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The Warsaw Ghetto Uprising,
by Marek Edelman
"The Ghetto Fights,"
by Marek Edelman
published in a pamphlet called The Warsaw Ghetto:
The 45th Anniversary of the Uprising
Interpress Publishers, pp.
17-39 [undated]
I am not acquainted with the young
author of this booklet, one of the leaders of the Jewish
Uprising. He brought me a typewritten copy, and I read
it all at once, unable to interrupt my reading for a
single moment.
... "I am not a writer, "
he said. "This has no literary value. "
However, this non-literary narrative
achieves that which not all masterpieces can achieve.
For it gives in serious, purposeful, reticent words
a record, simple and unostentatious, of a common martyrdom,
of its entire involved course. It is also an authentic
document about perseverance and moral strength kept
intact during the greatest tragedy in the history of
mankind.
--Zofia Nalkowska, LODZ, November
1945
Dedicated to the Memory of Abrasha
Blum
When the Germans occupied Warsaw
in 1939, they found the Jewish political and socialworld
in a state of complete chaos and disintegration. Almost
all the leading personalities had left Warsaw on September
7th. The 300,000 Jews there experienced a deeper feeling
of loneliness and helplessness than the others.
In such conditions it was easy
for the Germans to dominate the population from the
very beginning by breaking their spirit through persecutions
and by evoking a state of passive submission in their
midst. The experienced and devilishly refined German
propaganda agencies worked ceaselessly to achieve these
aims, spreading incredible--for those days--rumours
which further increased the panic and derangement in
Jewish life. Then, after a short period of time, the
maltreatment of Jews passed the stage of an occasional
punch on the nose, sadistic extractions of Jews from
their homes, and chaotic nabbing of Jews in the streets
for aimless work. The persecutions now became definite
and systematic.
As early as November 1939, the
first "exterminating" decrees were made public:
the establishment of "educational" camps for
the Jewish population as a whole, and the expropriation
of all Jewish assets in excess of 2,000 zloty per family.
Later, one after another, a multitude of prohibitive
rules and ordinances appeared. Jews were forbidden to
work in key industries, in government institutions,
to bake bread, to earn more than 500 zloty a month (and
the price of bread rose, at times, to as high as 40
zloty a pound), to buy from or sell to "Aryans",
to seek comfort at "Aryan" doctors' offices,
to doctor "Aryan" sick, to ride on trains
and trolley-cars, to leave the city limits without special
permits, to possess gold or jewelry, etc. After November
12th, 1939, every Jew twelve years of age or older was
compelled to wear on his right arm a white arm-band
with the blue Star of David printed on it (in certain
cities, e.g. Lodz and Wloclawek, yellow signs on the
back and chest).
The Jews--beaten, stepped upon,
slaughtered without the slightest cause--lived in constant
fear. There was only one punishment for failure to obey
regulations--death--while careful obedience to the rules
did not protect against a thousand more and more fantastic
degradations, more and more acute persecutions, recurrent
acts of terror, more far-reaching regulations. To top
it all, the unwritten law of collective responsibility
was being universally applied against the Jews. Thus,
in the first days of November 1939, 53 male inhabitants
of the 9 Nalewki Street apartment house were summarily
shot for the beating of a Polish policeman by one of
the tenants. This occurrence, the first case of mass
punishment, intensified the feeling of panic amongst
the Warsaw Jews. Their fear of the Germans now took
on unequalled forms.
In this atmosphere of terror and
fear, and under conditions cardinally changed, the Bund
resumed--or, to be more specific continued--its political
and social activities. Despite everything that was happening,
there were among us, it seemed, people ready to attempt
further work. First, psychological difficulties had
to be overcome. For instance, a strongly depressing
handicap was the feeling that one could perish instantly
not as a result of any particular activities, but as
a beaten and humiliated--not human being--but Jew. This
conviction that one was never treated as an individual
human being caused a lack of self-confidence and stunted
the desire to work. These factors will perhaps best
explain why our activities in the first period after
the fall of Warsaw were mainly of a charitable nature,
and why the first instinctive acts of armed resistance
against the occupying forces occurred comparatively
late and, in the beginning, in such insignificant forms.
To overcome our own terrifying apathy, to force ourselves
to the smallest spark of activity, to fight against
our own acceptance of the generally prevailing feeling
of panic--even these small tasks required truly gigantic
efforts on our part.
Even during the darkest moments,
the Bund did not suspend its activities for the shortest
time. When the Party's Central Committee was forced
to leave the city in September 1939, it had placed the
responsibility of continuing the political activities
of the Bund in the hands of Abrasha Blum. He, together
with Szmul Zygielbojm and in cooperation with the efforts
of Warsaw's mayor, Starzynski, organized Jewish detachments
which took an active part in the defence of the capitai.
Almost the entire editorial staff of the Folkszajtung
("The People's Gazette"--the party daily)
had left. However, the publication of the Folkszajtung
was continued. During the siege period, it appeared
regularly, edited by comrades Abrasha Blum, Klog, Klin
and others.
Public kitchens and canteens originated
during the siege continued their activities after the
seizure of the city. Almost all Party and Trade Union
members received financial help. Immediately following
the arrival of the Germans, the new Central Bureau of
the Party was organized (A. Blum, L. Klog, Mrs. S. Nowogrodzka,
B. Goldsztejn, S. Zygielbojm, later A. Sznajdmil ("Berek")
and M. Orzech).
In January 1940, after the first
radio transmitting station of the Polish Underground
had been found by the Germans, a new wave of mass terror
commenced. During a single night the Germans arrested
and murdered over 300 people comprising social leaders,
intelligentsia and professionals. This was not all.
The so-called "Seuchensperrgebiet" (area threatened
by typhus) was established, and Jews were forbidden
to live outside of this designated area. Furthermore,
the Jews were being forced to work for both German and
Polish employers, and were generally looked upon as
a source of cheap labour. This did not suffice, either.
The world was to be shown that the Jews were hated not
only by the Germans.
Thus, during the Easter Holidays
of 1940, pogroms lasting several days were instigated.
The German Air Corps engaged Polish hoodlums for 4 zloty
per "working day". The first three days the
hooligans raged unopposed. On the fourth day the Bund
militia carried out revenge actions. Four major street
battles resulted in the following localities: Solna
Street--Mirowski Market Square, Krochmalna Street--Grzybowski
Square, Karmelicka Street-- Nowolipie Street, and Niska
Street--Zamenhofa Street. Comrade, Bernard Goldsztejn
commanded all of these battles from his hide-out.
