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Warsaw Ghetto Uprising




  partof the World War II
  caption SS men during the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising
  date April 19 , 1943 - May 16 , 1943
  place Warsaw , Poland
  result Nazi victory
  combatant1 Nazi Germany
  combatant2 Jewish Resistance ( ŻOB , ŻZW )
  commander1 Jürgen Stroop
  commander2 Mordechai Anielewicz
  strength1 2,054, including 821 Waffen SS
  strength2 40,000 civilians, 750-1,000 fighting
  casualties1 300 KIA , official reports acknowledge 16 KIA and 85 wounded
  casualties2 about 13,000 killed, almost all of the rest sent to Extermination Camps


The Warsaw Ghetto Uprising, was a Jewish insurgency against Nazi Germany 's attempt to liquidate the remains of the Warsaw Ghetto in Poland during World War II . The main fighting lasted from April 19 , 1943 to May 16 that year and was finally crushed by ''SS- Gruppenführer '' (then '' Brigadeführer '') Jürgen Stroop . The significant precursor to the main fighting was an armed insurgent action launched against the Germans on January 18 , 1943 .


BACKGROUND

See Also: Warsaw Ghetto


Starting in 1940, the Nazis began concentrating Poland's over 3 million Jews in a number of massively overcrowded ghettos in various Polish cities. The largest of these, the Warsaw Ghetto, held 380,000 people in a densely-packed area in the middle of the city. Thousands of Jews were killed by disease or starvation before the Nazis began massive deportations of the Jews of the ghetto to the Treblinka death camp. In the 52 days before September 12 , 1942 about 300,000 Ghetto residents were sent to the extermination camps and killed. At the start of the deportations, members of the Jewish underground met, but decided not to fight, believing that the Jews were really being sent to work camps rather than their death. By the end of 1942, it was clear that the deportations were instead to death camps, and many of the remaining 40,000-50,000 Jews decided to fight. Of those, approximately 750 to 1,000, actually fought.


THE FIGHT


On January 18 , 1943 , the first instance of armed insurgency occurred when the Germans started the second expulsion of the Jew s. The Jewish insurgents achieved noteworthy success. The expulsion stopped after four days and the ŻOB and ŻZW insurgent organizations took control of the Ghetto, building dozens of fighting posts and killing Jews they considered to be Collaborators .

As the frustrated Germans diverted additional resources to end the standoff, during the next three months all inhabitants of the Ghetto prepared for what they realized would be the final fight. Hundreds of bunkers were dug under the houses (including 618 air raid bunkers), most connected through the Sewage system and linked up with the central water supply and electricity, and in some cases featuring camouflaged air supplies and tunnels leading to safer areas of Warsaw . The Germans eventually committed 821 Waffen SS troop as part of their 2,054 soldiers fighting in the Ghetto including 363 Polish " Navy-Blue Police " who have been ordered by Germans to cordon the walls of the Ghetto.

Support from outside the Ghetto was limited, but Polish units from Armia Krajowa (AK) and Gwardia Ludowa sporadically attacked German sentry units near the ghetto walls and attempted to smuggle weapons and ammunition inside. One Polish unit from AK, namely KB under the command of Henryk Iwański , even fought inside the Ghetto together with ŻZW. The AK tried twice to blow up the Ghetto Wall, but without much success.

The final battle started on the eve of Passover , April 19 , 1943 . Jewish insurgents shot and threw grenades at German and allied patrols from alleyways, sewers, house windows, and even burning buildings. The Nazis responded by shelling the houses block by block and rounding up or killing any Jew they could capture. Significant fighting ended on April 23 , and the uprising ended on May 16 . Nevertheless, sporadic shooting could be heard in the area of the Ghetto throughout the summer of 1943 .


AFTERMATH AND DEATH TOLL

During the fighting approximately 7,000 of the Jewish residents were killed. An additional 6,000 were burnt alive or gassed in bunkers. The remaining 50,000 people were sent to German Death Camps , mostly to Treblinka Extermination Camp . Approximately 300 Germans and Jewish "collaborators" were killed in the fighting.

After the fighting, the Ghetto became the place where Polish pr8, 29 April 2006 Most of the houses were levelled to the ground. Later the '' KL Warschau '' Concentration Camp was founded in the area of the Ghetto. During the later Warsaw Uprising in 1944 , Polish Home Army battalion "Zośka" was able to save 380 Jewish concentration camp prisoners from the Gęsiówka and Pawiak prisons, most of whom immediately joined the AK .

The final report of Jürgen Stroop on May 13, 1943, stated:

180 Jews, bandits, and subhumans were destroyed. The former Jewish quarter of Warsaw is no longer in existence. The large-scale action was terminated at 2015 hours by blowing up the Warsaw Synagogue.''

::Total number of Jews dealt with 56,065, including both Jews caught and Jews whose extermination can be proved.''


RELATION TO 1944 WARSAW UPRISING (THE POWSTANIE WARSZAWSKIE)


'' for deportation.]]
The Warsaw Ghetto Uprising of 1943 is sometimes confused with the Warsaw Uprising of 1944 . The two events were separated in time, and were quite different in aim. The first, in the Ghetto, was a choice to die fighting, with a slight hope of escape, rather than a sure death in a concentration camp, with the moment to fight being chosen as the last moment when the strength to fight was still available. The second was a coordinated action, part of a large Operation Tempest . Still, there are links between the events. A number (approximately 1000) of the insurgents from the Ghetto Uprising took part in the later ''Warsaw Uprising''. The brutality of the Nazi forces was similar. Some leaders of the Warsaw Uprising took inspiration from the fight in the Ghetto.


IN ISRAEL


, Israel ]]
A number of survivors of the Warsaw Ghetto uprising, known as the "Ghetto Fighters", including Icchak Cukierman / Yitzhak Zuckerman (ŻOB deputy commander), and his wife, Zivia Lubetkin who was also one of the commanders of the fighting units, went on to found Kibbutz Lohamey Ha-Geta'ot in Israel . In 1984 the members of the kibbutz published Dapei Edut ("Testimonies of Survival," interviewed and edited by Zvika Dror), four volumes of personal testimonies from 96 members of the kibbutz. Located north of Acre , the Kibbutz features a museum and archives dedicated to the memory of the Holocaust.


REFERENCES