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Warsaw Ghetto

The Warsaw Ghetto (German: Warschauer Ghetto, officially Jüdischer Wohnbezirk in Warschau, "Jewish Residential District in Warsaw"; Polish: getto warszawskie) was the largest of the Nazi ghettos during World War II and the Holocaust. It was established in November 1940 by the German authorities within the new General Government territory of occupied Poland. At its height, as many as 460,000 Jews were imprisoned there,[5] in an area of 3.4 km2 (1.3 sq mi), with an average of 9.2 persons per room,[6][7] barely subsisting on meager food rations.[7] Jews were deported from the Warsaw Ghetto to Nazi concentration camps and mass-killing centers. In the summer of 1942, at least 254,000 ghetto residents were sent to the Treblinka extermination camp during Großaktion Warschau under the guise of "resettlement in the East" over the course of the summer.[7] The ghetto was demolished by the Germans in May 1943 after the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising had temporarily halted the deportations. The total death toll among the prisoners of the ghetto is estimated to be at least 300,000 killed by bullet or gas,[8] combined with 92,000 victims of starvation and related diseases, the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising, and the casualties of the final destruction of the ghetto.[2][9][10][11]

Warsaw Ghetto
Brick wall of the Warsaw Ghetto dividing the Iron-Gate Square, with view of bombed out Lubomirski Palace (left) on the "Aryan" side of the city, May 24, 1941.
Also known asGerman: Ghetto Warschau
LocationWarsaw, German-occupied Poland
DateOctober 1940 to May 1943
Incident typeImprisonment, mass shootings, forced labor, starvation, mass deportations to Treblinka and Majdanek
Perpetrators Germany
Participants
OrganizationsSchutzstaffel (SS), RSHA
CampTreblinka, Majdanek[1]
Victims
  • 265,000 at Treblinka[2]
  • 42,000 at Majdanek[2]
  • 92,000 inside the ghetto[3]
  • with expellees from Germany, Czechoslovakia and other occupied countries[4]
Documentation
Memorials

Background

Before World War II, the majority of Polish Jews lived in the merchant districts of Muranów, Powązki, and Stara Praga.[12] Over 90% of Catholics lived further away from the commercial center.[12] The Jewish community was the most prominent there, constituting over 88% of the inhabitants of Muranów; with the total of about 32.7% of the population of the left-bank and 14.9% of the right-bank Warsaw, or 332,938 people in total according to 1931 census.[12] Many Jews left the city during the depression.[12] Antisemitic legislation, boycotts of Jewish businesses, and the nationalist "endecja" post-Piłsudski Polish government plans put pressure on Jews in the city.[13] In 1938 the Jewish population of the Polish capital was estimated at 270,000 people.[14]

The Siege of Warsaw continued until September 29, 1939. On September 10 alone, the Luftwaffe conducted 17 bombing raids on the city;[15] three days later, 50 German planes attacked the city center, targeting specifically Wola and Żoliborz. In total, some 30,000 people were killed,[15] and 10 percent of the city was destroyed.[4] Along with the advancing Wehrmacht, the Einsatzgruppe EG IV and the Einsatzkommandos rolled into town. On November 7, 1939, the Reichsführer-SS reorganized them into local Security Service (SD). The commander of EG IV, Josef Meisinger (the "Butcher of Warsaw"), was appointed chief of police for the newly formed Warsaw District.[15]

Establishment of the ghetto

 
Karmelicka Street 11 from Nowolipia September/October 1939
 
 
Anachronistic map with borders of the Warsaw Ghetto in November 1940, with location of Umschlagplatz for awaiting death trains
 
Aerial photograph of the northern Warsaw Ghetto area after its destruction, probably 1944

By the end of the September campaign the number of Jews in and around the capital increased dramatically with thousands of refugees escaping the Polish-German front.[16] In less than a year, the number of refugees in Warsaw exceeded 90,000.[17] On October 12, 1939, the General Government was established by Adolf Hitler in the occupied area of central Poland.[18] The Nazi-appointed Jewish Council (Judenrat) in Warsaw, a committee of 24 people headed by Adam Czerniaków, was responsible for carrying out German orders.[17] On October 26, the Jews were mobilized as forced laborers to clear bomb damage and perform other hard labor. One month later, on November 20, the bank accounts of Polish Jews and any deposits exceeding 2,000 were blocked.[18] On November 23, all Jewish establishments were ordered to display a Jewish star on doors and windows. Beginning December 1, all Jews older than ten were compelled to wear a white armband, and on December 11, they were forbidden from using public transit.[18] On January 26, 1940, the Jews were banned from holding communal prayers due to "the risk of spreading epidemics."[19] Food stamps were introduced by the German authorities, and measures were stepped up to liquidate all Jewish communities in the vicinity of Warsaw intensified. The Jewish population of the capital reached 359,827 before the end of the year.[17]

 
Roundup of Jewish men for forced labor by the Order Police battalions, Krakowskie Przedmieście, March 1940

On the orders of Warsaw District Governor Ludwig Fischer, the ghetto wall construction started on April 1, 1940, circling the area of Warsaw inhabited predominantly by Jews. The work was supervised by the Warsaw Judenrat.[20] The Nazi authorities expelled 113,000 ethnic Poles from the neighbourhood, and ordered the relocation of 138,000 Warsaw Jews from the suburbs into the city center.[21] On October 16, 1940, the creation of the ghetto was announced by the German governor-general, Hans Frank.[22] The initial population of the ghetto was 450,000 confined to an area of 307 hectares (3.07 km2).[17][23] Before the Holocaust began the number of Jews imprisoned there was between 375,000[24] and 400,000 (about 30% of the general population of the capital).[1] The area of the ghetto constituted only about 2.4% of the overall metropolitan area.[25]

 
Warsaw Ghetto wall and footbridge over Chłodna Street in 1942
 
Corner of Żelazna 70 and Chłodna 23 (looking east). This section of Żelazna street connected the "large ghetto" and "small ghetto" areas of German-occupied Warsaw.

The Germans closed the Warsaw Ghetto to the outside world on November 15, 1940.[16] The wall around it was 3 m (9.8 ft) high and topped with barbed wire. Escapees were shot on sight. German policemen from Battalion 61 used to hold victory parties on the days when a large number of prisoners were shot at the ghetto fence.[26] The borders of the ghetto changed and its overall area was gradually reduced, as the captive population was decreased by outbreaks of infectious diseases, mass hunger, and regular executions.[21]

The ghetto was divided in two along Chłodna Street Ulica Chłodna w Warszawie [pl], which was excluded from it, due to its local importance at that time (as one of Warsaw's east–west thoroughfares).[27] The area south-east of Chłodna was known as the "Small Ghetto", while the area north of it became known as the "Large Ghetto". The two zones were connected at an intersection of Chłodna with Żelazna Street, where a special gate was built. In January 1942, the gate was removed and a wooden footbridge was built over it,[28] which became one of the postwar symbols of the Holocaust in occupied Poland.[29]

Ghetto administration

 
Jewish Ghetto Police guarding the gates of the Warsaw Ghetto, June 1942

The first commissioner of the Warsaw Ghetto, appointed by Fischer, was SA-Standartenführer Waldemar Schön, who also supervised the initial Jewish relocations in 1940.[30] He was an attritionist best known for orchestrating an "artificial famine" (künstliche Hungersnot) in January 1941. Schön had eliminated virtually all food supplies to the ghetto causing an uproar among the SS upper echelon.[31] He was relieved of his duties by Frank himself in March 1941 and replaced by Kommissar Heinz Auerswald, a "productionist" who served until November 1942.[32] Like in all Nazi ghettos across occupied Poland, the Germans ascribed the internal administration to a Judenrat Council of the Jews, led by an "Ältester" (the Eldest).[33] In Warsaw, this role was relegated to Adam Czerniaków, who chose a policy of collaboration with the Nazis in the hope of saving lives. Adam Czerniaków confided his harrowing experience in nine diaries.[34] In July 1942, when the Germans ordered him to increase the contingent of people to be deported, he committed suicide.[35]

Czerniaków's collaboration with the German occupation policies was a paradigm for attitude of the majority of European Jews vis à vis Nazism. Although his personality as president of the Warsaw Judenrat may not become as infamous as Chaim Rumkowski, Ältester of the Łódź Ghetto; the SS policies he had followed were systematically anti-Jewish.

Czerniakow's first draft of October, 1939; for organizing the Warsaw Judenrat, was just a rehash of conventional kehilla departments: chancellery, welfare, rabbinate, education, cemetery, tax department, accounting, vital statistics... But the Kehilla was an anomalous institution. Throughout its history in czarist Russia, it served also as an instrument of the state, obligated to carry out the regime's policies within the Jewish community, even though these policies were frequently oppressive and specifically anti-Jewish. — Lucy Dawidowicz, The War Against the Jews [33]

The Council of Elders was supported internally by the Jewish Ghetto Police (Jüdischer Ordnungsdienst),[17] formed at the end of September 1940 with 3,000 men, instrumental in enforcing law and order as well as carrying out German ad hoc regulations, especially after 1941, when the number of refugees and expellees in Warsaw reached 150,000 or nearly one third of the entire Jewish population of the capital.[19]

Catholics and Poles in the ghetto

In January 1940 there were 1,540 Catholics and 221 individuals of other Christian faiths imprisoned in the ghetto, including Jewish converts. It is estimated that at the time of closure of the ghetto there were around 2,000 Christians, and number possibly rose eventually to over 5,000. Many of these people considered themselves Polish, but due to Nazi racial criteria they were classified by German authorities as Jewish.[36][37] Within the ghetto there were three Christian churches, the All Saints Church, St. Augustine's Church and the Church of the Nativity of the Blessed Virgin Mary. All Saints Church served Jewish Christians who were detained in the ghetto. At that time, the parish priest, Marceli Godlewski who before the war was connected to Endecja and anti-Jewish actions, now became involved in helping Jews. At the rectory of the parish, the priest sheltered and helped many escape, including Ludwik Hirszfeld, Louis-Christophe Zaleski-Zamenhof and Wanda Zamenhof-Zaleska. For his actions he was posthumously awarded the Righteous Among the Nations medal in 2009.[36][38]

Conditions

 
Homeless children in Warsaw Ghetto
 
A child dying on the sidewalk of the Warsaw Ghetto, September 19, 1941

Nazi officials, intent on eradicating the ghetto by hunger and disease, limited food and medical supplies.[5] An average daily food ration in 1941 for Jews in Warsaw was limited to 184 calories, compared to 699 calories allowed for gentile Poles and 2,613 calories for the Germans.[39] In August, the rations fell to 177 calories per person. This meager food supply by the German authorities usually consisted of dry bread, flour and potatoes of the lowest quality, groats, turnips, and a small monthly supplement of margarine, sugar, and meat.[40] As a result, black market economy thrived, supplying as much as 80% of the ghetto's food.[5][40] In addition, the Joint had opened over 250 soup kitchens,[41] which served at one time as many as 100,000 meals per day.[5]

Men, women and children all took part in smuggling and illegal trade, and private workshops were created to manufacture goods to be sold secretly on the "Aryan" side of the city. Foodstuffs were often smuggled by children alone, who crossed the ghetto wall by the hundreds in any way possible, sometimes several times a day, returning with goods that could weigh as much as they did. Unemployment leading to extreme poverty was a major problem in the ghetto, and smuggling was often the only source of subsistence for the ghetto inhabitants, who would have otherwise died of starvation.[40] "Professional" smugglers, in contrast, often became relatively wealthy.[5]

During the first year and a half, thousands of Polish Jews as well as some Romani people from smaller towns and the countryside were brought into the ghetto, but as many died from typhus and starvation the overall number of inhabitants stayed about the same.[42] Facing an out-of-control famine and meager medical supplies, a group of Jewish doctors imprisoned in the ghetto decided to use the opportunity to study the physiological and psychological effects of hunger.[43][44] The Warsaw Ghetto Hunger Study,[45] as it is now known, remains one of the most thorough investigations of semi-starvation done to date.[44]

