A system of gradually escalating terror was introduced with publicly announced executions. About 200 men were murdered for alleged Zionist activities, another 70 men were shot for alleged cigarette-smuggling, both within two days of each other.[2]

During the German Operation Reinhard which marked the deadliest phase of the Holocaust, from 23 August 1942 the final ghetto liquidation action took place over a three-day period, under the guise of "resettlement in the East" (Umsiedlung).[12] Prior to that, families with the elderly, and the sick, were ordered to relocate to the ghetto at Kazimierza Wielkiego Street. Most of those unable to leave home for the trains at an instance, were shot point blank by Ordnungspolizei during early morning roundups. The long column of Jewish prisoners, gathered for deportation, were led to an open field by the river, not far from the rail bridge across Dunajec. They were ordered to bring travel food, light luggage, and keys to their homes, because they would be transferred to labour camps in Reichskommissariat Ukraine. During a selection, approximately 750 young males were taken to be sent to labour camps in nearby Muszyna, Rożnów, and Sędziszów Małopolski.[11] All other Jews, estimated at at least 15,000 were kept on the river bank overnight, and taken in three Holocaust transports to the Bełżec death camp at 25–28 August 1942.[11] The Neu-Sandez (Nowy Sącz) Ghetto was no more.[9]

The commandant of the city and head of the Neu-Sandez SD, SS-Obersturmführer Heinrich Hamann from the Gestapo,[6] who had killed dozens of Jews with his own hands during the ghetto existence and its murderous liquidation, went on to live normal life in West Germany after World War II. He was arrested twenty years after the fact by the German authorities, and in 1962 put on trial at Bochum,[13] along with 14 members of his department for complicity in the murder of 17,000 Polish Jews from Neu-Sandez.[14] Hamann was charged with 76 cases of murder based on witness testimony,[15] and received a life sentence.[16]

Holocaust rescue

One of the most far-reaching rescue missions in Nowy Sącz was conducted by Anna Sokołowska née Hadziacka, a Catholic high school teacher who run a safe-house in her apartment at Szujskiego 10 Street for Jewish students. She procured false documents for them, bought food, clothing, medicine, harboured the sick, found Polish families for Jewish children, and delivered the ghetto correspondence. She was caught by Gestapo with two Jewish women in her house, and sent to Ravensbrück where she was killed with a phenol injection according to one account. The Jewish survivors remembered her; Sokołowska was bestowed the title of Righteous in 1989.[17]

 
The Król family of the Polish Righteous from Krasne (c. 1937–39) in front of their house west of Nowy Sącz. Sitting: Piotr Król (d. 1956) and Zenobia (d. 1979), both recognized by Yad Vashem posthumously in 1982

One day ahead of the ghetto liquidation, the Jewish family of Emil and Sala Steinlauf with their four children: Lola, Leon, Róża (Rosa), and Janina, managed to escape.[18] They knew Zenobia and Piotr Król family (pictured) with their seven children, from before the war; the Steinlaufs helped the Króls survive the winter of 1939.[18] In gratitude, Zenobia and Piotr brought food to the ghetto for their friends illegally, against strict Nazi orders which forbade this under penalty of death.[18] Upon Steinlaufs successful flight from the deportation to Belzec, the Króls arranged a secret living space for them in the attic for the following three years.[18] Their children used to play together while in hiding; between 15 August 1942 and 30 January 1945. All survived. The Steinlaufs emigrated to Israel after the war ended, but both families remained in contact. Nine members of the Król family were awarded the titles of the Righteous in January 1982, thanks to the Steinlaufs' surviving children.[19]

During the ghetto liquidation action, two Jewish sisters Helena (Lena) and Genowefa Brandel-Buchbinder (age 23 and 29 respectively) escaped dressed as farm girls. Their brothers Kazimierz (age 24) and Władysław escaped from the slave labour camp in Chełmiec, to join them. They found refuge at the distant home of the Sikoń family of the Polish Righteous. Both, the rescuers and the rescued had little to eat. The Sikoń children stole food from the neighbouring farms to feed them all. Genowefa died in March 1943 from tuberculosis. Everybody else survived the war. Zofia Sikoń died in 1971; the Sikoń children, Stanisław and Anna, were bestowed the titles of the Righteous in May 2000.[20]