The fact that none of the other
active political parties took part in this action is
significant as an example of the utter misconception
of existing conditions common to Jewish groups at the
time. All other groups even opposed our action. It was,
however, our determined stand that momentarily checked
the Germans' activities and went on record as the first
Jewish act of resistance.
It was imperative that the public
understand the significance of the events. It was imperative
that all the beaten, maltreated people be told and shown
that despite all we were still able to raise our heads.
This was the immediate purpose of the first issue of
The Bulletin which appeared for May Day, published on
the battered Skif mimeograph machine which had been
found by chance in the Public School at 29 Karmelicka
Street. The editorial committee included Abrasha Blum,
Adam Sznajdmil and Bernard Goldsztein. The entire issue
was dedicated to an analysis of the Easter disturbances.
It met, however, with indifference on the part of the
public.
In November 1940, the Germans
finally established the Warsaw ghetto. The Jewish population
still living outside the "Seuchensperrgebiet"
was brought inside the special area. Poles living within
the designated ghetto boundaries were ordered to move
out. Small factories, shopsand stores were allowed two
weeks more, until December 1st, to complete their evacuation.
But, beginning with November 15th, no Jew was allowed
to leave the Jewish precincts. All houses vacated by
Jews were immediately locked by the Germans and then,
with all their contents, gratuitiously given to Polish
merchants and hucksters. Hucksters and small-time pedlars,
the typical brood of war conditions, those were the
people upon whom the Germans counted, whose favours
they tried to gain by presenting them with confiscated
Jewish assets and by tolerating their practice of food-smuggling.
The walls and barbed wire surrounding
the ghetto grew higher every day until, on November
15th, they completely cut off the Jews from the outside
world. Contacts with Jews living in other cities and
towns were, naturally, also made impossible. For Jewish
workers, all possibilities to earn a living vanished.
Not only all factory workers, but all those who had
been working in "Aryan" enterprises, as well
as government agencies became unemployed. The typically
war-time group of "middlemen", tradesmen appeared.
The great majority, however, left jobless, started selling
everything that could possibly be sold, and slowly approached
the depths of extreme poverty. The Germans, it is true,
widely publicized their policy of "increasing the
productive power of the ghetto", but actually they
achieved the complete pauperization of the population.
The ghetto population was increased by thousands of
Jews evicted from neighbouring towns. These people with
practically nothing to their names, alone, in strange
surroundings where others were preoccupied with their
own difficulties, literally dying of malnutrition, tried
to build their existence anew.
The complete segregation of the
ghetto, the regulations under which no newspaper could
be brought into it and all the news from the outside
world carefully kept out, had a very definite purpose.
These regulations contributed to the development of
a special way of thinking common to the ghetto inhabitants.
Everything taking place outside the ghetto walls became
more and more foggy, distant, strange. Only the present
day really mattered. Only matters of the most personal
nature, the closest circle of friends were by now the
focal point of interest of the average ghetto inhabitant.
The most important thing was simply "to be alive".
This "life" itself,
however, had a different meaning to each, depending
on his environment and opportunities. It was a life
of plenty for the still wealthy few, it was exuberant
and colourful for a variety of depraved Gestapo-men
and demoralized smugglers, and, for a multitude of workers
and unemployed, it was a hungry existence upheld by
the meagre public kitchens' soup and rationed bread.
Everyone tried hard to hang on to his particular sort
of "life" as best he could. Those who had
money sought the essence of their existence in comfortable
living, strove to find it in the dense, chattery air
of overcrowded cafes, or plunged into the dance music
of the night clubs. Those who had nothing, the paupers,
sought their "happiness" in a rotten potato
recovered from a garbage pit, found evasive joy in a
piece of begged-for bread with which the taste of hunger
could, for a while, be stilled. These were the tragic
contrasts of the ghetto so often exploited by the Germans,
photographed for propaganda purposes and maliciously
presented to the opinion of the world. "In the
Warsaw Ghetto beggars, swollen from hunger, die in front
of luscious window displays of food smuggled from the
'Aryan' sections..."
The hunger increased daily. From
dark, overcrowded living quarters it got out into the
streets, came into sight in the shape of ridiculously
swollen, log-shaped bodies with diseased feet, covered
with open wounds, wrapped in dirty rags. It spoke through
the mouths of the beggars, the aged, the young, and
the children, in the streets and courtyards.
Children begged everywhere, in
the ghetto as well as on the "Aryan" side.
Six-year-old boys crawled through the barbed wire under
the very eyes of the gendarmes in order to obtain food
"on the other side". They supported entire
families in this manner. Often a lone shot in the vicinity
of the barbed wire told the casual passers-by that another
little smuggler had died in this fight with omnipotent
hunger. A new "profession" appeared, the so-called
"catchers". Boys, or rather shadows of former
boys, would snatch packages from pedestrians and immediately,
while still running, devour the contents. In their haste,
they sometimes stuffed themselves full of soap or uncooked
peas....
Such was the misery by now that
people began to die of hunger in the streets. Every
morning, about 4-5 a.m., funeral carts collected a dozen
or more corpses on the streets that had been covered
with a sheet of paper and weighted down with a few rocks.
Some simply fell in the streets and remained there,
others died in their homes but their families, after
having stripped them completely (in order to sell the
clothes), dumped the bodies in front of the houses so
that burial would be made at the cost of the Jewish
Community Council. Cart after cart filled with nude
corpses would move through the streets. One on top of
the other the bony carcasses lay, the heads bobbing
up and down and beating against one another or against
the wood of the cart on the uneven pavement.
When the ghetto was once more
flooded with evicted Jews from smaller cities and towns,
the situation became disastrous. There were never enough
houses and living quarters. Now homeless, grimy people
began loitering in the streets. All day long they camped
in the courtyards, ate there, slept there, lived there.
Finally, when there was no other way, they turned to
the specially established "points"--transient
homes for refugees. These "points" were one
of the darkest spots of ghetto life, a real plague with
which it was virtually impossible to cope (only some
of the children could be moved into children's homes,
where conditions were better).
A few hundred people crowd every
large, unheated room of a synagogue, every hall of a
deserted factory. Unkempt, lousy, with no facilities
to wash, undernourished, and hungry ("water soups"
are given once daily by the Jewish Community Council),
they remain all day on their filthy straw mattresses,
with no strength to rise. The walls are green, slimy,
mildewed. The mattresses usually lie on the ground,
seldom on wooden supports. A whole family often receives
sleeping space for one. This is the kingdom of hunger
and misery.