Education and culture

Despite grave hardships, life in the Warsaw Ghetto had educational and cultural activities, both legal and those conducted by its underground organizations. Hospitals, public soup kitchens, orphanages, refugee centers and recreation facilities were formed, as well as a school system. Some schools were illegal and operated under the guise of soup kitchens. There were secret libraries, classes for the children and even a symphony orchestra. Rabbi Alexander Friedman,[46] secretary-general of Agudath Israel of Poland, was one of the Torah leaders[clarification needed] in the Warsaw Ghetto; he organized an underground network of religious schools, including "a Yesodei HaTorah school for boys, a Bais Yaakov school for girls, a school for elementary Jewish instruction, and three institutions for advanced Jewish studies".[47] These schools, operating under the guise of kindergartens, medical centers and soup kitchens, were a place of refuge for thousands of children and teens, and hundreds of teachers. In 1941, when the Germans gave official permission to the local Judenrat to open schools, these schools came out of hiding and began receiving financial support from the official Jewish community.[48] Former cinema Femina became a theater in this period.[49] The Jewish Symphonic Orchestra performed in several venues, including Femina.[50]

Israel Gutman estimates that around 20,000 prisoners (out of more than 400,000) remained at the top of ghetto society, either because they were wealthy before the war, or because they were able to amass wealth during it (mainly through smuggling). Those families and individuals frequented restaurants, clubs and cafes, showing in stark contrast the economic inequalities of ghetto life.[51] Tilar Mazzeo estimates that group at around 10,000 people—"rich industrialists, many Judenrat council leaders, Jewish police officers, profiteering smugglers, nightclub owners [and] high-end prostitutes" who were spending their time at over sixty cafes and nightclubs, "dancing among the corpses."[52]

Manufacture of German military supplies

 
Jews working in a ghetto factory

Not long after the ghetto was closed off from the outside world, a number of German war profiteers such as Többens and Schultz appeared in the capital.[53] At first, they acted as middlemen between the high command and the Jewish-run workshops. By spring 1942, the Stickerei Abteilung Division with headquarters at Nowolipie 44 Street had already employed 3,000 workers making shoes, leather products, sweaters and socks for the Wehrmacht. Other divisions were making furs and wool sweaters also, guarded by the Werkschutz police.[54] Some 15,000 Jews were working in the ghetto for Walter C. Többens from Hamburg, a convicted war criminal,[55] including at his factories on Prosta and Leszno Streets among other locations. His Jewish labor exploitation was a source of envy for other ghetto inmates living in fear of deportations.[54] In early 1943 Többens gained for himself the appointment of a Jewish deportation commissar of Warsaw in order to keep his own workforce secure, and maximize profits.[56] In May 1943 Többens transferred his businesses, including 10,000 Jewish slave workers to the Poniatowa concentration camp barracks.[57] Fritz Schultz took his manufacture along with 6,000 Jews to the nearby Trawniki concentration camp.[53][58]

Treblinka deportations

 
The Grossaktion Warschau 1942
 
Umschlagplatz holding pen for deportations to Treblinka death camp
 
The Grossaktion Warschau 1942 boarding onto the Holocaust trains

Approximately 100,000 ghetto inmates had already died of hunger-related diseases and starvation before the mass deportations started in the summer of 1942. Earlier that year, during the Wannsee Conference near Berlin, the Final Solution was set in motion. It was a secretive plan to mass-murder Jewish inhabitants of the General Government. The techniques used to deceive victims were based upon experience gained at the Chełmno extermination camp (Kulmhof).[59] The ghettoised Jews were rounded up, street by street, under the guise of "resettlement", and marched to the Umschlagplatz holding area.[60] From there, they were sent aboard Holocaust trains to the Treblinka death camp, built in a forest 80 kilometres (50 mi) northeast of Warsaw.[61] The operation was headed by the German Resettlement Commissioner, SS-Sturmbannführer Hermann Höfle, on behalf of Sammern-Frankenegg. Upon learning of this plan, Adam Czerniaków, leader of the Judenrat Council committed suicide. He was replaced by Marek Lichtenbaum,[7] tasked with managing roundups with the aid of Jewish Ghetto Police. No-one was informed about the real state of affairs.[62]

The extermination of Jews by means of poisonous gases was carried out at Treblinka II under the auspices of Operation Reinhard, which also included Bełżec, Majdanek, and Sobibór death camps.[59] About 254,000 Warsaw Ghetto inmates (or at least 300,000 by different accounts) were sent to Treblinka during the Grossaktion Warschau, and murdered there between Tisha B'Av (July 23) and Yom Kippur (September 21) of 1942.[9] The ratio between Jews killed on the spot by Orpo and Sipo during roundups, and those deported was approximately 2 percent.[59]

For eight weeks, the deportations of Jews from Warsaw to Treblinka continued on a daily basis via two shuttle trains: each transport carrying about 4,000 to 7,000 people crying for water; 100 people to a cattle truck. The first daily trains rolled into the camp early in the morning often after an overnight wait at a layover yard; and the second, in mid-afternoon.[63] Dr Janusz Korczak, a famed educator, went to Treblinka with his orphanage children in August 1942. He was offered a chance to escape by Polish friends and admirers, but he chose instead to share the fate of his life's work.[64] All new arrivals were sent immediately to the undressing area by the Sonderkommando squad that managed the arrival platform, and from there to the gas chambers. The stripped victims were suffocated to death in batches of 200 with the use of monoxide gas. In September 1942, new gas chambers were built, which could kill as many as 3,000 people in just 2 hours. Civilians were forbidden to approach the camp area.[62] In the last two weeks of the Aktion ending on September 21, 1942, some 48,000 Warsaw Jews are deported to their deaths. The last transport with 2,200 victims from the Polish capital included the Jewish police involved with deportations, and their families.[65] In October 1942 the Jewish Combat Organization (ŻOB) was formed and tasked with opposing further deportations. It was led by 24 year–old Mordechai Anielewicz.[2] Meanwhile, between October 1942 and March 1943, Treblinka received transports of almost 20,000 foreign Jews from the German Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia via Theresienstadt, and from Bulgarian-occupied Thrace, Macedonia, and Pirot following an agreement with the Nazi-allied Bulgarian government.[66]

By the end of 1942, it was clear that the deportations were to their deaths.[2] The underground activity of ghetto resistors in the group Oyneg Shabbos increased after learning that the transports for "resettlement" led to the mass killings.[67] Also in 1942, Polish resistance officer Jan Karski reported to the Western governments on the situation in the ghetto and on the extermination camps. Many of the remaining Jews decided to resist further deportations, and began to smuggle in weapons, ammunition and supplies.[2]

Ghetto Uprising and final destruction of the ghetto

 
Suppression of Warsaw Ghetto Uprising. Captured Jews escorted by the Waffen SS, Nowolipie Street, 1943

On January 18, 1943, after almost four months without deportations, the Germans suddenly entered the Warsaw Ghetto intent upon further roundups. Within hours, some 600 Jews were shot and 5,000 others removed from their residences. The Germans expected no resistance, but the action was brought to a halt by hundreds of insurgents armed with handguns and Molotov cocktails.[68][69][70]

Preparations to resist had been going on since the previous autumn.[71] The first instance of Jewish armed struggle in Warsaw had begun. The underground fighters from ŻOB (Żydowska Organizacja Bojowa: Jewish Combat Organization) and ŻZW (Żydowski Związek Wojskowy: Jewish Military Union) achieved considerable success initially, taking control of the ghetto. They then barricaded themselves in the bunkers and built dozens of fighting posts, stopping the expulsions. Taking further steps, a number of Jewish collaborators from Żagiew were also executed.[42] An offensive against the ghetto underground launched by Von Sammern-Frankenegg was unsuccessful. He was relieved of duty by Heinrich Himmler on April 17, 1943, and court-martialed.

 
Warsaw Ghetto area after the war. Gęsia Street, view to the west
 
Ruins of the Warsaw Ghetto

The final assault started on the eve of Passover of April 19, 1943, when a Nazi force consisting of several thousand troops entered the ghetto. After initial setbacks, 2,000 Waffen-SS soldiers under the field command of Jürgen Stroop systematically burned and blew up the ghetto buildings, block by block, rounding up or murdering anybody they could capture. Significant resistance ended on April 28, and the Nazi operation officially ended in mid-May, symbolically culminating with the demolition of the Great Synagogue of Warsaw on May 16. According to the official report, at least 56,065 people were killed on the spot or deported to German Nazi concentration and death camps (Treblinka, Poniatowa, Majdanek and Trawniki).[72][better source needed] The site of the ghetto became the Warsaw concentration camp.

Preserving remnants of the Warsaw Ghetto

The ghetto was almost entirely leveled during the Uprising; however, a number of buildings and streets survived, mostly in the "small ghetto" area, which had been included into the Aryan part of the city in August 1942 and was not involved in the fighting. In 2008 and 2010 Warsaw Ghetto boundary markers were built along the borders of the former Jewish quarter, where from 1940 to 1943 stood the gates to the ghetto, wooden footbridges over Aryan streets, and the buildings important to the ghetto inmates. The four buildings at 7, 9, 12 and 14 Próżna Street are among the best known original residential buildings that in 1940–41 housed Jewish families in the Warsaw Ghetto. They have largely remained empty since the war. The street is a focus of the annual Warsaw Jewish Festival. In 2011–2013 buildings at number 7 and 9 underwent extensive renovations and have become office space.[73][74]

The Nożyk Synagogue also survived the war. It was used as a horse stable by the German Wehrmacht. The synagogue has today been restored and is once again used as an active synagogue. The best preserved fragments of the ghetto wall are located 55 Sienna Street, 62 Złota Street, and 11 Waliców Street (the last two being walls of the pre-war buildings). There are two Warsaw Ghetto Heroes' monuments, unveiled in 1946 and 1948, near the place where the German troops entered the ghetto on 19 April 1943. In 1988 a stone monument was built to mark the Umschlagplatz.[74]

There is also a small memorial at ul. Mila 18 to commemorate the site of the Socialist ŻOB underground headquarters during the Ghetto Uprising. In December 2012, a controversial statue of a kneeling and praying Adolf Hitler was installed in a courtyard of the ghetto. The artwork by Italian artist, Maurizio Cattelan, entitled "HIM", has received mixed reactions worldwide. Many feel that it is unnecessarily offensive, while others, such as Poland's chief rabbi, Michael Schudrich, feel that it is thought-provoking, even "educational".[75]