Jewish doctor, Juliusz Hellereich (Bernard Ingram) and his Polish fiancé Irena found shelter at the small apartment of Polish Righteous, Marian Gołębiowski, lawyer by profession residing in Nowy Sącz for the war. In search of safe hideaways, Gołębiowski travelled with them under false names as the Jakobiszyn couple to other locations. All three stayed together until the end of the occupation and survived while helping other people as well. Gołębiowski was honoured by Yad Vashem in 1989 at the age of 90.[21] Stefan Kiełbasa (age 18), living in Nowy Sącz, was shot with one of his Christian friends in 1942 by the Gestapo for supplying Jews with forged "Aryan" identity documents.[22] Stanisław Adamczyk from Nowy Sącz county was beaten to death by the Germans in the spring of 1943 for sheltering a single Jew.[23] Another Christian Pole from Nowy Sącz county, physician Józef Pietrzykowski, was arrested and executed in winter of 1942 for providing medical help to a sick Jewish child.[24]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d Justyna Filochowska; Anna Rutkowski. "History of Nowy Sącz". Virtual Shtetl (in English and Polish). Translated by Zofia Sochańska. POLIN Museum of the History of Polish Jews. Retrieved 6 April 2016.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i Krzysztof Bielawski; Anna Rutkowski; Aleksandra Bilewicz (2015). . Virtual Shtetl. POLIN Museum of the History of Polish Jews. p. 3. Archived from the original on 20 April 2016. Retrieved 6 April 2016.
  3. ^ Gedeon, Justyna Filochowska; Anna Rutkowski (2009). "Synagoga w Nowym Sączu" (in Polish). Virtual Shtetl.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g Marta Duch; Mateusz Dyngosz (2012). [On the trail of Jewish history and culture of Lesser Poland: Nowy Sącz]. Małopolskie Szlaki Dziedzictwa Żydowskiego. Archived from the original on 9 May 2016. Retrieved 8 April 2016.
  5. ^ Piotr M. A. Cywiński; Anna Marta Szczepan-Wojnarska; Kaja Wieczorek. . Serwis informacyjny Diapozytyw. Instytut Adama Mickiewicza. Archived from the original on 23 October 2004.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  6. ^ a b Łukasz Połomski (2013). "Crimes of the Obersurmführer Heinrich Hamann in the Nowy Sącz Ghetto". Kamienica z historią (in English and Polish). Stowarzyszenie Rodzicielstwa Zastępczego “Betlejem”.
  7. ^ Czesław Madajczyk (1988). Die okkupationspolitik Nazideutschlands in Polen 1939–1945 (in German). Pahl-Rugenstein, Akademie-Verlag Berlin. ISBN 3-05-000302-2.
  8. ^ J. Bieńka (17 April 2013). "Poszukiwany Heinrich Hamann". Heinrich Hamann – w cieniu swastyki. Rocznik Sądecki, tom XXII.
  9. ^ a b Robin O'Neil (2011). Rabka Police School. ISBN 978-1-908128-15-7. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)
  10. ^ Avraham Klevan (1982). "The Jewish Communities Of Poland (alphabetically – letter: K)". Jerusalem: We Remember.
  11. ^ a b c Krzysztof Bielawski; et al. (2015). . Virtual Shtetl. pp. 1–4. Archived from the original on 20 April 2016. Retrieved 6 April 2016.
  12. ^ Wolfgang Curilla (2011). Der Judenmord in Polen und die deutsche Ordnungspolizei 1939–1945. Verlag Ferdinand Schöningh GmbH & CoKG. p. 397. ISBN 978-3-506-77043-1.
  13. ^ Jewish Telegraphic Agency (3 January 1962). . The Bochum prosecution office preparing a trial against 35 former security police officers in the 1940–42 period. Bonn. Archived from the original on 5 May 2016 – via Internet Archive.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  14. ^ Nans Lamm. "Trial of Nazi crimes" (PDF). Central Europe: West Germany. American Jewish Yearbook. 350 (7/24 in PDF) – via American Jewish Committee Archives.
  15. ^ Jewish Telegraphic Agency, JTA (17 June 1966). "The World Over: Bonn". The Canadian Jewish Chronicle – via Google News Archive Search.
  16. ^ Faculteit der Rechtsgeleerdheid – Universiteit van Amsterdam. "Court: LG Bochum 660722, Case Nr. 635". Court decisions and press reports. Justiz und NS-Verbrechen Vol. XXIV, Nazi Crimes on Trial.
  17. ^ Martyna Grądzka (2014). "Sokołowska Anna". Sprawiedliwy wśród Narodów Świata – tytuł przyznany: 1989. Historia pomocy. POLIN Museum of the History of Polish Jews.
  18. ^ a b c d Yad Vashem (quote from a certificate of honor): The Krol family harbored their friends, the six members of the Steinlauf family – for almost three years. They hid them in their loft. This was particularly dangerous, as the house was not a good place for shelter: it was on a crossroads and far from the forest. In close vicinity, Germans carried out numerous "pacifications" (mass executions of civilians). Urząd Miasta Nowego Sącza (2016). "Sądeczanie w telewizji: Sprawiedliwy Artur Król". Nowy Sącz: Oficjalna strona miasta. Komunikaty Biura Prasowego.
  19. ^ Dr Martyna Grądzka-Rejak (November 2015). "Rodzina Królów". Sprawiedliwy wśród Narodów Świata – tytuł przyznany: 1982. Historia pomocy. POLIN Museum of the History of Polish Jews.
  20. ^ Karolina Dzięciołowska (2010). "Rodzina Sikoniów" [The Sikoń Family of the Righteous]. Sprawiedliwy wśród Narodów Świata – tytuł przyznany: 2000. Historia pomocy. POLIN Museum of the History of Polish Jews.
  21. ^ Joel Goldenberg (11 November 2009). "Holocaust heroes from Poland honoured in Montreal". Quebec: The Suburban.
  22. ^ Pogonowski, Iwo (1997). Jews in Poland: A Documentary History (2 illustrated ed.). University of Michigan: Hippocrene Books. p. 118. ISBN 0781806046.
  23. ^ Main commission for the investigation of crimes against the Polish nation; Główna Komisja Badania Zbrodni przeciwko Narodowi Polskiemu--Instytut Pamięci Narodowej; Institute of National Memory; Polish Society for the Righteous Among Nations (1993). Those who helped: Polish rescuers of Jews during the Holocaust. Agencja Wydawnicza Mako. pp. 48, 93. ISBN 9788390057361.
  24. ^ Władysław Bartoszewski; Zofia Lewinówna (1970). The Samaritans: heroes of the holocaust. Twayne Publishers. p. 431.