Simultaneously spotted fever raged in the ghetto. Yellow
signs reading "Fleckfieber!" (Spotted Fever)
were affixed to a constantly increasing number of doors
and entrances. Particularly great numbers of the starvelings
at the "points" were afflicted. All hospitals,
by now handling contagious diseases exclusively, were
overcrowded. 150 sick daily were being admitted to a
single ward and placed two or three in a bed, or on
the floors. The dying were viewed impatiently--let them
vacate quicker for the next one! Physicians simply could
not keep up with it. There had not been enough of them
in the first place. Hundreds were dying at a given instance.
The grave-diggers were unable to dig fast enough. Although
hundreds of corpses were being put into every grave,
hundreds more had to lie around for several days, filling
the graveyard with a sickening, sweetish odour. The
epidemic kept growing. It could not be controlled. Typhus
was everywhere, and from everywhere it threatened. It
shared mastery over the ghetto with the overpowering
hunger. The monthly mortality rate reached 6,000 (over
2% of the population).
In such tragic conditions, the Germans attempted to
establish a semblance of law and order. The Jewish Council
("Judenrat") officially governed the ghetto
from the very first day of its establishment. To secure
"order" a uniformed Jewish police force was
formed. The children smuggling across the barbed wires
now had to be careful lest still another official would
catch them, and the ghetto population received another
Cerberus, making a total of three: the Germans, the
Polish policemen, and the Jewish policemen. But the
agencies established to give the ghetto a semblance
of normal life were in reality nests of corruption and
demoralization. The Germans succeeded in drafting the
best-known citizens into serving on the Jewish Council.
The only member of the Council, however, who had the
courage to leave that agency despite the death penalty
for such an act was Comrade Arthur (Szmul Zygielbojm).
Such was life in the ghetto when the first report of
the gassing of Jews in Chelmno, Pomerania, reached Warsaw.
The news was brought by three persons who were to be
put to death in Chelmno and who had miraculously escaped.
Their story showed that during November and December
1940, approximately 40,000 Jews from Lodz, another 40,000
from Pomerania and towns from other regions incorporated
into the Reich, and also a few hundred Gypsies from
Bessarabia had died in the Chelmno gas chambers. They
had been murdered by the Germans in the now well-known
vile manner. The victims were told they were being taken
for work and ordered to take along hand-luggage. Upon
their arrival at the Chelmno Palace they were stripped
of all their clothes and everyone was given a towel
and soap, supposedly for the bathing that was to follow.
All appearances were kept up to the very last minute.
The victims were led into hermetically closed trucks
containing gas chambers. The gas was forced into the
chambers by the truck engines. Afterwards, in a clearing
in the woods in the vicinity of Chelmno, Jewish grave-diggers
unloaded the corpses from the trucks and buried them.
The woods were surrounded by 200 SS-men. A certain SS-man
called Bykowiec was in charge of the procedure. Inspections
by SS and SA generals occurred several times.
The Warsaw ghetto did not believe these reports. People
who clung to their lives with superhuman determination
were unable to believe that they could be killed in
such a manner. Only our organized [youth] groups, carefully
noting the steadily increasing signs of German terror,
accepted the Chelmno story as indeed probable, and decided
upon extensive propaganda activities in order to inform
the population of the imminent danger. A meeting of
the Zukunft cadres took place in mid-February 1941,
with Abrasha Blum and Abramek Bortensztein as speakers.
All of us agreed to offer resistance before being led
to death. We were ashamed of the Chelmno Jews' submissiveness,
of their failure to rise in their own defence. We did
not want the Warsaw ghetto ever to act in a similar
way. "We shall not die on our knees," said
Abramek, "Not they will be an example for us, but
men like our comrade Alter Bas." While Chelmno
victims were dying passively and humbly he, after having
been caught as a political leader, with illegal papers
in his pocket, and tortured in every manner known to
the Germans, resisted the barbarous torment through
superhuman efforts, when but a few words would have
saved his life.
A few dozen copies of a report on the Chelmno murders
were circulated throughout the ghetto. This report was
also sent abroad, together with a demand to take retaliatory
measures against the German civilian population. But
public opinion abroad did not believe the story either.
Our appeal found no response. Comrade Zygielbojm, our
representative in the Polish National Council in London,
broadcast the literal text of our message in a radio
speech to the whole world. The following morning his
appeal was circulated in the ghetto both in a special
edition of our publication Der Weker and in the papers
of all other political groups.
The beginning of the Soviet-German war (summer 1941)
was also the time of extensive exterminating activities
on the part of the Germans in the Western Ukrainian
and White Russian territories. In November 1941, the
mass shooting of Jews in Wilno, Slonim, Bialystok and
Baranowicze occurred. In Ponary (vic. Wilno) tens of
thousands of Jews perished in rapid killings. The news
reached Warsaw, but the uninformed public again took
a near-sighted view of the situation. The majority was
still of the opinion that the murders were not a result
of an organized, orderly policy to exterminate the Jewish
people, but acts of misbehaviour on the part of victory-drunk
troops. Political parties, however, were now beginning
to understand the true state of affairs.
In January 1942, an inter-party conference was called.
By now all parties agreed that armed resistance was
the only appropriate answer to the persecutions. The
Hashomer and Hechalutz organizations for the first time
suggested a plan for a joint battle organization. Maurycy
Orzech and Abrasha Blum addressed the conference on
behalf of our movement, maintaining that an armed uprising
could be successful only if carried out in agreement
with the Polish Underground and with their cooperation.
However, the common battle organization was not established
at that time.
It was our group that called the first battle organization
into being with the knowledge of the Polish Socialists
(Left-wing group of the PPS--the Polish Socialist Party).
Bernard Goldsztejn, Abrasha Blum, and Berek Sznajdmil
constituted the Command. The first "five"
of instructors was organized and comprised Liebeskind
(from Lodz), Zygmunt Frydrych, Lejb Szpichler, Abram
Fajner and Marek Edelman. We started our work with theoretical
instruction, but the complete lack of weapons made it
impossible to broaden our activities. Thus we were practically
limited in our activities to intelligence work among
the Germans and, in close relation to the foregoing,
the warning of particular people against possible "slip-ups".
