Warsaw ghetto
Key and copyright. (In Czech)
Before the Second World War, Warsaw with its 375 000 Jewish inhabitants
was the second largest Jewish centre in the world after New York. Jews made up 29.1% of
Warsaw's population. After Poland was invaded by the German army, Warsaw had to
capitulate on the
On the orders of the occupiers, Warsaw Jews were not allowed to renew their pre-war institutions. At the start of October 1939, the Jewish Council, or Judenrat, was formed, with Adam Czerniaków as its head. On the 12th of October 1940, Yom Kippur, Warsaw Jews were informed that the ghetto was being created. It was located in the northern part of the city, in the centre of the former Jewish quarter. In mid-November it was cut off from the outside world, and a high wall built around it. All of Warsaw's Jews now had to squeeze into a space that amounted to only 2.4% of the city's area. The separation of the ghetto from the surrounding area meant the severance of most Jews' economic ties, and prevented them from accessing the property they still had. Some 2 000 Jews who had earlier converted to Christianity but who were now affected by the Nazi race laws were also sent to the ghetto. In the ghetto they were allowed to use a single church and had their own priest of non-Aryan origin.
The overcrowding, poor sanitation and lack of food and fuel led to a high death rate. By November 1940, there had already been 445 deaths, in January 1941 there were 898, in April 2 061, in June 4 290 and in August 5 560. Many of the ghetto's inhabitants had no means at all, and some of them were literally dying of hunger. Food rations in the ghetto amounted to 8% of the rations of the German population and 25% of those of the Polish population.
On the 22nd of July 1942, Jews started to be deported from the Warsaw ghetto to the extermination camps. On the following day, Czerniaków committed suicide, refusing to comply with the Nazis' order to assemble 7 000 Jews daily, including children, for deportation. The rounding up of Jews for deportation took place in an extremely brutal manner. Initially the Jewish police were involved in the deportations, while later the SS and their Ukrainian helpers gathered the Jews themselves during raids in the ghetto. By the end of 1942, only approximately 60 000 people remained in the ghetto. The original ghetto was divided into three independent parts, and was transformed into something closer to a labour camp.
After the deportations started, several resistance groups in the ghetto formed a
joint illegal resistance organisation: Żidowska organizacja bojowa. It tried to inform the
remaining inhabitants of the ghetto of the fate that Jews who had been deported earlier had
met in the extermination camps. It also collected weapons and prepared for armed resistance.
When, on the

Members of the Jewish resistance captured during the uprising in the Warsaw ghetto, April-May 1943. (Photo: National Archives, courtesy of USHMM Photo Archives.)
When on the
Map of the Warsaw Ghetto (On the website A Teacher's Guide to the Holocaust).
Links:
Online presentation: Photographs of the Warsaw ghetto. (In Czech).
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Bernard MARK: Hrdinná kapitola. Příspěvek k dějinám povstání ve varšavském ghettu. Naše vojsko: Praha 1958.
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Ruta SAKOWSKA: Menschen im Ghetto. Die jüdische Bevölkerung im besetzten Warschau, 1939-1943. Fibre: Osnabrück 1999.
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Adam CZERNIAKÓW: Im Warschauer Getto. Das Tagebuch des Adam Czerniaków, 1939-1942. Beck: München 1986.
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Marek EDELMAN: Das Ghetto kämpft. Harald-Kater: Berlin 1993.
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Arno LUSTIGER: Zum Kampf auf Leben und Tod. Das Buch vom Widerstand der Juden, 1933-1945. Kiepenheuer & Witsch: Köln 1994.
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Reuben AINSENSTEIN: Revolte gegen die Vernichtung. Der Aufstand im Warschauer Ghetto. Schwarze Risse: Berlin 1993.