People of the Warsaw Ghetto

Casualties

 
Umschlagplatz Memorial on Stawki Street
 
Borders of the ghetto are marked in remembrance of its victims

Survivors

 
Yitzhak Zuckerman testifies for the prosecution during the trial of Adolf Eichmann
  • Yitzhak Zuckerman – ghetto resistance leader ("Antek"), founder of the Lohamei HaGeta'ot kibbutz in Israel. Died in 1981.
  • Marek Edelman – Polish political and social activist, cardiologist. He was the last surviving leader of the ŻOB. Died in 2009.
  • Jack P. Eisner – author of "The Survivor of the Holocaust". The young boy who hung the Jewish flag atop the burning building in the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising. ZZW fighter. Commemorator of the Holocaust. Died in 2003.[b]
  • Ruben Feldschu (Ben Shem) (1900–1980) – Zionist author and political activist[78]
  • Joseph Friedenson – editor of Dos Yiddishe Vort. Died in 2013.
  • Bronisław Geremek – Polish social historian and politician. Died in 2008.
  • Martin GraySoviet secret police officer and American and French writer. Died in 2016.
  • Mietek Grocher – Swedish author and the Holocaust remembrance activist.
  • Alexander J. Groth – Professor of Political Science at the University of California, Davis. Author of Lincoln: Authoritarian Savior, Democracies Against Hitler: Myth, Reality and Prologue, Holocaust Voices, and Accomplices: Roosevelt, Churchill and the Holocaust.
  • Ludwik Hirszfeld – Polish microbiologist and serologist, died in 1954.
  • Morton Kamien – Polish-American economist, died in 2011.
  • Zivia Lubetkin – ghetto resistance leader, Aliyah Bet activist, later married Cukierman. Died in 1976.
  • Vladka Meed – ghetto resistance member; author. Died in 2012.
  • Uri Orlev – Israeli author of the semi-autobiographical novel The Island on Bird Street recounting his experiences in the Warsaw Ghetto.
  • Marcel Reich-Ranicki – German literary critic. Died in 2013.
  • Sol Rosenberg – American steel industrialist and philanthropist. Died in 2009.[79]
  • Simcha Rotem – ghetto resistance fighter ("Kazik"), Berihah activist, post-war Nazi hunter. Died in 2018.
  • Uri Shulevitz – book illustrator
  • Władysław Szpilman – Polish pianist, composer and writer, subject of the film The Pianist by Roman Polanski (survivor of the Kraków Ghetto) based on his memoir. Died in 2000.
  • Menachem Mendel TaubKaliver rabbi in Israel. Died in 2019.
  • Dawid Wdowiński – psychiatrist, political leader of the Irgun in Poland, resistance leader of the ŻZW, American memoirist. Died in 1970.
  • Bogdan-Dawid Wojdowski – writer and the author of the most renowned novel about the Warsaw Ghetto, Chleb rzucony umarłym (1971; Bread for the Departed, 1998)

Associated people

 
Ruins of the Warsaw Ghetto in 1945; left, the Krasiński's Garden and Swiętojerska street. The entire city district was leveled by the German forces according to order from Adolf Hitler after the suppression of the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising in 1943

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Though Apfelbaum is listed in many books and articles devoted to the revolt in the Warsaw Ghetto as one of the commanders of the Jewish Military Union (see: Arens, Moshe (January 2008). "The Development of the Narrative of the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising". Israel Affairs. 14 (1): 6–28. doi:10.1080/13537120701705924. S2CID 144134946.), and a square was named for him in Warsaw, historians Dariusz Libionka and Laurence Weinbaum have cast doubt about his existence.[76]
  2. ^ Eisner's memoir, 'The Survivor' (published in 1980) is challenged as not a reliable source of information.[77]
  3. ^ Though he succeeded in convincing a number of historians of the veracity of his story, according to new research by a Polish-Israeli team of historians, Iwanski's unit never entered the ghetto. See: Dariusz Libionka; Laurence Weinbaum (2011). Bohaterowie, hochsztaplerzy, opisywacze: wokół Żydowskiego Związku Wojskowego. Warsaw: Stowarzyszenie Centrum Badań nad Zagładą Żydów. ISBN 9788393220281. [also in] Joshua D. Zimmerman (2015). The Polish Underground and the Jews, 1939–1945. Cambridge University Press. p. 218. ISBN 978-1107014268.

References

  1. ^ a b Holocaust Encyclopedia (February 22, 2023). "Warsaw". United States Holocaust Memorial Museum.
  2. ^ a b c d e f Holocaust Encyclopedia (April 17, 2023). "Warsaw Ghetto Uprising". United States Holocaust Memorial Museum.
  3. ^ Engelking & Leociak (2013), p. 71.
  4. ^ a b Philpott, Colin (2016). Relics of the Reich: The Buildings The Nazis Left Behind. Pen and Sword. p. 122. ISBN 978-1473844254 – via Google Books.
  5. ^ a b c d e Megargee, Geoffrey P., ed. (2009). "Warsaw". The United States Holocaust Memorial Museum encyclopedia of camps and ghettos, 1933–1945. Vol. 2-B. Bloomington, Washington, D.C.: Indiana University Press; In association with the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. pp. 456–460. ISBN 978-0-253-35328-3.
  6. ^ Bains, Alisha (2016). World War II. Encyclopædia Britannica. pp. 190–200. ISBN 978-1680483529. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)
  7. ^ a b c d Gutman, Israel (1998). Resistance: The Warsaw Ghetto Uprising. Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. pp. 118–119, 200. ISBN 0395901308.
  8. ^ Shapiro, Robert Moses (1999). Holocaust Chronicles. Published by KTAV Publishing. p. 35. ISBN 0-88125-630-7 – via Internet Archive, 302 pages. 300,000 Jews murdered by bullet or gas.[page 35]
  9. ^ a b Yad Vashem. "Treblinka Extermination Camp in the Generalgouvernement" (PDF). Aktion Reinhard. Archived (PDF) from the original on October 9, 2022.
  10. ^ Dr. Marcin Urynowicz. [Gross Aktion – Annihilation of the Warsaw Ghetto]. Biuletyn Instytutu Pamięci Narodowej, 7 /7 (2007) Pp. 105–114 (in Polish). Institute of National Remembrance (IPN). Archived from the original on December 20, 2016. Retrieved December 11, 2016 – via direct download. Likwidacja getta warszawskiego wiosną 1943 r. oznaczała natychmiastową lub chwilowo odwleczoną śmierć ok. 50 tys. osób. Tymczasem Gross Aktion, tzw. Wielka Akcja, zakończyła się wysłaniem do obozu zagłady w Treblince ok. 250 tys. osób. Zatem to lato 1942 r., a nie wiosna 1943, było okresem faktycznej likwidacji społeczności warszawskich Żydów.
  11. ^ Statistical data compiled on the basis of "Glossary of 2,077 Jewish towns in Poland" February 8, 2016, at the Wayback Machine by Virtual Shtetl Museum of the History of the Polish Jews  (in English), as well as "Getta Żydowskie" by Gedeon  (in Polish) and "Ghetto List" by Michael Peters at ARC.
  12. ^ a b c d Gawryszewski, Andrzej (2009). Ludność Warszawy w XX wieku [Population of Warsaw in the 20th Century] (PDF). Warsaw: Instytut Geografii i Przestrzennego Zagospodarowania PAN im. Stanisława Leszczyckiego. pp. 191, 193, 195, 202–203. ISBN 978-83-61590-96-5. ISSN 1643-2312. Archived (PDF) from the original on October 9, 2022 – via direct download, 425 pages. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)
  13. ^ Melzer, Emanuel (1997). No way out: the politics of Polish Jewry, 1935–1939. Hebrew Union College Press. pp. 131–144. ISBN 0878204180 – via Google Books, 235 pages.
  14. ^ Peter K. Gessner (2000). . Polish Academic Information Center, University at Buffalo. Archived from the original on January 30, 2012. Retrieved December 12, 2016.
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  16. ^ a b c Berg, Mary; Pentlin, Susan Lee (2007) [1945]. The Diary of Mary Berg: Growing up in the Warsaw Ghetto. New York: L. B. Fischer Publishing / Oxford: Oneworld Publications (2nd ed). pp. 2–5, 38. ISBN 978-1851684724. Hardcover. Chapter I: Warsaw Besieged: ... the roads were jammed, and gradually we were completely engulfed in the slow but steady flow of humanity toward the capital. Mile after mile it was the same ... as tens of thousands of provincials entered Warsaw in the hope of finding shelter there.
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  19. ^ a b Trunk, Isaiah (1972). Judenrat: The Jewish Councils in Eastern Europe Under Nazi Occupation. U of Nebraska Press. pp. 191, 475, 543–544. ISBN 080329428X. The Jewish police have learned how to hit, to enforce order, and to send people to the labor camps, and they are one of the contributing factors that keep people in line. — Emanuel Ringelblum [544]
  20. ^ Czerniaków, Adam; Fuks, Marian (1983). Adama Czerniakowa dziennik getta warszawskiego 6 IX 1939 – 23 VII 1942. Opracowanie i przypisy Marian Fuks. Warszawa 1983: Państwowe Wydawnictwo Naukowe. p. 101. ISBN 9788301030421 – via Google Books.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location (link)
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  24. ^ Levin, Itamar; Neiman, Rachel (2004). Walls Around: The Plunder of Warsaw Jewry During World War II and Its Aftermath. Greenwood Publishing Group. p. 29. ISBN 0275976491.
  25. ^ The Warsaw Ghetto. Local Life Warsaw, Guide.
  26. ^ Browning (1998), p. 41.
  27. ^ Chłodna Street. Warsaw: Google Maps. 2016. 52°14'13.0"N 20°59'18.0"E.
  28. ^ Kajczyk, Agnieszka (February 3, 2015). "The bridge over Chłodna Street". Jewish Historical Institute.
  29. ^ John D Clare (2014), The Warsaw Ghetto, 1940–43. Modern World History Topics.
  30. ^ Gutman, Yisrael (1989). The Jews of Warsaw, 1939–1943: Ghetto, Underground, Revolt. Indiana University Press. pp. 50, 98. ISBN 0253205115.
  31. ^ Browning, Christopher (2005). "Before the "Final Solution": Nazi Ghettoization Policy in Poland (1940–1941)" (PDF). Ghettos 1939–1945. New Research and Perspectives on Definition, Daily Life, and Survival. Symposium Presentations, USHMM. 18 of 175 in PDF. Archived (PDF) from the original on October 9, 2022.
  32. ^ Yad Vashem. "Auerswald, Heinz" (PDF). Shoah Resource Center, The International School for Holocaust Studies. Archived (PDF) from the original on October 9, 2022 – via direct download. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help) [Also in:] Browning, Christopher (2005). "Ghettos 1939–1945. New Research and Perspectives on Definition, Daily Life, and Survival" (PDF). Before the 'Final Solution'. United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. PDF file, direct download. Archived (PDF) from the original on October 9, 2022.
  33. ^ a b Dawidowicz, Lucy S. (1975). The war against the Jews 1933–1945. New York: Holt, Rinehart and Winston. pp. 228–229. ISBN 9781453203064.
  34. ^ Hilberg, Staron & Kermisz (1979).
  35. ^ Piotr M. A. Cywinski, ed. (2004). "Adam Czerniakow". Dia-pozytyw: People. Translated by Christina Manetti. Adam Mickiewicz Institute. from the original on August 22, 2004.
  36. ^ a b Karol Madaj – Duszpasterstwo Żydów-katolików w getcie warszawskim Biuletyn IPN nr 98 (3) / 2009 page 23–39
  37. ^ Christians in the Warsaw Ghetto: An Epitaph for the Unremembered, by Peter Florian Dembowski, 2005
  38. ^ Dariusz Libionka (2005). "Antisemitism, Anti-Judaism, and the Polish Catholic Clergy during the Second World War, 1939–1945". In Robert Blobaum (ed.). Antisemitism and Its Opponents in Modern Poland. Cornell University Press. p. 256. ISBN 0801489695.
  39. ^ Roland, Charles G. (1992). "Scenes of Hunger and Starvation". Courage Under Siege: Disease, Starvation and Death in the Warsaw Ghetto. New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 99–104. ISBN 978-0-19-506285-4. Retrieved January 25, 2008.
  40. ^ a b c Laqueur, Walter; Baumel, Judith Tydor (2001). The Holocaust Encyclopedia. Yale University Press. pp. 260–262. ISBN 0300138113.
  41. ^ "In Memoriam: David Guzik". JDC Archives. Retrieved October 10, 2019.
  42. ^ a b Wdowiński, David (1963). And we are not saved. New York: Philosophical Library pp. 222. ISBN 0-8022-2486-5. Note: Chariton and Lazar are not co-authors of Wdowiński's memoir. Wdowiński is considered the single author.
  43. ^ Engelking, Barbara (2002). Holocaust and memory : the experience of the Holocaust and its consequences : an investigation based on personal narratives. London: Leicester University Press, in association with the European Jewish Publication Society. pp. 110–111. ISBN 9780567342775. OCLC 741690863.
  44. ^ a b Winick, Myron (2014). "Jewish medical resistance in the Warsaw Ghetto". In Michael A. Grodin (ed.). Jewish medical resistance in the Holocaust. New York; Oxford: Berghahn Books. ISBN 978-1-78238-417-5.
  45. ^ Winick, Myron; Osnos, Martha (1979). Hunger disease: studies by the Jewish physicians in the Warsaw Ghetto. Wiley.
  46. ^ Farbstein, Esther (2007). Hidden in Thunder: Perspectives on faith, halachah and leadership during the Holocaust. Vol. 1. Feldheim Publishers. p. 31. ISBN 9789657265055. Friedman sought to inform world Jewry of the initial transports, he sent a telegram stating: 'Mr. Amos kept his promise from the fifth-third.' This is an allusion to Amos 5:3: 'The city that goes out a thousand strong will have a hundred left, and the one that goes out a hundred strong will have ten left to the House of Israel'.
  47. ^ Frydman, A. Zisha (1986) [1974]. Wellsprings of Torah. Judaica Press. pp. xii–xxiii. ISBN 0910818045 – via Google Books snippet.
  48. ^ Seidman, Hillel. "Alexander Zusia Friedman", in Wellsprings of Torah: An Anthology of Biblical Commentaries, Vol. 1. Nison L. Alpert, ed. The Judaica Press, Inc., 1974, pp. xii–xxiii.
  49. ^ Theater as Imperative in the Warsaw Ghetto: Artists and Audience in Jerzy Jurandot's FEMINA 1940–1942
  50. ^ Marian Fuks (November 25, 2013). . Jewish Historical Institute. Archived from the original on August 21, 2020. Retrieved July 4, 2019.
  51. ^ Gutman, Israel (1994). Resistance : the Warsaw Ghetto uprising. Boston: United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. pp. 87. ISBN 0395601991. OCLC 29548576.
  52. ^ Mazzeo, Tilar J. (2016). Irena's children : the extraordinary story of the woman who saved 2,500 children from the Warsaw ghetto (First Gallery books hardcover ed.). New York: Simon and Schuster. pp. 66–67. ISBN 9781476778501. OCLC 928481017.
  53. ^ a b Menszer, John (2015). "Tobbens' Shop in the Warsaw ghetto". Background Information to Survivor Stories. Holocaust Survivors: Encyclopedia.
  54. ^ a b . Getto Warszawskie (in Polish). Centrum Badań nad Zagładą Żydów. Archived from the original on October 29, 2018. Retrieved December 19, 2016.
  55. ^ Kurzman, Dan (2009). Tobbens Poniatow factories. Da Capo Press. p. 346. ISBN 978-0786748266. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)
  56. ^ Powell, Lawrence N. (2000). Troubled Memory. Univ of North Carolina Press. p. 114. ISBN 0807825042.
  57. ^ Nicosia, Francis; Niewyk, Donald (2000). The Columbia Guide to the Holocaust. New York: Columbia University Press. p. 232. ISBN 0231528787. The Jews of Poland were augmented by around 3,000 Slovakian and Austrian Jews (the camp elite) expelled to Poland beforehand, and housed separately from the rest.
  58. ^ Lenarczyk, Wojciech; Libionka, Dariusz (2009). "Obóz pracy dla Żydów w Trawnikach" (PDF / HTML). Erntefest 3–4 Listopada 1943 – Zapomniany Epizod Zagłady, Pp. 183–210. Państwowe Muzeum na Majdanku: 189–191. ISBN 978-83-925187-5-4. Transfer szopów Schultza z getta warszawskiego.
  59. ^ a b c Browning (1998), "The August Deportations to Treblinka". pp. 88–96 (115–123 in PDF).
  60. ^ Memorial Museums.org (2013). "Treblinka Museum of Struggle and Martyrdom". Remembrance. Uwe Neumärker (Director). Portal to European Sites of Remembrance.
  61. ^ Kopówka, Edward (February 4, 2010). . Muzeum Walki i Męczeństwa w Treblince. Oddział Muzeum Regionalnego w Siedlcach [Museum of Struggle and Martyrdom at Treblinka. Division of the Regional Museum in Siedlce]. Archived from the original on October 19, 2013 – via Internet Archive. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)
  62. ^ a b Edelman, Marek (n.d.). "The Ghetto Fights". The Warsaw Ghetto: The 45th Anniversary of the Uprising. Interpress Publishers. pp. 17–39. via "The Warsaw Ghetto Uprising, by Marek Edelman". Literature of the Holocaust.
    [Also in:] Musiał, Bogdan (2004). "Treblinka — ein Todeslager der "Aktion Reinhard"". "Aktion Reinhardt": der Völkermord an den Juden im Generalgouvernement 1941–1944. Osnabrück. pp. 257–281. ISBN 978-3-929-75983-9.
    [As well as:] . The Nizkor Project. Archived from the original on September 23, 2013. Retrieved December 21, 2016. [Source:] AZ-LG Dusseldorf: II 931638, p. 49 ff., and AZ-LG Dusseldorf, XI-148/69 S, pp. 111 ff.
  63. ^ Kopówka & Rytel-Andrianik (2011), p. 94.
  64. ^ Lifton, Betty Jean (2006). . St. Martin's Griffin. 1st edition. ISBN 0-312-15560-3. Archived from the original on March 7, 2016. Retrieved February 24, 2024. [Also in:] "The Janusz Korczak Living Heritage Association". Stockholm, Sweden: The Florida Center for Instructional Technology. from the original on March 9, 2015. Retrieved February 24, 2024.
  65. ^ Arad, Yitzhak (1987). Belzec, Sobibor, Treblinka. Indiana University Press, Bloomington, Indianapolis. pp. 97–99. ISBN 9780253342935.
  66. ^ Holocaust Encyclopedia (June 10, 2013). . United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. Archived from the original on June 5, 2012. Deportations from Theresienstadt and Bulgarian-occupied territory among others.
  67. ^ Robert Moses Shapiro; Tadeusz Epsztein, eds. (2009). The Warsaw Ghetto Oyneg Shabes—Ringelblum Archive. Catalog and Guide. Introduction by Samuel D. Kassow. Indiana University Press in association with USHMM and the Jewish Historical Institute, Warsaw. ISBN 978-0-253-35327-6 – via Academic Publications of the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. For years, Oyneg Shabbos had discreetly chronicled conditions and hid their photos, writings, and short films in improvised time capsules. In May 1942, the Germans began filming a propaganda movie titled "Das Ghetto" which was never completed. Footage is shown in the 2010 documentary called "A Film Unfinished" which concerns the making of "Das Ghetto" and correlates scenes from the film with descriptions of them that Czerniakow mentioned in his own diary.
  68. ^ Seeman, Mary V. (August 25, 2013). "Review of Bohaterowie, Hochsztaplerzy, Opisywacze, Wokol Żydowskiego Związku Wojskowego". Heroes, Hucksters and Story-Tellers: On the Jewish Military Union in the Warsaw Ghetto. Scholars for Peace in the Middle East (SPME).
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Bibliography