The following people were active in our intelligence
service: Pola Lipszyc, Cywia Waks, Zodka Goldblat, Lajcia
Blank, Stefa Moryc, Mania Elenbogen, and comrades from
the PS: Marian Meremholc, Mietek Dab, etc. Despite our
very limited possibilities, the mere fact of establishing
such an organization was of obvious importance. Our
initiative met with the full approval of all those in
the know.
In those days the Bund was quite a large organization,
considering the clandestine working conditions. More
than 2,000 people participated in the festivities occasioned
by the Bund's 44th anniversary in October 1941. These
meetings were held in many places simultaneously. On
the surface nothing was discernible, and it was difficult
to realize how great the number of small groups--dispersed
"fives" or "sevens" meeting in private
apartments--really was.
The Central Trade Union Council was also revived (Bernard
Goldsztejn, Kersz, Mermelsztein), and eventually registered
approximately 30,000 former union members.
The scope of the Zukunft's work was also quite extensive.
The clandestine Zukunft Committee established itself
during the first days of October 1939, and by mid-November
1939, the first "fives" were meeting. In the
generally tragic conditions of Jewish life, the lot
of Jewish youth was the worst. Young Jews were being
persecuted by the Germans with special cruelty. These
young men, whom the Germans continuously hunted for
forced labour, were not even free to walk the streets,
let alone attempt regular work. To remedy their difficulties,
the Zukunft established cooperative enterprises where
young people could find employment. In 1940 two barber
shops were opened, a cooperative tailor shop, and a
cooperative shoemaker shop. The shops served not only
as working places, but as comparatively safe meeting
places for the entire organization as well. It was here
that the first Zukunftsturm (Zukunft Militia) met. With
the increase in the scope of work, the Zukunft and Skif
Committees merged into one (Henoch Russ, Abramek Bortensztein,
Lejb Szpichler, Abram Fajner, Miriam Szyfman, Mojszele
Kaufman, Rywka Rozensztajn, Fajgele Peltel, Welwl Rozowski,
Jankiel Gruszka, Sziojme Paw, Marek Edelman).
In 1941 a Youth Division was established at the Jewish
Social Mutual Aid Organization and the Zukunft became
one of the Division's important contributors. We were
able to reach large numbers of young people. Our lecturers
took charge of numerous youth groups, which were at
that time established under the House Committees in
every apartment house. There was the choir with its
active programme (public concerts were given in the
Judaistic Library). School-age youth was also being
organized. The SOMS (Socialist School Students' Organization)
was re-established, and numbered a few hundred members
after a very short time. Comprehensive political education
and cultural activities were carried out.
At the same time the Skif, whose activities were until
then limited to securing financial help for its pre-war
members, started large-scale work among children of
school and pre-school age. A so-called "corner"
was established in every house, where children found
a home for a few hours every day. The Dramatic Club,
led by Pola Lipszyc, gave performances twice a week.
During the 1941 season 12,000 children attended these
performances (Dolls and The Granary were shown 80 times).
Instruction classes were held for children 12-15 years
of age. The Instructors' Council members themselves
attended instruction classes covering a full secondary
school course.
Six periodicals were published by us in those days:
1. Der Weker (weekly), 2. The Bulletin (monthly), 3.
Tsait Fragn ("Problems of the Times"--a theoretical
political magazine), 4. For Our and Your Freedom (monthly),
5. Yugnt Shtime (The Voice of Youth--monthly), 6. The
New Youth (monthly). Considerable effort went into the
publication of these papers. As a rule, the single old
Skif mimeograph machine would be working the whole night
through. Usually no electricity was available, and working
by carbide gas lights proved extremely strenuous. At
about 2 a.m. the printing personnel (Rozowski, Zyferman,
Blumka Klog, Marek) would complain of tremendous eye
pains and it would be almost impossible to continue
working. On the other hand, every minute was precious.
At 7 a.m. the issue, no matter how many pages it held,
had to be ready for circulation. Everyone worked harder
than they were physically able to. They averaged two-three
sleepless nights a week. It was impossible to catch
up on one's sleep the following morning, because one
had to pretend complete ignorance of the printing activities.
The manager of the printing office, Marek, was also
in charge of circulation (people actually circulating
the paper were: Zoska Goldblat, Anka Wolkowicz, Stefa
Moryc, Miriam Szyfman, Marynka Segalewicz, Cluwa Krysztal-Nisenbaum,
Chajka Betchatowska, Halina Lipszyc and others). After
a sleepless night, there usually followed a difficult
day, always in suspense, uncertainty whether everything
reached its destination, whether all was in order, whether
there were no "slip-ups".
Once Marynka was stopped on the street by a "navy-blue"
[Polish] policeman while carrying 40 copies of The Bulletin.
It happened under the ghetto wall, on Franciszkanska
Street. She pretended she was an "ordinary"
smuggler and wanted to take care of the matter accordingly--by
offering a bribe of 500 zloty. The unusually high offer
made the police suspicious, and they asked to be shown
the "merchandise". Now the inevitable happened.
Not stockings, but printed sheets of paper fell out
from under the girl's skirt and littered the street.
The matter became serious, and Marynka already saw herself
in the Gestapo's dark shadow. Suddenly a lucky "coincidence"
occurred--an argument started not far away, and fists
were soon flying. Such disturbances could not be tolerated
near the ghetto wall. The policemen lost their heads,
did not know what to do first, and turned around for
an instant--long enough for Marynka to gather the papers,
throw the policemen their promised 500 zloty, and disappear...
As to the "argument", it was intentionally
started by "Little Kostek" (S. Kostrynski)
who had noticed Marynka's predicament.
It might be interesting to add that according to a sort
of poll that we were able to conduct, our publications
were being read by an average of 20 people per copy.
Our periodicals were also circulated throughout the
country. This phase of our work was organized by J.
Ceiemenski and I. Falk, both of whom had been previously
authorized by the Party Central Committee to maintain
continuous contacts with groups throughout the country.
In addition, Mendelson (Mendele) was delegated by the
Zukunft Committee for the purpose of organizing the
work of youth groups outside Warsaw.
In the meantime the terror within the ghetto kept increasing
while the ghetto's isolation from the outside world
became more and more rigid. More and more people were
being arrested for sneaking onto the "Aryan side",
and finally "special courts" were established.