Further reading

External links

nowy, sącz, ghetto, known, german, ghetto, sandez, yiddish, צאנז, tsanz, zanc, נײ, סאנץ, sants, nojzanc, world, ghetto, nazi, germany, purpose, persecution, exploitation, polish, jews, city, nowy, sącz, pronounced, ˈnɔvɨ, ˈsɔnt, during, occupation, poland, 193. The Nowy Sacz Ghetto known in German as Ghetto von Neu Sandez and in Yiddish as צאנז Tsanz Zanc or נײ סאנץ Nay Sants Nojzanc was a World War II ghetto set up by Nazi Germany for the purpose of persecution and exploitation of Polish Jews in the city of Nowy Sacz pronounced ˈnɔvɨ ˈsɔnt ʂ during the occupation of Poland 1939 45 2 The Nowy Sacz GhettoStreet in the Nowy Sacz Ghetto c 1941SaczNowy Sacz wartime location south east of Auschwitz during the Holocaust in occupied PolandNowy Sacz GhettoLocation of Nowy Sacz in Poland todayLocation49 38 00 N 20 43 00 E 49 6333 N 20 7166 E 49 6333 20 7166Date1939 1942Incident typeImprisonment mass shooting forced labor starvation deportations to death campsPerpetratorsNazi SS Orpo police battalionsCampBelzec extermination camp 1 Victims20 000 Polish JewsThe relocation of Jews continued ever since the German army rolled into Nowy Sacz on 6 September 1939 in the first week of the invasion of Poland Synagogues and prayer houses were devastated and turned into storehouses 3 The Ghetto was filled with 18 000 prisoners from the city and all neighbouring settlements and closed off from the outside officially in June 1941 It was liquidated one year later with all Jewish men women and children rounded up and sent aboard Holocaust trains to Belzec extermination camp in late August 1942 2 Contents 1 Background 2 Ghetto history 3 Holocaust rescue 4 See also 5 References 6 Further reading 7 External linksBackgroundAccording to records historic Nowy Sacz was populated by the Jews at least since 1469 4 Throughout centuries Jews contributed greatly to the town s overall economy Most Jewish families lived in the Zakamienica neighbourhood by the Kamienica river The first brick and mortar synagogue was built at Nowy Sacz in 1699 tax exempt 5 Nowy Sacz was an influential centre of Hasidic Judaism and the Zionist movement dating back to the 19th century Some 30 of the total population of 34 000 residents of Nowy Sacz were Jewish before the German Soviet invasion of Poland in 1939 1 In the city centre 90 of tenement houses were owned by Jews 4 On 6 September 1939 the Germans took over Nowy Sacz and renamed it Neu Sandez The command of the city was given to SS Obersturmfuhrer Heinrich Hamann de pl from the Gestapo 6 Nowy Sacz became the seat of Kreis Neu Sandez in Distrikt Krakau of the General Government in line with the Nazi Soviet pact against Poland 7 The persecution of Jews began soon thereafter 2 The new German administration ordered all Jewish businesses closed pending confiscation proceedings 2 In the spring of 1940 the Judenrat was formed on German orders 2 The first mass execution of Jews and Poles took place in May 1940 2 in the course of the German AB Aktion in Poland 8 The city block surrounding the German office of Sicherheitspolizei was cleared of all so called undesirables 9 Nearly 1 000 people were murdered 1 Ghetto historyDispossessed Jews were resettled to Nowy Sacz in several major deportation actions from the neighbouring towns of Muszyna Krynica 1 000 1 200 10 Piwniczna but also from Lodz Sieradz Krakow Lwow and Bielsko 2 The ghetto formation was pronounced by Hamann in June 1941 at which time a 2 3 metre wall was erected along its perimeter 4 11 although the ghetto zone existed already since 12 July 1940 4 It consisted of two interconnected parts of the city centre both very small One of them around Kazimierza Wielkiego Street by the castle and the second one on the other side of the river in the so called Pieklo neighbourhood across the Lwowska Street bridge Some 12 000 Jews were forced to relocate there In the following months more Jews were resettled to Nowy Sacz from the