External links

  • Warsaw article in The Holocaust Encyclopedia — United States Holocaust Memorial Museum
  • Photographs from the Warsaw Ghetto – Online exhibition from Yad Vashem
  • Warsaw Ghetto from Holocaust Survivors and Remembrance Project: "Forget You Not"
  • pre and post-war pictures of Warsaw
  • Historical Sites of Jewish Warsaw
  • Warsaw Ghetto Internet Database July 17, 2013, at the Wayback Machine hosted by the Polish Center for Holocaust Research
  • Topography of Terror: Maps of the Warsaw Ghetto, by Harrie Teunissen
  • Yad Vashem – About the Holocaust – The Warsaw Ghetto March 5, 2016, at the Wayback Machine
  • Warsaw Ghetto poems from the Ringelblum Archive
  • Lecture on Emanuel Ringelblum and the Warsaw Ghetto Dr. Henry Abramson
  • The ramparts of Warsaw 1943–44 (documentary film) by André Bossuroy, 2014, programme 'Active European Remembrance' of the European Commission.
  • 'Warsaw Ghetto – hell in the center of the city'. Collection of testimonies concerning Warsaw Ghetto
  • Rokhl Auerbakh: Literature as Social Service & the Warsaw Ghetto Soup Kitchen
  • Warszawa, Poland at JewishGen