On February 12th, 1941, seventeen people previously
sentenced to death for illegal trespassing in the "Aryan
section" lost their lives. The execution took place
in the Jewish jail on Gesia Street. At 4 a.m. shrill
cries notified the neighbourhood that "justice"
was being meted out, that seventeen outcasts, including
four children and three women, were being duly punished
for leaving the ghetto in pursuit of a piece of bread
or a few pennies. Cries from other jail cells could
also be heard, the voices of future victims awaiting
trial for the same offence, a total of 700 people.
The same afternoon the entire Jewish population was
notified of the execution by special posters signed
by the German Commissar of the ghetto, Dr. Auerswald.
The ghetto could clearly feel the breath of death.
During a short meeting of the Party Executive Committee
(Abrasha Blum, Luzer Klog, Berek Sznajdmil, Marek Orzech),
held the same day, it was proposed to publish and post
short leaflets reading: "Shame to the Murderers."
The ghetto was dumbfounded by the terror of what was
happening and by fear of large-scale retaliations on
the part of the Germans. Once more every effort to decide
on armed resistance was nipped in the bud. The fear
of the Germans and of their policy of collective responsibility
was such that even the best refused to show any signs
of protest.
Now the events began moving at a breath-taking pace.
The ghetto streets became a bloody slaughter-house.
The Germans made it a habit to shoot passers-by without
the slightest provocation. People were afraid to leave
their homes, but German bullets reached them through
the windows. There were days when the toll of terror
was 10-15 quite accidental victims. One of the more
notorious sadists, a Schutzpolizei gendarme by the name
of Frankenstein, had on his conscience over 300 people
murdered in one month, more than half of whom were children.
Simultaneously man-hunts were being conducted on the
streets by German and Jewish Police. The captives were
sent to various labour camps throughout the General
Government. The Germans gained doubly from that procedure:
first, they obtained the needed working power; secondly,
they were able to show that all evictions were caused
by the Germans' desire to "increase the productive
power", and that in German labour camps, even though
the conditions were difficult, one had an opportunity
to live through the war... The Germans were truly magnanimous.
They even permitted the people to write to their families...
These letters found their way to the ghetto in great
numbers and their result was disbelief of the more and
more persistent reports concerning mass executions of
Jews. Repeated deportations throughout the country,
allegedly to Bessarabia, passed almost unnoticed, because
the ghetto obstinately believed the rumours that letters
had arrived from these people also. Likewise, people
dismissed as untrue the story of the wholesale slaughter
of almost the entire transport of German Jews brought
the previous year to the vicinity of Lublin. The stories
about the executions in the Lublin woods were too horrible,
it was thought, to be true.
The ghetto did not believe.
We, however, did our utmost to obtain arms from the
"Aryan side". We enlarged our battle organization,
whose members were mostly Bund youth cadres (Szmul Kostrynski,
Jurek Blones, Janek Bilak, Lejb Rozensztajn, Icl Szpilberg,
Kuba Zylberberg, Mania Elenbogen, and many others).
It is difficult to describe here the manner and the
handicaps of our work. It was an unbroken chain of disappointments
and failures. Repeatedly disappointing difficulties
in securing weapons, lack of understanding for our efforts
on the part of our Polish comrades--these were the conditions
in which our group worked and grew.
At one point it looked as if we were about to attain
our aim, and that transports of arms would soon start
arriving in the ghetto. Instead, news came about the
liquidation of the Lublin ghetto. Since a few months
before, when the serious "slip-up" of Celek
and many others in Piotrkow and Lublin took place, communications
with the groups outside the ghetto were almost non-existent.
The Warsaw ghetto, lacking direct contacts with the
outside, received these latest reports with skepticism
too. People gave many reasons to refute the remotest
possibility of similar acts of violence, refused to
accept the thought that a similar murder could possibly
be committed in Poland's capital where 300,000 Jews
dwelled. People argued with one another and tried to
convince others and themselves that "even the Germans
would not murder hundreds of thousands of people without
any reason whatever, particularly in times when they
were in such need of productive power..." A normal
human being with normal mental processes was simply
unable to conceive that a difference in the colour of
eyes or hair or different racial origin might be sufficient
causes for murder.
However, immediately after the arrival of these reports
came the tragic and bloody events of the night of April
17th, 1942, like an omen of things to come. Over fifty
social workers were dragged from their homes that night
by German officers and shot in the ghetto streets. Of
our comrades we then lost Goldberg (the barber) and
his wife, Naftali Leruch and his father, Sklar, etc.
Sonia Nowogrodzka, Luzer Klog, and Berenbaum were also
hunted by the Germans. The following morning the entire
ghetto, stunned, terrified, hysterical, tried to find
the reasons behind these executions. The majority came
to the conclusion that the action was aimed at political
leaders, and that all illegal activities should have
been stopped so as not to needlessly increase the tremendous
number of victims.
On April 19th, a special edition of Der Weker was published,
in which we tried to explain that the latest executions
were but another link in the systematic policy of extermination
practiced against the Jews as a whole, and that the
Germans wanted to get the Jewish population's more active
elements out of the way. Once this was accomplished,
the paper argued, the Germans hoped that the remaining
masses would meekly accept their lot as they did in
Wilno, Bialystok, Lublin and other cities. Our view,
however, remained as isolated as it had been before.
Only some youth groups, such as Hashomer and Hechalutz,
shared our convictions.
At this time a complete reorganization of our work took
place. All our clandestine activities, we decided, would
now be carried out with a single view in mind: to prepare
our resistance. To expedite matters the Party Executive
Committee was re-established (Abrasha Blum, Berek Sznajdmil,
Marek Orzech). All youth "fives" received
basic military training. Special orders were issued.
A detailed plan of action was worked out in the event
of a German attempt to overrun the ghetto. A transport
of weapons promised by the PS (Polish Socialists) was
to arrive shortly and was to comprise 100 pistols and
a few dozen rifles and grenades.
In the meantime our number decreased as a result of
continuous executions. From April 18th to July 22nd,
1942, the Germans killed 10-15 ghetto inhabitants per
night. None of our comrades slept at home during that
period. It was, however, very difficult to predict the
Germans' intentions at any given time since they employed
an involved pattern in choosing their victims. These
stemmed from all social groups--smugglers, merchants,
workers, professionals, etc. The purpose behind it was
to implant fear among the population to such a degree
as to render it incapable of any instinctive or organized
actions, to cause the fear of death from the Germans
to paralyze even the smallest acts of the people's resistance
and to force them onto the path of blind, passive subordination.
This, however, was clear to a small handful only. The
ghetto as a whole was unable to grasp the true reasons
behind the German acts of terror.