General Government and territories of Poland annexed by Nazi Germany forced by the SS to subsist on little to nothing in extremely overcrowded conditions Often 20 people were assigned to one room The Ghetto was entirely dependent on the German authorities for food Starvation rations were introduced In the fall of 1941 some 30 Jews where caught and executed following failed escape attempt across the border to the Soviet occupied eastern part of Poland 2 The total number of Jews in the ghetto grew to 18 000 4 nbsp SS Obersturmfuhrer Heinrich Hamann in charge of ghetto liquidationA number of forced labour camps were set up in the vicinity of Nowy Sacz for the able bodied prisoners including the camp in Roznow improperly Rozanow as well as camps in Stary Sacz Chelmiec Rytro and Lipie Several hundred men were sent to Rabka 4 All Jewish slave labour was housed at the Zakamienica ghetto located between the river bank and the streets of Zdrojowa to the north Hallera Barska and Lwowska to the south 4 In total 2 500 Jews were sent away 1 A system of gradually escalating terror was introduced with publicly announced executions About 200 men were murdered for alleged Zionist activities another 70 men were shot for alleged cigarette smuggling both within two days of each other 2 During the German Operation Reinhard which marked the deadliest phase of the Holocaust from 23 August 1942 the final ghetto liquidation action took place over a three day period under the guise of resettlement in the East Umsiedlung 12 Prior to that families with the elderly and the sick were ordered to relocate to the ghetto at Kazimierza Wielkiego Street Most of those unable to leave home for the trains at an instance were shot point blank by Ordnungspolizei during early morning roundups The long column of Jewish prisoners gathered for deportation were led to an open field by the river not far from the rail bridge across Dunajec They were ordered to bring travel food light luggage and keys to their homes because they would be transferred to labour camps in Reichskommissariat Ukraine During a selection approximately 750 young males were taken to be sent to labour camps in nearby Muszyna Roznow and Sedziszow Malopolski 11 All other Jews estimated at at least 15 000 were kept on the river bank overnight and taken in three Holocaust transports to the Belzec death camp at 25 28 August 1942 11 The Neu Sandez Nowy Sacz Ghetto was no more 9 The commandant of the city and head of the Neu Sandez SD SS Obersturmfuhrer Heinrich Hamann from the Gestapo 6 who had killed dozens of Jews with his own hands during the ghetto existence and its murderous liquidation went on to live normal life in West Germany after World War II He was arrested twenty years after the fact by the German authorities and in 1962 put on trial at Bochum 13 along with 14 members of his department for complicity in the murder of 17 000 Polish Jews from Neu Sandez 14 Hamann was charged with 76 cases of murder based on witness testimony 15 and received a life sentence 16 Holocaust rescueOne of the most far reaching rescue missions in Nowy Sacz was conducted by Anna Sokolowska nee Hadziacka a Catholic high school teacher who run a safe house in her apartment at Szujskiego 10 Street for Jewish students She procured false documents for them bought food clothing medicine harboured the sick found Polish families for Jewish children and delivered the ghetto correspondence She was caught by Gestapo with two Jewish women in her house and sent to Ravensbruck where she was killed with a phenol injection according to one account The Jewish survivors remembered her Sokolowska was bestowed the title of Righteous in 1989 17 nbsp The Krol family of the Polish Righteous from Krasne c 1937 39 in front of their house west of Nowy Sacz Sitting Piotr Krol d 1956 and Zenobia d 1979 both recognized by Yad Vashem posthumously in 1982One day ahead of the ghetto liquidation the Jewish family of Emil and Sala