warsaw, ghetto, book, guide, perished, city, german, warschauer, ghetto, officially, jüdischer, wohnbezirk, warschau, jewish, residential, district, warsaw, polish, getto, warszawskie, largest, nazi, ghettos, during, world, holocaust, established, november, 19. For the book see The Warsaw Ghetto A Guide to the Perished City The Warsaw Ghetto German Warschauer Ghetto officially Judischer Wohnbezirk in Warschau Jewish Residential District in Warsaw Polish getto warszawskie was the largest of the Nazi ghettos during World War II and the Holocaust It was established in November 1940 by the German authorities within the new General Government territory of occupied Poland At its height as many as 460 000 Jews were imprisoned there 5 in an area of 3 4 km2 1 3 sq mi with an average of 9 2 persons per room 6 7 barely subsisting on meager food rations 7 Jews were deported from the Warsaw Ghetto to Nazi concentration camps and mass killing centers In the summer of 1942 at least 254 000 ghetto residents were sent to the Treblinka extermination camp during Grossaktion Warschau under the guise of resettlement in the East over the course of the summer 7 The ghetto was demolished by the Germans in May 1943 after the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising had temporarily halted the deportations The total death toll among the prisoners of the ghetto is estimated to be at least 300 000 killed by bullet or gas 8 combined with 92 000 victims of starvation and related diseases the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising and the casualties of the final destruction of the ghetto 2 9 10 11 Warsaw GhettoBrick wall of the Warsaw Ghetto dividing the Iron Gate Square with view of bombed out Lubomirski Palace left on the Aryan side of the city May 24 1941 Also known asGerman Ghetto WarschauLocationWarsaw German occupied Poland Muranow Powazki Nowolipki Srodmiescie Polnocne MirowDateOctober 1940 to May 1943Incident typeImprisonment mass shootings forced labor starvation mass deportations to Treblinka and MajdanekPerpetrators GermanyParticipantsGestapo Order Police battalions Einsatzgruppen Trawniki men Waffen SSOrganizationsSchutzstaffel SS RSHACampTreblinka Majdanek 1 Victims265 000 at Treblinka 2 42 000 at Majdanek 2 92 000 inside the ghetto 3 with expellees from Germany Czechoslovakia and other occupied countries 4 DocumentationJewish Historical Institute Museum of the History of the Polish JewsMemorialsMonument to the Ghetto Heroes Umschlagplatz Warsaw Ghetto boundary markers Contents 1 Background 2 Establishment of the ghetto 3 Ghetto administration 3 1 Catholics and Poles in the ghetto 4 Conditions 5 Education and culture 6 Manufacture of German military supplies 7 Treblinka deportations 8 Ghetto Uprising and final destruction of the ghetto 9 Preserving remnants of the Warsaw Ghetto 10 People of the Warsaw Ghetto 10 1 Casualties 10 2 Survivors 10 3 Associated people 11 See also 12 Notes 13 References 14 Bibliography 15 External linksBackgroundBefore World War II the majority of Polish Jews lived in the merchant districts of Muranow Powazki and Stara Praga 12 Over 90 of Catholics lived further away from the commercial center 12 The Jewish community was the most prominent there constituting over 88 of the inhabitants of Muranow with the total of about 32 7 of the population of the left bank and 14 9 of the right bank Warsaw or 332 938 people in total according to 1931 census 12 Many Jews left the city during the depression 12 Antisemitic legislation boycotts of Jewish businesses and the nationalist endecja post Pilsudski Polish government plans put pressure on Jews in the city 13 In 1938 the Jewish population of the Polish capital was estimated at 270 000 people 14 The Siege of Warsaw continued until September 29 1939 On September 10 alone the Luftwaffe conducted 17 bombing raids on the city 15 three days later 50 German planes attacked the city center targeting specifically Wola and Zoliborz In total some 30 000 people were killed 15 and 10 percent of the city was destroyed 4 Along with the advancing Wehrmacht the Einsatzgruppe EG IV and the Einsatzkommandos rolled into town On November 7 1939 the Reichsfuhrer SS reorganized them into local Security Service SD The commander of EG IV Josef Meisinger the Butcher of Warsaw was appointed chief of police for the newly formed Warsaw District 15 Establishment of the ghetto nbsp Karmelicka Street 11 from Nowolipia September October 1939 nbsp nbsp Anachronistic map with borders of the Warsaw Ghetto in November 1940 with location of Umschlagplatz for awaiting death trains Main article Jewish ghettos in German occupied Poland nbsp Aerial photograph of the northern Warsaw Ghetto area after its destruction probably 1944 By the end of the September campaign the number of Jews in and around the capital increased dramatically with thousands of refugees escaping the Polish German front 16 In less than a year the number of refugees in Warsaw exceeded 90 000 17 On October 12 1939 the General Government was established by Adolf Hitler in the occupied area of central Poland 18 The Nazi appointed Jewish Council Judenrat in Warsaw a committee of 24 people headed by Adam Czerniakow was responsible for carrying out German orders 17 On October 26 the Jews were mobilized as forced laborers to clear bomb damage and perform other hard labor One month later on November 20 the bank accounts of Polish Jews and any deposits exceeding 2 000 zl were blocked 18 On November 23 all Jewish establishments were ordered to display a Jewish star on doors and windows Beginning December 1 all Jews older than ten were compelled to wear a white armband and on December 11 they were forbidden from using public transit 18 On January 26 1940 the Jews were banned from holding communal prayers due to the risk of spreading epidemics 19 Food stamps were introduced by the German authorities and measures were stepped up to liquidate all Jewish communities in the vicinity of Warsaw intensified The Jewish population of the capital reached 359 827 before the end of the year 17 nbsp Roundup of Jewish men for forced labor by the Order Police battalions Krakowskie Przedmiescie March 1940 On the orders of Warsaw District Governor Ludwig Fischer the ghetto wall construction started on April 1 1940 circling the area of Warsaw inhabited predominantly by Jews The work was supervised by the Warsaw Judenrat 20 The Nazi authorities expelled 113 000 ethnic Poles from the neighbourhood and ordered the relocation of 138 000 Warsaw Jews from the suburbs into the city center 21 On October 16 1940 the creation of the ghetto was announced by the German governor general Hans Frank 22 The initial population of the ghetto was 450 000 confined to an area of 307 hectares 3 07 km2 17 23 Before the Holocaust began the number of Jews imprisoned there was between 375 000 24 and 400 000 about 30 of the general population of the capital 1 The area of the ghetto constituted only about 2 4 of the overall metropolitan area 25 nbsp Warsaw Ghetto wall and footbridge over Chlodna Street in 1942 nbsp Corner of Zelazna 70 and Chlodna 23 looking east This section of Zelazna street connected the large ghetto and small ghetto areas of German occupied Warsaw The Germans closed the Warsaw Ghetto to the outside world on November 15 1940 16 The wall around it was 3 m 9 8 ft high and topped with barbed wire Escapees were shot on sight German policemen from Battalion 61 used to hold victory parties on the days when a large number of prisoners were shot at the ghetto fence 26 The borders of the ghetto changed and its overall area was gradually reduced as the captive population was decreased by outbreaks of infectious diseases mass hunger and regular executions 21 The ghetto was divided in two along Chlodna Street Ulica Chlodna w Warszawie pl which was excluded from it due to its local importance at that time as one of Warsaw s east west thoroughfares 27 The area south east of Chlodna was known as the Small Ghetto while the area north of it became known as the Large Ghetto The two zones were connected at an intersection of Chlodna with Zelazna Street where a special gate was built In January 1942 the gate was removed and a wooden footbridge was built over it 28 which became one of the postwar symbols of the Holocaust in occupied Poland 29 Ghetto administration nbsp Jewish Ghetto Police guarding the gates of the Warsaw Ghetto June 1942 The first commissioner of the Warsaw Ghetto appointed by Fischer was SA Standartenfuhrer Waldemar Schon who also supervised the initial Jewish relocations in 1940 30 He was an attritionist best known for orchestrating an artificial famine kunstliche Hungersnot in January 1941 Schon had eliminated virtually all food supplies to the ghetto causing an uproar among the SS upper echelon 31 He was relieved of his duties by Frank himself in March 1941 and replaced by Kommissar Heinz Auerswald a productionist who served until November 1942 32 Like in all Nazi ghettos across occupied Poland the Germans ascribed the internal administration to a Judenrat Council of the Jews led by an Altester the Eldest 33 In Warsaw this role was relegated to Adam Czerniakow who chose a policy of collaboration with the Nazis in the hope of saving lives Adam Czerniakow confided his harrowing experience in nine diaries 34 In July 1942 when the Germans ordered him to increase the contingent of people to be deported he committed suicide 35 Czerniakow s collaboration with the German occupation policies was a paradigm for attitude of the majority of European Jews vis a vis Nazism Although his personality as president of the Warsaw Judenrat may not become as infamous as Chaim Rumkowski Altester of the Lodz Ghetto the SS policies he had followed were systematically anti Jewish Czerniakow s first draft of October 1939 for organizing the Warsaw Judenrat was just a rehash of conventional kehilla departments chancellery welfare rabbinate education cemetery tax department accounting vital statistics But the Kehilla was an anomalous institution Throughout its history in czarist Russia it served also as an instrument of the state obligated to carry out the regime s policies within the Jewish community even though these policies were frequently oppressive and specifically anti Jewish Lucy Dawidowicz The War Against the Jews 33 The Council of Elders was supported internally by the Jewish Ghetto Police Judischer Ordnungsdienst 17 formed at the end of September 1940 with 3 000 men instrumental in enforcing law and order as well as carrying out German ad hoc regulations especially after 1941 when the number of refugees and expellees in Warsaw reached 150 000 or nearly one third of the entire Jewish population of the capital 19 Catholics and Poles in the ghetto In January 1940 there were 1 540 Catholics and 221 individuals of other Christian faiths imprisoned in the ghetto including Jewish converts It is estimated that at the time of closure of the ghetto there were around 2 000 Christians and number possibly rose eventually to over 5 000 Many of these people considered themselves Polish but due to Nazi racial criteria they were classified by German authorities as Jewish 36 37 Within the ghetto there were three Christian churches the All Saints Church St Augustine s Church and the Church of the Nativity of the Blessed Virgin Mary All Saints Church served Jewish Christians who were detained in the ghetto At that time the parish priest Marceli Godlewski who before the war was connected to Endecja and anti Jewish actions now became involved in helping Jews At the rectory of the parish the priest sheltered and helped many escape including Ludwik Hirszfeld Louis Christophe Zaleski Zamenhof and Wanda Zamenhof Zaleska For his actions he was posthumously awarded the Righteous Among the Nations medal in 2009 36 38 Conditions nbsp Homeless children in Warsaw Ghetto nbsp A child dying on the sidewalk of the Warsaw Ghetto September 19 1941 See also Hunger Plan Nazi officials intent on eradicating the ghetto by hunger and disease limited food and medical supplies 5 An average daily food ration in 1941 for Jews in Warsaw was limited to 184 calories compared to 699 calories allowed for gentile Poles and 2 613 calories for the Germans 39 In August the rations fell to 177 calories per person This meager food supply by the German authorities usually consisted of dry bread flour and potatoes of the lowest quality groats turnips and a small monthly supplement of margarine sugar and meat 40 As a result black market economy thrived supplying as much as 80 of the ghetto s food 5 40 In addition the Joint had opened over 250 soup kitchens 41 which served at one time as many as 100 000 meals per day 5 Men women and children all took part in smuggling and illegal trade and private workshops were created to manufacture goods to be sold secretly on the Aryan side of the city Foodstuffs were often smuggled by children alone who crossed the ghetto wall by the hundreds in any way possible sometimes several times a day returning with goods that could weigh as much as they did Unemployment leading to extreme poverty was a major problem in the ghetto and smuggling was often the only source of subsistence for the ghetto inhabitants who would have otherwise died of starvation 40 Professional smugglers