It is difficult to relate today life in the ghetto during
those days preceding the "official" exterminating
procedure applied to its inhabitants. Now the sadistic
and beastly methods of the Germans are well known to
the world. A few examples of everyday happenings will
suffice.
Three children sit, one behind the other, in front of
the Bersons and
Baumans Hospital. Agendarme, passing by, shoots all
three with a single round.
A pregnant woman trips and falls while crossing the
street. A German, present during the accident, does
not allow her to rise and shoots her right there and
then.
Dozens of those smuggling across the ghetto wall are
killed by a new German technique: Germans clad in civilian
clothes, with Jewish arm-bands and weapons hidden in
burlap bags, wait for the instant when the smugglers
scale the wall. At that very moment machine-guns appear
from the bags and the fate of the group is settled.
Every morning a small Opel stops at Orla Street. Every
morning a shackled man is thrown out of the car and
shot in the first house entrance. It is a Jew who had
been caught on the "Aryan side" without identification
papers.
In mid-May 1942, 110 prisoners of the so-called Central
Jail ("Gesiowka"), arrested for illegal crossing
to the "Aryan side", were executed. One of
our comrades (Grylak) saw the prisoners being led out
of the jail and into special trucks. Almost all of them
walked meekly into the cars, when suddenly one woman
found courage to show her protest. From the steps of
the truck she shouted: "I shall die, but your death
will be much worse!" Special proclamations signed
by Dr. Auerswald informed the ghetto of the "just"
punishment received by the 110 "criminals".
At about this time another of our major "slip-ups"
occurred. The Germans discovered the apartment where
our printing shop was installed. They did not find anybody
there, however, because our intelligence service had
known about the German order to search the house 24
hours beforehand and as a result we had had ample time
to move our paper supply, the mimeograph machine, and
the typewriters to another safe place.
The mood of the ghetto was now changing daily. The turning
point in the ghetto, however, was April 18th. Until
that day, no matter how difficult life had been, the
ghetto inhabitants felt that their everyday life, the
very foundations of their existence, were based on something
stabilized and durable; that one could try to balance
one's budget or make preparations for the winter. On
April 18th the very basis of ghetto life started to
move from under people's feet. Every night filled with
the shrill, crisp sound of shots was an illustration
that the ghetto had no foundations whatever, that it
lived at the will of the Germans, that it was brittle
and weak like a house built of playing cards. By now
everybody understood that the ghetto was to be liquidated,
but nobody yet realized that its entire population was
destined to die.
By mid-July the black clouds became thicker. Appearances
were normal enough. Only "unikely" rumours
began to circulate--about the arrival of the UmsiedIungskommando
(Deportation Board), about the proposed deportation
of 20,000, 40,000, 60,000 ghetto inhabitants, about
taking all the jobless for fortification works, about
leaving in Warsaw only those who were actually employed.
These rumours, although still considered implausible,
caused uneasiness, then panic. Great numbers of people
started looking for work, tried to obtain employment
in factories and public offices. Ladies who, until then,
had been spending their days in cafes, overnight became
hard-working seamstresses, menders, clerks. Some shops
gave preference to those in possession of sewing machines.
The price of sewing machines immediately rose. Although
no definite information was forthcoming, people became
more and more panicky and willingly started paying larger
sums for a chance to work. "To obtain work"
was, at that time, the only topic of conversation, the
only thought. Everybody had to work. Those "established"
were happy--a load was off their minds. The "unestablished"--uneasy,
irritated--followed every lead which might bring them
employment.
In July 20th the arrests began. Almost all doctors of
the "Czyste" Hospital were locked up in the
Pawiak Prison, as were part of the Jewish Mutual Aid
Committee's managing personnel and several Community
councilmen (among others, J. Jaszunski). That the ghetto
would shortly be liquidated was obvious.
On July 22nd, 1942, at 10 a.m., German cars halted at
the Jewish Council buildings. The "Umsiedlungsstab"
members entered the house. At a short meeting the Judenrat
members were told the Germans' desire. It was really
a simple matter: all "unproductive" Jews were
to be deported somewhere to the East.
The Germans departed and another secret meeting took
place. Not a single councilman stopped to consider the
basic question--whether the Jewish Council should undertake
to carry out the order at all. The Secretary of the
Jewish Council addressed the meeting: "Gentlemen,
before you pass to the technical means of executing
the order, stop and think--should it be done?"
But his advice was not heeded. There was no debate on
the implications of the order, only on matters of procedure
for its execution.
The following morning large white posters signed by
the Judenrat (the text of the proclamation was dictated
by Oberscharfuhrer Hoefle) made it clear to the Jewish
population that all, with the exception of those working
for Germans (here followed a carefully prepared list
of all working places which the order did not concern),
employees of the Jewish Council and the ZSS (Jewish
Mutual Aid), would have to leave Warsaw. The Jewish
police was designated as the agency to execute the deportation
order, and its Command was to keep in touch with the
"Umsiedlungsstab". Thus the Germans made the
Jewish Council itself condemn over 300,000 ghetto inhabitants
to death.
On the first day of the deportation period 2,000 prisoners
of the Central Jail were sent out together with a few
hundred beggars and starvelings who had been caught
in the streets.
In the afternoon a meeting of our "instructors'
five" took place. We decided that in view of the
complete lack of weapons and, therefore, the impossibility
of offering resistance, our activities should be directed
at saving from deportation as many people as possible.
We thought that contacts maintained by certain welfare
organizations with people within the Jewish police--the
agency in charge of the deportation procedure--would
prove helpful. However, even before the end of the meeting
and before the final details had been worked out, we
learned that the Germans and Ukrainians themselves had
surrounded the Muranowska Street--Niska Street block,
that they were attending to the "technical details"
themselves, and that they had already taken from these
buildings over 2,000 people, the number lacking to fill
the daily quota. (This quota was, in the first days
of the deportation, 6,000 people per day). According
to this report, the Germans took everybody without discrimination.
Even those in possession of certificates from German
places of employment had to come along (L. Rozensztajn
perished in this manner). In view of the new developments
our plans seemed quite unrealistic.