Steinlauf with their four children Lola Leon Roza Rosa and Janina managed to escape 18 They knew Zenobia and Piotr Krol family pictured with their seven children from before the war the Steinlaufs helped the Krols survive the winter of 1939 18 In gratitude Zenobia and Piotr brought food to the ghetto for their friends illegally against strict Nazi orders which forbade this under penalty of death 18 Upon Steinlaufs successful flight from the deportation to Belzec the Krols arranged a secret living space for them in the attic for the following three years 18 Their children used to play together while in hiding between 15 August 1942 and 30 January 1945 All survived The Steinlaufs emigrated to Israel after the war ended but both families remained in contact Nine members of the Krol family were awarded the titles of the Righteous in January 1982 thanks to the Steinlaufs surviving children 19 During the ghetto liquidation action two Jewish sisters Helena Lena and Genowefa Brandel Buchbinder age 23 and 29 respectively escaped dressed as farm girls Their brothers Kazimierz age 24 and Wladyslaw escaped from the slave labour camp in Chelmiec to join them They found refuge at the distant home of the Sikon family of the Polish Righteous Both the rescuers and the rescued had little to eat The Sikon children stole food from the neighbouring farms to feed them all Genowefa died in March 1943 from tuberculosis Everybody else survived the war Zofia Sikon died in 1971 the Sikon children Stanislaw and Anna were bestowed the titles of the Righteous in May 2000 20 Jewish doctor Juliusz Hellereich Bernard Ingram and his Polish fiance Irena found shelter at the small apartment of Polish Righteous Marian Golebiowski lawyer by profession residing in Nowy Sacz for the war In search of safe hideaways Golebiowski travelled with them under false names as the Jakobiszyn couple to other locations All three stayed together until the end of the occupation and survived while helping other people as well Golebiowski was honoured by Yad Vashem in 1989 at the age of 90 21 Stefan Kielbasa age 18 living in Nowy Sacz was shot with one of his Christian friends in 1942 by the Gestapo for supplying Jews with forged Aryan identity documents 22 Stanislaw Adamczyk from Nowy Sacz county was beaten to death by the Germans in the spring of 1943 for sheltering a single Jew 23 Another Christian Pole from Nowy Sacz county physician Jozef Pietrzykowski was arrested and executed in winter of 1942 for providing medical help to a sick Jewish child 24 See alsoJewish ghettos in German occupied Poland The Holocaust in occupied Poland Nazi crimes against the Polish nationReferences a b c d Justyna Filochowska Anna Rutkowski History of Nowy Sacz Virtual Shtetl in English and Polish Translated by Zofia Sochanska POLIN Museum of the History of Polish Jews Retrieved 6 April 2016 a b c d e f g h i Krzysztof Bielawski Anna Rutkowski Aleksandra Bilewicz 2015 Nowy Sacz Ghetto Part three Virtual Shtetl POLIN Museum of the History of Polish Jews p 3 Archived from the original on 20 April 2016 Retrieved 6 April 2016 Gedeon Justyna Filochowska Anna Rutkowski 2009 Synagoga w Nowym Saczu in Polish Virtual Shtetl a b c d e f g Marta Duch Mateusz Dyngosz 2012 Sladami kultury i historii Zydow Malopolskich On the trail of Jewish history and culture of Lesser Poland Nowy Sacz Malopolskie Szlaki Dziedzictwa Zydowskiego Archived from the original on 9 May 2016 Retrieved 8 April 2016 Piotr M A Cywinski Anna Marta Szczepan Wojnarska Kaja Wieczorek Slady i Judaica Nowy Sacz Serwis informacyjny Diapozytyw Instytut Adama Mickiewicza Archived from the original on 23 October 2004 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint unfit URL link a b Lukasz Polomski 2013 Crimes of the Obersurmfuhrer Heinrich Hamann in the Nowy Sacz Ghetto Kamienica z historia in English and Polish Stowarzyszenie Rodzicielstwa Zastepczego Betlejem Czeslaw Madajczyk 1988 Die okkupationspolitik