in contrast often became relatively wealthy 5 During the first year and a half thousands of Polish Jews as well as some Romani people from smaller towns and the countryside were brought into the ghetto but as many died from typhus and starvation the overall number of inhabitants stayed about the same 42 Facing an out of control famine and meager medical supplies a group of Jewish doctors imprisoned in the ghetto decided to use the opportunity to study the physiological and psychological effects of hunger 43 44 The Warsaw Ghetto Hunger Study 45 as it is now known remains one of the most thorough investigations of semi starvation done to date 44 Education and cultureDespite grave hardships life in the Warsaw Ghetto had educational and cultural activities both legal and those conducted by its underground organizations Hospitals public soup kitchens orphanages refugee centers and recreation facilities were formed as well as a school system Some schools were illegal and operated under the guise of soup kitchens There were secret libraries classes for the children and even a symphony orchestra Rabbi Alexander Friedman 46 secretary general of Agudath Israel of Poland was one of the Torah leaders clarification needed in the Warsaw Ghetto he organized an underground network of religious schools including a Yesodei HaTorah school for boys a Bais Yaakov school for girls a school for elementary Jewish instruction and three institutions for advanced Jewish studies 47 These schools operating under the guise of kindergartens medical centers and soup kitchens were a place of refuge for thousands of children and teens and hundreds of teachers In 1941 when the Germans gave official permission to the local Judenrat to open schools these schools came out of hiding and began receiving financial support from the official Jewish community 48 Former cinema Femina became a theater in this period 49 The Jewish Symphonic Orchestra performed in several venues including Femina 50 Israel Gutman estimates that around 20 000 prisoners out of more than 400 000 remained at the top of ghetto society either because they were wealthy before the war or because they were able to amass wealth during it mainly through smuggling Those families and individuals frequented restaurants clubs and cafes showing in stark contrast the economic inequalities of ghetto life 51 Tilar Mazzeo estimates that group at around 10 000 people rich industrialists many Judenrat council leaders Jewish police officers profiteering smugglers nightclub owners and high end prostitutes who were spending their time at over sixty cafes and nightclubs dancing among the corpses 52 Manufacture of German military supplies nbsp Jews working in a ghetto factory Not long after the ghetto was closed off from the outside world a number of German war profiteers such as Tobbens and Schultz appeared in the capital 53 At first they acted as middlemen between the high command and the Jewish run workshops By spring 1942 the Stickerei Abteilung Division with headquarters at Nowolipie 44 Street had already employed 3 000 workers making shoes leather products sweaters and socks for the Wehrmacht Other divisions were making furs and wool sweaters also guarded by the Werkschutz police 54 Some 15 000 Jews were working in the ghetto for Walter C Tobbens from Hamburg a convicted war criminal 55 including at his factories on Prosta and Leszno Streets among other locations His Jewish labor exploitation was a source of envy for other ghetto inmates living in fear of deportations 54 In early 1943 Tobbens gained for himself the appointment of a Jewish deportation commissar of Warsaw in order to keep his own workforce secure and maximize profits 56 In May 1943 Tobbens transferred his businesses including 10 000 Jewish slave workers to the Poniatowa concentration camp barracks 57 Fritz Schultz took his manufacture along with 6 000 Jews to the nearby Trawniki concentration camp 53 58 Treblinka deportations nbsp The Grossaktion Warschau 1942 nbsp Umschlagplatz holding pen for deportations to Treblinka death camp nbsp The Grossaktion Warschau 1942 boarding onto the Holocaust trains Approximately 100 000 ghetto inmates had already died of hunger related diseases and starvation before the mass deportations started in the summer of 1942 Earlier that year during the Wannsee Conference near Berlin the Final Solution was set in motion It was a secretive plan to mass murder Jewish inhabitants of the General Government The techniques used to deceive victims were based upon experience gained at the Chelmno extermination camp Kulmhof 59 The ghettoised Jews were rounded up street by street under the guise of resettlement and marched to the Umschlagplatz holding area 60 From there they were sent aboard Holocaust trains to the Treblinka death camp built in a forest 80 kilometres 50 mi northeast of Warsaw 61 The operation was headed by the German Resettlement Commissioner SS Sturmbannfuhrer Hermann Hofle on behalf of Sammern Frankenegg Upon learning of this plan Adam Czerniakow leader of the Judenrat Council committed suicide He was replaced by Marek Lichtenbaum 7 tasked with managing roundups with the aid of Jewish Ghetto Police No one was informed about the real state of affairs 62 The extermination of Jews by means of poisonous gases was carried out at Treblinka II under the auspices of Operation Reinhard which also included Belzec Majdanek and Sobibor death camps 59 About 254 000 Warsaw Ghetto inmates or at least 300 000 by different accounts were sent to Treblinka during the Grossaktion Warschau and murdered there between Tisha B Av July 23 and Yom Kippur September 21 of 1942 9 The ratio between Jews killed on the spot by Orpo and Sipo during roundups and those deported was approximately 2 percent 59 For eight weeks the deportations of Jews from Warsaw to Treblinka continued on a daily basis via two shuttle trains each transport carrying about 4 000 to 7 000 people crying for water 100 people to a cattle truck The first daily trains rolled into the camp early in the morning often after an overnight wait at a layover yard and the second in mid afternoon 63 Dr Janusz Korczak a famed educator went to Treblinka with his orphanage children in August 1942 He was offered a chance to escape by Polish friends and admirers but he chose instead to share the fate of his life s work 64 All new arrivals were sent immediately to the undressing area by the Sonderkommando squad that managed the arrival platform and from there to the gas chambers The stripped victims were suffocated to death in batches of 200 with the use of monoxide gas In September 1942 new gas chambers were built which could kill as many as 3 000 people in just 2 hours Civilians were forbidden to approach the camp area 62 In the last two weeks of the Aktion ending on September 21 1942 some 48 000 Warsaw Jews are deported to their deaths The last transport with 2 200 victims from the Polish capital included the Jewish police involved with deportations and their families 65 In October 1942 the Jewish Combat Organization ZOB was formed and tasked with opposing further deportations It was led by 24 year old Mordechai Anielewicz 2 Meanwhile between October 1942 and March 1943 Treblinka received transports of almost 20 000 foreign Jews from the German Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia via Theresienstadt and from Bulgarian occupied Thrace Macedonia and Pirot following an agreement with the Nazi allied Bulgarian government 66 By the end of 1942 it was clear that the deportations were to their deaths 2 The underground activity of ghetto resistors in the group Oyneg Shabbos increased after learning that the transports for resettlement led to the mass killings 67 Also in 1942 Polish resistance officer Jan Karski reported to the Western governments on the situation in the ghetto and on the extermination camps Many of the remaining Jews decided to resist further deportations and began to smuggle in weapons ammunition and supplies 2 Ghetto Uprising and final destruction of the ghettoMain article Warsaw Ghetto Uprising nbsp Suppression of Warsaw Ghetto Uprising Captured Jews escorted by the Waffen SS Nowolipie Street 1943 On January 18 1943 after almost four months without deportations the Germans suddenly entered the Warsaw Ghetto intent upon further roundups Within hours some 600 Jews were shot and 5 000 others removed from their residences The Germans expected no resistance but the action was brought to a halt by hundreds of insurgents armed with handguns and Molotov cocktails 68 69 70 Preparations to resist had been going on since the previous autumn 71 The first instance of Jewish armed struggle in Warsaw had begun The underground fighters from ZOB Zydowska Organizacja Bojowa Jewish Combat Organization and ZZW Zydowski Zwiazek Wojskowy Jewish Military Union achieved considerable success initially taking control of the ghetto They then barricaded themselves in the bunkers and built dozens of fighting posts stopping the expulsions Taking further steps a number of Jewish collaborators from Zagiew were also executed 42 An offensive against the ghetto underground launched by Von Sammern Frankenegg was unsuccessful He was relieved of duty by Heinrich Himmler on April 17 1943 and court martialed nbsp Warsaw Ghetto area after the war Gesia Street view to the west nbsp Ruins of the Warsaw Ghetto The final assault started on the eve of Passover of April 19 1943 when a Nazi force consisting of several thousand troops entered the ghetto After initial setbacks 2 000 Waffen SS soldiers under the field command of Jurgen Stroop systematically burned and blew up the ghetto buildings block by block rounding up or murdering anybody they could capture Significant resistance ended on April 28 and the Nazi operation officially ended in mid May symbolically culminating with the demolition of the Great Synagogue of Warsaw on May 16 According to the official report at least 56 065 people were killed on the spot or deported to German Nazi concentration and death camps Treblinka Poniatowa Majdanek and Trawniki 72 better source needed The site of the ghetto became the Warsaw concentration camp Preserving remnants of the Warsaw GhettoThe ghetto was almost entirely leveled during the Uprising however a number of buildings and streets survived mostly in the small ghetto area which had been included into the Aryan part of the city in August 1942 and was not involved in the fighting In 2008 and 2010 Warsaw Ghetto boundary markers were built along the borders of the former Jewish quarter where from 1940 to 1943 stood the gates to the ghetto wooden footbridges over Aryan streets and the buildings important to the ghetto inmates The four buildings at 7 9 12 and 14 Prozna Street are among the best known original residential buildings that in 1940 41 housed Jewish families in the Warsaw Ghetto They have largely remained empty since the war The street is a focus of the annual Warsaw Jewish Festival In 2011 2013 buildings at number 7 and 9 underwent extensive renovations and have become office space 73 74 The Nozyk Synagogue also survived the war It was used as a horse stable by the German Wehrmacht The synagogue has today been restored and is once again used as an active synagogue The best preserved fragments of the ghetto wall are located 55 Sienna Street 62 Zlota Street and 11 Walicow Street the last two being walls of the pre war buildings There are two Warsaw Ghetto Heroes monuments unveiled in 1946 and 1948 near the place where the German troops entered the ghetto on 19 April 1943 In 1988 a stone monument was built to mark the Umschlagplatz 74 There is also a small memorial at ul Mila 18 to commemorate the site of the Socialist ZOB underground headquarters during the Ghetto Uprising In December 2012 a controversial statue of a kneeling and praying Adolf Hitler was installed in a courtyard of the ghetto The artwork by Italian artist Maurizio Cattelan entitled HIM has received mixed reactions worldwide Many feel that it is unnecessarily offensive while others such as Poland s chief rabbi Michael Schudrich feel that it is thought provoking even educational 75 People of the Warsaw GhettoThis 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 October 2020 Learn how and when to remove this message Casualties nbsp Umschlagplatz Memorial on Stawki Street nbsp Borders of the ghetto are marked in remembrance of its victims Tosia Altman ghetto resistance fighter escaped the ghetto in 1943 uprising through the sewers Died after she was caught by the Gestapo when the celluloid factory she was sheltering in caught fire Mordechai Anielewicz ghetto resistance leader in the ZOB alias Aniolek Died with many of his comrades at their surrounded command post Dawid Moryc Apfelbaum ghetto resistance leader and commander of the ZZW Killed in action during the ghetto uprising a Maria Ajzensztadt singer known as the Nightingale of the Ghetto Adam Czerniakow engineer and senator head of the Warsaw Judenrat Jewish council Committed suicide in 1942 Pawel Finder First Secretary of the Polish Workers Party PPR from 1943 to 1944 killed by Germans in Warsaw Ruins 1944 Pawel Frenkiel one of the leaders of ZZW Zydowski Zwiazek Wojskowy Jewish Military Union Mira Fuchrer ghetto resistance fighter in the ZOB Died