On the second day, July 23rd, a meeting of the so-called
Workers' Committee took place. All political parties
were represented on the Committee. Our group, supported
only by the Hechalutz and Hashomer organization, called
for active resistance. But public opinion was against
us. The majority still thought such action provocative
and maintained that if the required contingent of Jews
could be delivered, the remainder of the ghetto would
be left in peace. The instinct for self-preservation
finally drove the people into a state of mind permitting
them to disregard the safety of others in order to save
their own necks. True, nobody as yet believed that the
deportation meant death. But the Germans had already
succeeded in dividing the Jewish population into two
distinct groups--those already condemned to die and
those who still hoped to remain alive. Afterwards, step
by step, the Germans will succeed in pitting these two
groups against one another and cause some Jews to lead
others to certain death in order to save their own skin.
During the first days of the "actions", the
Party Council sat in continuous session (Orzech, Abrasha
Blum, Berek Sznajdmil, Sonia Nowogrodzka, Bernard Goldsztejn,
Klog, Paw, Grylak, Mermelsztajn, Kersz, Wojland, Russ,
Marek Edelman, and a comrade from the Polish Socialists).
We were awaiting the arrival of weapons at any hour
then. Our youth groups were all ready. For three days
until the time when all hopes to obtain the promised
weapons had to be given up, a state of "acute emergency"
for our mobilized groups prevailed. All our other members
were also mobilized and concentrated at several designated
spots awaiting orders. Such was the feeling of excitement
and apprehension that several street fights with members
of the Jewish police who were taking part in the "action"
took place.
On the second day of the "deportations" the
Chairman of the Jewish Council, Adam Czerniakow, committed
suicide. He knew beyond any doubt that the supposed
"deportation to the East" actually meant the
death of hundreds and thousands of people in gas chambers,
and he refused to assume responsibility for it. Being
unable to counteract events he decided to quit altogether.
At the time, however, we thought that he had no right
to act as he did. We thought that since he was the only
person in the ghetto whose voice carried a great deal
of authority, it had been his duty to inform the entire
population of the real state of affairs, and also to
dissolve all public institutions, particularly the Jewish
police, which had been established by the Jewish Council
and was legally subordinate to it.
The same day the first issue of our paper On Guard,
in which we warned the population not to volunteer for
deportation, and called for resistance, appeared. "Utterly
helpless as we are," Comrade Orzech wrote in the
editorial, "we must not let ourselves be caught.
Fight against it with all means at your disposal!"
This issue, published in three times the usual number
of copies, was circulated throughout the ghetto during
the fourth and fifth days of the deportation action.
So that we might learn conclusively and in detail about
the fate of the human transports leaving the ghetto,
Zalmen Frydrych (Zygmunt) was ordered to follow one
of the transports to the "Aryan side". His
journey "to the East", however, was a short
one, for it took only three days. Immediately after
leaving the ghetto walls he established contact with
an employee of the Warsaw Danzig [Gdanski] Terminal
working on the Warsaw--Malkinia line. They travelled
together in the transport's wake to Sokolow where, Zygmunt
was told by local railroad men, the tracks forked out,
one branch leading to Treblinka. It proved that every
day a freight train carrying people from Warsaw travelled
in that direction and invariably returned empty. No
transports of food were ever seen on this line. Civilians
were forbidden to approach the Treblinka railroad station.
This in itself was conclusive proof that the people
brought to Treblinka were being exterminated somewhere
in the vicinity. In addition, Zygmunt met two fugitives
from the death camp the following morning. They were
two Jews, completely stripped of their clothes, and
Zygmunt met them on the Sokolow market place and obtained
the full details of the horrible procedure. Thus it
was not any longer a question of rumours, but of facts
established by eyewitness accounts (one of the fugitives
was our comrade Wallach).
After Zygmunt's return we published the second issue
of On Guard with a detailed description of Treblinka.
But even now the population stubbornly refused to believe
the truth. They simply closed their eyes to the unpleasant
facts and fought against them with all the means at
their disposal.
In the meantime the Germans, not too discriminating
in their choice of methods, introduced a new propaganda
twist. They promised--and actually gave--three kilograms
of bread and one kilogram of marmalade to everyone who
voluntarily registered for "deportation".
The offer was more than sufficient. Once the bait was
thrown, propaganda and hunger did the rest. The propaganda
value of the measure lay in the fact that it was truly
an excellent argument against the "stories"
about gas chambers ("why would they be giving bread
away if they intended to murder them?..."). The
hunger, an even stronger persuader, magnified the picture
of three brown, crusty loaves of bread until nothing
was visible beyond it. Their taste which one could almost
feel in one's mouth--it was only a short walk from one's
home to the "Umschlagplatz" from which the
cars left--blinded people to all the other things at
the end of the same road. Their smell, familiar, delicious,
befogged one's mind, made it unable to grasp the things
which would normally have been so very obvious. There
were times when hundreds of people had to wait on line
for several days to be "deported". The number
of people anxious to obtain the three kilograms of bread
was such that the transports, now leaving twice daily
with 12,000 people, could not accommodate them all.
The noose around the ghetto was now becoming tighter
and tighter. After a short period of time all of the
so-called "Little Ghetto" (the neighbourhood
of Twarda and Pahska Streets) had been emptied of all
its inhabitants. In ten days all "volunteers",
children's homes ("Korczak's Children"), and
refugee shelters were shipped out, and the systematic
"blockades" of city blocks and streets began.
People with knapsacks would escape from street to street,
trying to guess in advance the area of the next "blockade",
and stay away from it.
The gendarmes, Ukrainians and Jewish police cooperate
nicely. The roles are meticulously and precisely divided.
The gendarmes surround the streets; the Ukrainians,
in front of the gendarmes, encircle the houses closely;
the Jewish police walk into the courtyards and summon
all the inhabitants. "All Jews must come down.
30 kilograms of baggage allowed. Those remaining inside
shall be shot..." And once again the same summons.
People run from all staircases. Nervously, on the run,
they clothe themselves in whatever is handy. Some descend
as they are, sometimes straight from bed, others are
carrying everything they can possibly take along, knapsacks,
packages, pots and pans. People cast frightened glances
at one another, the worst has happened. Trembling, they
form groups in front of the house. They are not allowed
to talk but they still try to gain the policemen's pity.
From nearby houses similar groups of trembling, completely
exhausted people arrive and form into one long column.