Nazideutschlands in Polen 1939 1945 in German Pahl Rugenstein Akademie Verlag Berlin ISBN 3 05 000302 2 J Bienka 17 April 2013 Poszukiwany Heinrich Hamann Heinrich Hamann w cieniu swastyki Rocznik Sadecki tom XXII a b Robin O Neil 2011 Rabka Police School ISBN 978 1 908128 15 7 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a work ignored help Avraham Klevan 1982 The Jewish Communities Of Poland alphabetically letter K Jerusalem We Remember a b c Krzysztof Bielawski et al 2015 Nowy Sacz Getto Part four Virtual Shtetl pp 1 4 Archived from the original on 20 April 2016 Retrieved 6 April 2016 Wolfgang Curilla 2011 Der Judenmord in Polen und die deutsche Ordnungspolizei 1939 1945 Verlag Ferdinand Schoningh GmbH amp CoKG p 397 ISBN 978 3 506 77043 1 Jewish Telegraphic Agency 3 January 1962 35 German Police Officers to Face Trial for Killing Jews in Poland The Bochum prosecution office preparing a trial against 35 former security police officers in the 1940 42 period Bonn Archived from the original on 5 May 2016 via Internet Archive a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint unfit URL link Nans Lamm Trial of Nazi crimes PDF Central Europe West Germany American Jewish Yearbook 350 7 24 in PDF via American Jewish Committee Archives Jewish Telegraphic Agency JTA 17 June 1966 The World Over Bonn The Canadian Jewish Chronicle via Google News Archive Search Faculteit der Rechtsgeleerdheid Universiteit van Amsterdam Court LG Bochum 660722 Case Nr 635 Court decisions and press reports Justiz und NS Verbrechen Vol XXIV Nazi Crimes on Trial Martyna Gradzka 2014 Sokolowska Anna Sprawiedliwy wsrod Narodow Swiata tytul przyznany 1989 Historia pomocy POLIN Museum of the History of Polish Jews a b c d Yad Vashem quote from a certificate of honor The Krol family harbored their friends the six members of the Steinlauf family for almost three years They hid them in their loft This was particularly dangerous as the house was not a good place for shelter it was on a crossroads and far from the forest In close vicinity Germans carried out numerous pacifications mass executions of civilians Urzad Miasta Nowego Sacza 2016 Sadeczanie w telewizji Sprawiedliwy Artur Krol Nowy Sacz Oficjalna strona miasta Komunikaty Biura Prasowego Dr Martyna Gradzka Rejak November 2015 Rodzina Krolow Sprawiedliwy wsrod Narodow Swiata tytul przyznany 1982 Historia pomocy POLIN Museum of the History of Polish Jews Karolina Dzieciolowska 2010 Rodzina Sikoniow The Sikon Family of the Righteous Sprawiedliwy wsrod Narodow Swiata tytul przyznany 2000 Historia pomocy POLIN Museum of the History of Polish Jews Joel Goldenberg 11 November 2009 Holocaust heroes from Poland honoured in Montreal Quebec The Suburban Pogonowski Iwo 1997 Jews in Poland A Documentary History 2 illustrated ed University of Michigan Hippocrene Books p 118 ISBN 0781806046 Main commission for the investigation of crimes against the Polish nation Glowna Komisja Badania Zbrodni przeciwko Narodowi Polskiemu Instytut Pamieci Narodowej Institute of National Memory Polish Society for the Righteous Among Nations 1993 Those who helped Polish rescuers of Jews during the Holocaust Agencja Wydawnicza Mako pp 48 93 ISBN 9788390057361 Wladyslaw Bartoszewski Zofia Lewinowna 1970 The Samaritans heroes of the holocaust Twayne Publishers p 431 Further readingAnna Dominik Pedagogical University of Krakow 24 April 2014 Swieczka dla 480 ofiar masakry Candle for the 480 victims of a massacre Twoj Sacz online in Polish Geoffrey P Megargee 2009 The United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Encyclopedia of Camps and Ghettos 1933 1945 Indiana University Press ISBN 0 253 00226 5 External links nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Nowy Sacz Nowy Sacz Poland at JewishGen Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Nowy Sacz Ghetto amp oldid 1144508756, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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