with many of her comrades at their surrounded command post Yitzhak Gitterman director of the American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee in Poland resistance fighter Killed in action during the ghetto uprising Itzhak Katzenelson teacher poet dramatist and resistance fighter Executed at Auschwitz Birkenau in 1944 Janusz Korczak children s author pediatrician child pedagogist and orphanage owner Executed along with his orphans at Treblinka in August 1942 after refusing an offer to leave his orphans and escape Simon Pullman conductor of the Warsaw Ghetto symphony orchestra Executed at Treblinka in 1942 Emanuel Ringelblum historian politician and social worker leader of the ghetto chroniclers Discovered in Warsaw and executed together with his family in 1944 Kalonymus Kalman Shapira grand rabbi of Piaseczno Executed at Trawniki during Aktion Erntefest in 1943 Gershon Sirota cantor known as the Jewish Caruso Was killed during the uprising Cecylia Slapakowa journalist and translator killed at Treblinka in 1942 or at Trawniki in 1943 together with her daughter Wladyslaw Szlengel poet of the Warsaw ghetto killed in 1943 uprising Lidia Zamenhof Bahaʼi Esperantist daughter of Dr L L Zamenhof Executed at Treblinka in 1942 Nathalie Zand neurologist and research scientist Practiced as a doctor within the ghetto Thought to have been executed at Pawiak prison September 1942 Yitzhak Suknik fighter in the Jewish Fighting Organization Was shot and killed in combat in an escape operation Survivors Rokhl Auerbakh Polish Jewish writer and essayist member of the ghetto chroniclers group led by Emanuel Ringelblum Died in 1976 Mary Berg 15 year old diarist in 1939 born to American mother in Lodz Pawiak internee exchanged for German POWs in March 1944 16 Died in 2013 Adolf Berman leader in Jewish Underground in Warsaw member of Zegota and CENTOS died in 1978 nbsp Yitzhak Zuckerman testifies for the prosecution during the trial of Adolf Eichmann Yitzhak Zuckerman ghetto resistance leader Antek founder of the Lohamei HaGeta ot kibbutz in Israel Died in 1981 Marek Edelman Polish political and social activist cardiologist He was the last surviving leader of the ZOB Died in 2009 Jack P Eisner author of The Survivor of the Holocaust The young boy who hung the Jewish flag atop the burning building in the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising ZZW fighter Commemorator of the Holocaust Died in 2003 b Ruben Feldschu Ben Shem 1900 1980 Zionist author and political activist 78 Joseph Friedenson editor of Dos Yiddishe Vort Died in 2013 Bronislaw Geremek Polish social historian and politician Died in 2008 Martin Gray Soviet secret police officer and American and French writer Died in 2016 Mietek Grocher Swedish author and the Holocaust remembrance activist Alexander J Groth Professor of Political Science at the University of California Davis Author of Lincoln Authoritarian Savior Democracies Against Hitler Myth Reality and Prologue Holocaust Voices and Accomplices Roosevelt Churchill and the Holocaust Ludwik Hirszfeld Polish microbiologist and serologist died in 1954 Morton Kamien Polish American economist died in 2011 Zivia Lubetkin ghetto resistance leader Aliyah Bet activist later married Cukierman Died in 1976 Vladka Meed ghetto resistance member author Died in 2012 Uri Orlev Israeli author of the semi autobiographical novel The Island on Bird Street recounting his experiences in the Warsaw Ghetto Marcel Reich Ranicki German literary critic Died in 2013 Sol Rosenberg American steel industrialist and philanthropist Died in 2009 79 Simcha Rotem ghetto resistance fighter Kazik Berihah activist post war Nazi hunter Died in 2018 Uri Shulevitz book illustrator Wladyslaw Szpilman Polish pianist composer and writer subject of the film The Pianist by Roman Polanski survivor of the Krakow Ghetto based on his memoir Died in 2000 Menachem Mendel Taub Kaliver rabbi in Israel Died in 2019 Dawid Wdowinski psychiatrist political leader of the Irgun in Poland resistance leader of the ZZW American memoirist Died in 1970 Bogdan Dawid Wojdowski writer and the author of the most renowned novel about the Warsaw Ghetto Chleb rzucony umarlym 1971 Bread for the Departed 1998 Associated people Wladyslaw Bartoszewski Polish resistance activist of the Zegota organization in Warsaw Henryk Iwanski Polish resistance officer in the charge of support for the ghetto Died in 1978 c Jan Karski Polish resistance courier who reported on the ghetto for the Allies Died in 2000 Zofia Kossak Szczucka Polish writer and World War II resistance fighter and co founder of Zegota Died in 1968 Irena Sendler Polish resistance member who smuggled 2 500 Jewish children out of the ghetto and helped to hide them subject of the film The Courageous Heart of Irena Sendler Died in 2008 Szmul Zygielbojm Polish Jewish socialist politician In 1943 committed suicide in London in an act of protest against the Allied indifference to the death of the Warsaw Ghetto nbsp Ruins of the Warsaw Ghetto in 1945 left the Krasinski s Garden and Swietojerska street The entire city district was leveled by the German forces according to order from Adolf Hitler after the suppression of the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising in 1943See alsoExecutions in the ruins of the Warsaw Ghetto 1943 1944 Group 13 Jewish collaborationist secret police also known as Jewish Gestapo led by Abraham Gancwajch Odilo Globocnik The Nazi leader responsible for the liquidation of the ghetto Ludwig Hahn Chief of the Sicherheitspolizei and the Sicherheitsdienst KdS for Warsaw Mila 18 book by Leon Uris The Silver Sword novel focused on a family from Warsaw during the Second World War Stroop Report official Nazi record of the Ghetto Uprising 19 April 1943 24 May 1943 Timeline of Treblinka extermination camp Warschauer Kniefall gesture by Chancellor of Germany Willy BrandtNotes Though Apfelbaum is listed in many books and articles devoted to the revolt in the Warsaw Ghetto as one of the commanders of the Jewish Military Union see Arens Moshe January 2008 The Development of the Narrative of the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising Israel Affairs 14 1 6 28 doi 10 1080 13537120701705924 S2CID 144134946 and a square was named for him in Warsaw historians Dariusz Libionka and Laurence Weinbaum have cast doubt about his existence 76 Eisner s memoir The Survivor published in 1980 is challenged as not a reliable source of information 77 Though he succeeded in convincing a number of historians of the veracity of his story according to new research by a Polish Israeli team of historians Iwanski s unit never entered the ghetto See Dariusz Libionka Laurence Weinbaum 2011 Bohaterowie hochsztaplerzy opisywacze wokol Zydowskiego Zwiazku Wojskowego Warsaw Stowarzyszenie Centrum Badan nad Zaglada Zydow ISBN 9788393220281 also in Joshua D Zimmerman 2015 The Polish Underground and the Jews 1939 1945 Cambridge University Press p 218 ISBN 978 1107014268 References a b Holocaust Encyclopedia February 22 2023 Warsaw United States Holocaust Memorial Museum a b c d e f Holocaust Encyclopedia April 17 2023 Warsaw Ghetto Uprising United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Engelking amp Leociak 2013 p 71 a b Philpott Colin 2016 Relics of the Reich The Buildings The Nazis Left Behind Pen and Sword p 122 ISBN 978 1473844254 via Google Books a b c d e Megargee Geoffrey P ed 2009 Warsaw The United States Holocaust Memorial Museum encyclopedia of camps and ghettos 1933 1945 Vol 2 B Bloomington Washington D C Indiana University Press In association with the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum pp 456 460 ISBN 978 0 253 35328 3 Bains Alisha 2016 World War II Encyclopaedia Britannica pp 190 200 ISBN 978 1680483529 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a work ignored help a b c d Gutman Israel 1998 Resistance The Warsaw Ghetto Uprising Houghton Mifflin Harcourt pp 118 119 200 ISBN 0395901308 Shapiro Robert Moses 1999 Holocaust Chronicles Published by KTAV Publishing p 35 ISBN 0 88125 630 7 via Internet Archive 302 pages 300 000 Jews murdered by bullet or gas page 35 a b Yad Vashem Treblinka Extermination Camp in the Generalgouvernement PDF Aktion Reinhard Archived PDF from the original on October 9 2022 Dr Marcin Urynowicz Gross Aktion Zaglada Warszawskiego Getta Gross Aktion Annihilation of the Warsaw Ghetto Biuletyn Instytutu Pamieci Narodowej 7 7 2007 Pp 105 114 in Polish Institute of National Remembrance IPN Archived from the original on December 20 2016 Retrieved December 11 2016 via direct download Likwidacja getta warszawskiego wiosna 1943 r oznaczala natychmiastowa lub chwilowo odwleczona smierc ok 50 tys osob Tymczasem Gross Aktion tzw Wielka Akcja zakonczyla sie wyslaniem do obozu zaglady w Treblince ok 250 tys osob Zatem to lato 1942 r a nie wiosna 1943 bylo okresem faktycznej likwidacji spolecznosci warszawskich Zydow Statistical data compiled on the basis of Glossary of 2 077 Jewish towns in Poland Archived February 8 2016 at the Wayback Machine by Virtual Shtetl Museum of the History of the Polish Jews in English as well as Getta Zydowskie by Gedeon in Polish and Ghetto List by Michael Peters at ARC a b c d Gawryszewski Andrzej 2009 Ludnosc Warszawy w XX wieku Population of Warsaw in the 20th Century PDF Warsaw Instytut Geografii i Przestrzennego Zagospodarowania PAN im Stanislawa Leszczyckiego pp 191 193 195 202 203 ISBN 978 83 61590 96 5 ISSN 1643 2312 Archived PDF from the original on October 9 2022 via direct download 425 pages a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a work ignored help Melzer Emanuel 1997 No way out the politics of Polish Jewry 1935 1939 Hebrew Union College Press pp 131 144 ISBN 0878204180 via Google Books 235 pages Peter K Gessner 2000 Warsaw Life and Death in the Ghetto during WWII Polish Academic Information Center University at Buffalo Archived from the original on January 30 2012 Retrieved December 12 2016 a b c Wardzynska Maria 2009 Intelligenzaktion PDF Warsaw Instytut Pamieci Narodowej Komisja Scigania Zbrodni przeciwko Narodowi Polskiemu pp 46 51 55 88 89 Archived from the original PDF on May 10 2019 via direct download a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a work ignored help a b c Berg Mary Pentlin Susan Lee 2007 1945 The Diary of Mary Berg Growing up in the Warsaw Ghetto New York L B Fischer Publishing Oxford Oneworld Publications 2nd ed pp 2 5 38 ISBN 978 1851684724 Hardcover Chapter I Warsaw Besieged the roads were jammed and gradually we were completely engulfed in the slow but steady flow of humanity toward the capital Mile after mile it was the same as tens of thousands of provincials entered Warsaw in the hope of finding shelter there a b c d e Bielawski Krzysztof Dylewski Adam Kraus Anna Laskowska Justyna Warszawa part 7 Virtual Shtetl POLIN Museum of the History of Polish Jews Also in The Warsaw Ghetto part 2 Translated by Magdalena Wojcik Virtual Shtetl Archived from the original on December 20 2016 Retrieved December 15 2016 a b c Grzesik Julian 2011 Holocaust Zaglada Zydow 1939 1945 Holocaust Destruction of the Jews 1939 1945 PDF Lublin 3rd edition revised pp 43 44 54 Archived from the original PDF on April 12 2013 via direct download a b Trunk Isaiah 1972 Judenrat The Jewish Councils in Eastern Europe Under Nazi Occupation U of Nebraska Press pp 191 475 543 544 ISBN 080329428X The Jewish police have learned how to hit to enforce order and to send people to the labor camps and they are one of the contributing factors that keep people in line Emanuel Ringelblum 544 Czerniakow Adam Fuks Marian 1983 Adama Czerniakowa dziennik getta warszawskiego 6 IX 1939 23 VII 1942 Opracowanie i przypisy Marian Fuks Warszawa 1983 Panstwowe Wydawnictwo Naukowe p 101 ISBN 9788301030421 via Google Books a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location link a b Bergman Eleonora Ludnosc zydowska w Warszawie Jewish population of Warsaw Virtual Shtetl Archived from the original on December 20 2016 Retrieved December 14 2016 Nie masz boznicy powszechnej Synagogi i domy modlitwy w Warszawie od konca XVIII do poczatku XXI wieku McDonough Frank 2008 The Holocaust London Macmillan International Higher Education p 41 ISBN 978 1 137 02048 2 Sakowska Ruta 1996 The Warsaw Ghetto 1940 1945 R Nowicki p 7 ISBN 978 83 904639 1 9 Levin Itamar Neiman Rachel 2004 Walls Around The Plunder of Warsaw Jewry During World War II and Its Aftermath Greenwood Publishing Group p 29 ISBN 0275976491 The Warsaw Ghetto Local Life Warsaw Guide Browning 1998 p 41 Chlodna Street Warsaw Google Maps 2016 52 14 13 0 N 20 59 18 0 E Kajczyk Agnieszka February 3 2015 The bridge over Chlodna Street Jewish Historical Institute John D Clare 2014 The Warsaw Ghetto 1940 43 Modern World History Topics Gutman Yisrael 1989 The Jews of Warsaw 1939 1943 Ghetto Underground Revolt Indiana University Press pp 50 98 ISBN 0253205115 Browning Christopher 2005 Before the Final Solution Nazi Ghettoization Policy in Poland 1940 1941 PDF Ghettos 1939 1945 New Research and Perspectives on Definition Daily Life and Survival Symposium Presentations USHMM 18 of 175 in PDF Archived PDF from the original on October 9 2022 Yad Vashem Auerswald Heinz PDF Shoah Resource Center The International School for Holocaust Studies Archived PDF from the original on October 9 2022 via direct download a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Also in Browning Christopher 2005 Ghettos 1939 1945 New Research and Perspectives on Definition Daily Life and Survival PDF Before the Final Solution United States Holocaust Memorial Museum PDF file direct download Archived PDF from the original on October 9 2022 a b Dawidowicz Lucy S 1975 The war against the Jews 1933 1945 New York Holt Rinehart and Winston pp 228 229 ISBN 9781453203064 Hilberg Staron amp Kermisz 1979 Piotr M A Cywinski ed 2004 Adam Czerniakow Dia pozytyw People Translated by Christina Manetti Adam Mickiewicz Institute Archived from the original on August 22 2004 a b Karol Madaj Duszpasterstwo Zydow katolikow w getcie warszawskim Biuletyn IPN nr 98 3 2009 page 23 39 Christians in the Warsaw Ghetto An Epitaph for the Unremembered by Peter Florian Dembowski 2005 Dariusz Libionka 2005 Antisemitism Anti Judaism and the Polish Catholic Clergy during the Second World War 1939 1945 In Robert Blobaum ed Antisemitism and Its Opponents in Modern Poland Cornell University Press p 256 ISBN 0801489695 Roland Charles G 1992 Scenes of Hunger and Starvation Courage Under Siege Disease Starvation and Death in the Warsaw Ghetto New York Oxford University Press pp 99 104 ISBN 978 0 19 506285 4 Retrieved January 25 2008 a b c Laqueur Walter Baumel Judith Tydor 2001 The Holocaust Encyclopedia Yale University Press pp 260 262 ISBN 0300138113 In Memoriam David Guzik JDC Archives Retrieved October 10 2019 a b Wdowinski David 1963 And we are not saved New York Philosophical Library pp 222 ISBN 0 8022 2486 5 Note Chariton and Lazar are not co authors of Wdowinski s memoir Wdowinski is considered the single author Engelking Barbara 2002 Holocaust and memory the experience of the Holocaust and its consequences an investigation based on personal narratives London Leicester University Press in association with the European Jewish Publication Society pp 110 111 ISBN 9780567342775 OCLC 741690863 a b Winick Myron 2014 Jewish medical resistance in the Warsaw Ghetto In Michael A Grodin ed Jewish medical resistance in the Holocaust New York Oxford Berghahn Books ISBN 978 1 78238 417 5 Winick Myron Osnos Martha 1979 Hunger disease studies by the Jewish physicians in the Warsaw Ghetto Wiley Farbstein Esther 2007 Hidden in Thunder Perspectives on faith halachah and leadership during the Holocaust Vol 1 Feldheim Publishers p 31 ISBN 9789657265055 Friedman sought to inform world Jewry of the initial transports he sent a telegram stating Mr Amos kept his promise from the fifth third This is an allusion to Amos 5 3 The city that goes out a thousand strong will have a hundred left and the one that goes out a hundred strong will have ten left to the House of Israel Frydman A Zisha 1986 1974 Wellsprings of Torah Judaica Press pp xii xxiii ISBN 0910818045 via Google Books snippet Seidman Hillel Alexander Zusia Friedman in Wellsprings of Torah An Anthology of Biblical Commentaries Vol 1 Nison L Alpert ed The Judaica Press Inc 1974 pp xii xxiii Theater as Imperative in the Warsaw Ghetto Artists and Audience in Jerzy Jurandot s FEMINA 1940 1942 Marian Fuks November 25 2013 Polyhymnia in the Warsaw Ghetto Jewish Historical Institute Archived from the original on August 21 2020 Retrieved July 4 2019 Gutman Israel 1994 Resistance the Warsaw Ghetto uprising Boston United States Holocaust Memorial Museum pp 87 ISBN 0395601991 OCLC 29548576 Mazzeo Tilar J 2016 Irena s children the extraordinary story of the woman who saved 2 500 children from the Warsaw ghetto First Gallery books hardcover ed New York Simon and Schuster pp 66 67 ISBN 9781476778501 OCLC 928481017 a b Menszer John 2015 Tobbens Shop in the Warsaw ghetto Background Information to Survivor Stories Holocaust Survivors Encyclopedia a b database search Getto Warszawskie in Polish Centrum Badan nad Zaglada Zydow Archived from the original on October 29 2018 Retrieved December 19 2016 Kurzman Dan 2009 Tobbens Poniatow factories Da Capo Press p 346 ISBN 978 0786748266 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a work ignored help Powell Lawrence N 2000 Troubled Memory Univ of North Carolina Press p 114 ISBN 0807825042 Nicosia Francis Niewyk Donald 2000 The Columbia Guide to the Holocaust New York Columbia University Press p 232 ISBN 0231528787 The Jews of Poland were augmented by around 3 000 Slovakian and Austrian Jews the camp elite expelled to Poland beforehand and housed separately from the rest Lenarczyk Wojciech Libionka Dariusz 2009 Oboz pracy dla Zydow w Trawnikach PDF HTML Erntefest 3 4 Listopada 1943 Zapomniany Epizod Zaglady Pp 183 210 Panstwowe Muzeum na Majdanku 189 191 ISBN 978 83 925187 5 4 Transfer szopow Schultza z getta warszawskiego a b c Browning 1998 The August Deportations to Treblinka pp 88 96 115 123 in PDF Memorial Museums org 2013 Treblinka Museum of Struggle and Martyrdom Remembrance Uwe Neumarker Director Portal to European Sites of Remembrance Kopowka Edward February 4 2010 The Memorial Muzeum Walki i Meczenstwa w Treblince Oddzial Muzeum Regionalnego w Siedlcach Museum of Struggle and Martyrdom at Treblinka Division of the Regional Museum in Siedlce Archived from the original on October 19 2013 via Internet Archive a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a work ignored help a b Edelman Marek n d The Ghetto Fights The Warsaw Ghetto The 45th Anniversary of the Uprising Interpress Publishers pp 17 39 via The Warsaw Ghetto Uprising by Marek Edelman Literature of the Holocaust Also in Musial Bogdan 2004 Treblinka ein Todeslager der Aktion Reinhard Aktion Reinhardt der Volkermord an den Juden im Generalgouvernement 1941 1944 Osnabruck pp 257 281 ISBN 978 3 929 75983 9 As well as Operation Reinhard Treblinka Deportations The Nizkor Project Archived from the original on September 23 2013 Retrieved December 21 2016 Source AZ LG Dusseldorf II 931638 p 49 ff and AZ LG Dusseldorf XI 148 69 S pp 111 ff Kopowka amp Rytel Andrianik 2011 p 94 Lifton Betty Jean 2006 The King of Children The Life and Death of Janusz Korczak St Martin s Griffin 1st edition ISBN 0 312 15560 3 Archived from the original on March 7 2016 Retrieved February 24 2024 Also in The Janusz Korczak Living Heritage Association Stockholm Sweden The Florida Center for Instructional Technology Archived from the original on March 9 2015 Retrieved February 24 2024 Arad Yitzhak 1987 Belzec Sobibor Treblinka Indiana University Press Bloomington Indianapolis pp 97 99 ISBN 9780253342935 Holocaust Encyclopedia June 10 2013 Treblinka Chronology United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Archived from the original on June 5 2012 Deportations from Theresienstadt and Bulgarian occupied territory among others Robert Moses Shapiro Tadeusz Epsztein eds 2009 The Warsaw Ghetto Oyneg Shabes Ringelblum Archive Catalog and Guide Introduction by Samuel D Kassow Indiana University Press in association with USHMM and the Jewish Historical Institute Warsaw ISBN 978 0 253 35327 6 via Academic Publications of the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum For years Oyneg Shabbos had discreetly chronicled conditions and hid their photos writings and short films in improvised time capsules In May 1942 the Germans began filming a propaganda movie titled Das Ghetto which was never completed Footage is shown in the 2010 documentary called A Film Unfinished which concerns the making of Das Ghetto and correlates scenes from the film with descriptions of them that Czerniakow mentioned in his own diary Seeman Mary V August 25 2013 Review of Bohaterowie Hochsztaplerzy Opisywacze Wokol Zydowskiego Zwiazku Wojskowego Heroes Hucksters and Story Tellers On the Jewish Military Union in the Warsaw Ghetto Scholars for Peace in the Middle East SPME Patt Avinoam 2014 Henry Patrick ed Resistance in the Warsaw Ghetto CUA Press pp 414 425 ISBN 978 0813225890 via Google Books a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a work ignored help Schoenberner Gerhard 2004 The Yellow Star The Persecution of the Jews in Europe 1933 1945 Fordham Univ Press pp 204 205 ISBN 0823223906 via Google Books a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a work ignored help Gilbert Martin 1986 The Holocaust pages 522 523 Jurgen Stroop The Warsaw Ghetto Is No More Nazi Conspriracy and Aggression Volume 3 Document No 1061 PS The Avalon Project Lillian Goldman Law Library Archived from the original on November 26 2010 Robert Mielcarek 2016 Book review Rafal Chwiszczuk Ulica Prozna i dzielnica zydowska w Warszawie Warszawa Austriackie Forum Kultury 2013 Forum Zydow Polskich Archived from the original on August 6 2019 Retrieved December 11 2016 a b UMSW 2016 Miejsca historyczne zwiazane z ludnoscia zydowska w Warszawie Historic places connected to Jewish people of Warsaw Judaica Urzad m st Warszawy official website Archived from the original on December 20 2016 Retrieved December 11 2016 Controversy over Adolf Hitler statue in Warsaw ghetto The Guardian December 28 2012 Retrieved August 11 2016 Dariusz Libionka Laurence Weinbaum June 22 2007 A legendary commander Haaretz Dariusz Libionka Laurence Weinbaum 2011 Bohaterowie hochsztaplerzy opisywacze wokol Zydowskiego Zwiazku Wojskowego in Polish Warsaw Stowarzyszenie Centrum Badan nad Zaglada Zydow pp 534 535 ISBN 9788393220281 Laurence Weinbaum Shaking the Dust Off The Story of the Warsaw Ghetto s Forgotten Chronicler Jewish Political Studies Review Vol 22 No 3 4 Fall 2010 Businessman Sol Rosenthal dies The News Star Monroe Louisiana January 31 2009 Retrieved December 12 2019 BibliographyBrowning Christopher R 1998 1992 Ordinary Men Reserve Police Battalion 101 and the Final Solution in Poland PDF Penguin Books Archived PDF from the original on October 19 2013 Edelman Marek 1994 The Ghetto Fights London Bookmarks ISBN 0 906224 56 X Full text in Edelman Marek The Ghetto Fights Literature of the Holocaust University of Pennsylvania Retrieved January 7 2024 Engelking Barbara Leociak Jacek 2009 The Warsaw Ghetto A Guide to the Perished City Translated by Emma Harris New Haven Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 11234 4 Engelking Barbara Leociak Jacek 2013 2001 Getto warszawskie Przewodnik po nieistniejacym miescie Warszawa Stowarzyszenie Centrum Badan nad Zaglada Zydow ISBN 978 83 63444 27 3 Gutman Israel 1994 Resistance The Warsaw Ghetto Uprising Boston MA Houghton Mifflin ISBN 0 395 60199 1 Hilberg Raul Staron Stanislaw Kermisz Josef eds 1979 The Warsaw diary of Adam Czerniakow Prelude to Doom New York Stein amp Day ISBN 9780812825237 Kopowka Edward Rytel Andrianik Pawel 2011 Treblinka II Oboz zaglady Monograph chapt 3 Treblinka II Death Camp PDF in Polish Dam im imie na wieki I will give them an everlasting name Isaiah 56 5 Drohiczynskie Towarzystwo Naukowe The Drohiczyn Scientific Society ISBN 978 83 7257 496 1 With list of Catholic rescuers of Jews from around Treblinka selected testimonies bibliography alphabetical indexes photographs English language summaries and forewords by Holocaust scholars Archived from the original PDF on October 10 2014 Retrieved February 9 2014 via direct download 20 2 MB Korczak Janusz 2003 Ghetto Diary Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 89604 004 5 via Google Books Potyralska Bozena Potyralski Marek 2000 Warsaw and Ghetto i ghetto Warsaw B amp M Potyralski ISBN 83 901501 2 3 Ringelblum Emmanuel 2015 Notes From The Warsaw Ghetto The Journal Of Emmanuel Ringelblum Pickle Partners Publishing ISBN 978 1786257161 via Google Books Preview Szpilman Wladyslaw 2003 The Pianist The Extraordinary True Story of One Man s Survival in Warsaw 1939 1945 New York Picador ISBN 0 312 31135 4 Wdowinski Dawid 1985 And We Are Not Saved New York Philosophical Library ISBN 978 0 8022 2486 6 via sample in Kindle And We Are Not Saved 1963 Archived from the original on December 22 2016 External links nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Warsaw Ghetto Warsaw article in The Holocaust Encyclopedia United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Photographs from the Warsaw Ghetto Online exhibition from Yad Vashem Warsaw Ghetto from Holocaust Survivors and Remembrance Project Forget You Not pre and post war pictures of Warsaw Historical Sites of Jewish Warsaw Warsaw Ghetto Internet Database Archived July 17 2013 at the Wayback Machine hosted by the Polish Center for Holocaust Research Topography of Terror Maps of the Warsaw Ghetto by Harrie Teunissen Detailed interactive map of the Warsaw Ghetto plotted on pre war plan of the city Yad Vashem About the Holocaust The Warsaw Ghetto Archived March 5 2016 at the Wayback Machine Warsaw Ghetto poems from the Ringelblum Archive Lecture on Emanuel Ringelblum and the Warsaw Ghetto Dr Henry Abramson Artists of the Warsaw Ghetto The ramparts of Warsaw 1943 44 documentary film by Andre Bossuroy 2014 programme Active European Remembrance of the European Commission Warsaw Ghetto hell in the center of the city Collection of testimonies concerning Warsaw Ghetto Rokhl Auerbakh Literature as Social Service amp the Warsaw Ghetto Soup Kitchen Warszawa Poland at JewishGen Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Warsaw Ghetto amp oldid 1219280629, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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