A gendarme beckons with his rifle to a casual passer-by
who, having been warned too late, was unable to escape
the doomed street. A Jewish policeman pulls him by his
sleeve or by his neck into the column in front of the
house. If the policeman is half-way decent, he hides
a small piece of paper with the scribbled address of
the victim's family--to let them know... Now the deserted
houses, the apartment entrances ajar according to regulations,
are given a quick once-over by the Ukrainians. They
open closed apartments with a single kick of their heavy
boots, with a single blow of a rifle butt. Two, three
shots signify the death of those few who did not heed
the call and remained in their homes. The "blockade"
is finished. On somebody's table an unfinished cup of
tea gets cold, flies finish somebody's piece of bread.
People outside of the "blockaded" area hopelessly
look for relatives and friends among the rectangular
groups surrounded by Ukrainians and Jewish policemen.
The columns slowly march through the streets. Behind
them, in a single row, requisitioned "rikshas"
carry the old and the children.
It is a long way to the "Umschlag". The Deportation
Point, from which the cars leave, is situated on the
very edge of the ghetto, on Stawki Street. The tall
walls surrounding it and closely guarded by gendarmes
are broken at only one narrow place. Through this entrance
the groups of helpless, powerless people are brought
in. Everyone holds some papers, working certificates,
identification cards. The gendarme at the entrance looks
them over briefly. "Rechts"--means life, "links"--means
death. Although everyone knows in advance the futility
of all arguments, he still tries to show his particular
helpfulness to German industry, to his German master,
and hopes for the magic little order, "rechts".
The gendarme does not even listen. Sometimes he orders
the passing people to show him their hands--he chooses
all small ones: "rechts"; sometimes he separates
blondes: "links"; in the morning he favours
short people; in the evening he takes a liking to tall
ones. "Links", "links", "links".
The human torrent grows, deepens, floods the square,
floods three large three-storey buildings, former schools.
More people are assembled here than are necessary to
fill the next four days' quota, they are just being
brought in as "reserves". People wait four
or five days before they are loaded into the railroad
cars. People fill every inch of free space, crowd the
buildings, bivouac in empty rooms, hallways, on the
stairs. Dirty, slimy mud floods the floors. One's foot
sinks in human excrement at every step. The odour of
sweat and urine sticks in one's throat. There are no
panes in the windows, and the nights are cold. Some
are dressed only in night-shirts or house-coats.
On the second day hunger begins to twist the stomach
in painful spasms, cracked lips long for a drop of water.
The times when people were given three loaves of bread
are long since gone. Sweating, feverish children lie
helplessly in their mothers'arms. People seem to shrink,
become smaller, greyer.
All eyes have a wild, crazy, fearful look. People look
pale, helpless, desperate. There is a sudden flash of
revelation that soon the worst, the incredible, the
thing one would not believe to the very last moment
is bound to happen. Here, in this crowded square, all
the continually nursed illusions collapse, all the brittle
hopes that "maybe I may save myself and my dearest
ones from total destruction"... collapse. A nightmare
settles on one's chest, grips one's throat, shoves one's
eyes out of their sockets, opens one's mouth to a soundless
cry. An old man imploringly and feverishly hangs on
to strangers around him. A helplessly suffering mother
presses three children to her heart. One wants to yell,
but there is nobody to yell to; to implore, to argue--there
is nobody to argue with; one is alone, completely alone
in this multitudinous crowd. One can almost feel the
ten--nay, hundred, thousand--rifles aimed at one's heart.
The figures of the Ukrainians grow to gigantic proportions.
And then one does not know of anything any more, does
not think about anything, one sits down dully in a corner,
right in the mud and dung of the wet floor. The air
becomes more and more stuffy, the place becomes more
and more crowded, not because of the thousands of bodies
and the odour of the rooms, but because of the sudden
understanding that all is lost, that nothing can be
done, that one must perish.
Possibilities of leaving the "Umschlag" did
exist, but they were a drop in the sea of the thousands
awaiting help. The Germans themselves established these
possibilities when they transferred a small children's
hospital from the Little Ghetto into one of the "Umschlag"
buildings and opened an emergency aid station there--a
malicious gesture toward those sentenced to death. Twice
daily, in the morning and in the evening, the personnel
working in the aid station was changed. All the aid
station workers were clad in white coats and all were
issued working certificates. Thus it was sufficient
to dress somebody in a white coat to enable him to be
taken out with the crew of doctors and nurses. Some
nurses took strange children into their arms and walked
out with them claiming they were their own. With older
people the matter was more difficult. These could only
be sent to the cemetery or to a hospital for adults
situated outside the enclosure, a procedure likewise
sanctioned by the Germans for no apparent reason. Thus,
healthy people were smuggled out of the "Umschlag
ground" in ambulances and in coffins. After a while,
however, the Germans began to check the ambulances and
the condition of the "sick". Therefore, in
order to show undeniable evidence, those old men and
women whose death was slated to be temporarily postponed
by virtue of somebody's intervention or as a personal
favour, were brought to a small room in the aid station,
behind the reception room. Here their legs were broken
without anaesthesia.
In addition, the Jewish police also "helped",
by charging incredible amounts of money, gold or valuables
per "head" for a chance to escape. Those who
were rescued, however, a comparatively insignificant
number, usually showed up at the "Umschlag"
for a second and third time, and finally disappeared
into the fatal interior of a railroad car with the rest
of the victims.
But people made frantic efforts to get out of the doomed
place. They would cling to the coats of passing nurses
begging for a white coat and storm the doors of the
hospital guarded by Jewish policemen.
A father asks that at least his child be admitted. Dr.
Anna Braude-Heller, Head of me Bersons and Baumans Hospital,
takes it from his arms and forcibly pushes it past the
protesting guard, into the hospital.
Helena Szefner, pale and beside herself, brought to
the "Umschlag" after the last blockade, is
also taken into the hospital by our comrades and is
then, at the first opportunity, taken outside the walls
on a doctor's certificate.
Janek Stroz is stopped by a Jewish policeman as he is
about to be led out of the enclosure. It looks as if
he is lost, but we terrorize the policeman just behind
the gendarme's back and he lets Janek through.
It often happened that the messenger sent to help somebody
to escape from the "Umschlag" was not only
unable to complete his mission, but perished himself,
swept with the crowd into a railroad car. Samek Kostryrski,
one of our bravest sent to the "Umschlag"
for some of our comrades, met death in such a manner.
The most important and most difficult thing in the "Umschlag"
was to live through the time when the cars were being
loaded. The transports left in the mornings and evenings.
The loading took place twice daily. An endless chain
of Ukrainians would encircle the square and the thousandfold
crowd. Shots would be fired and every shot hit its target.
It was not difficult to hit when one had within a few
paces a thick, moving crowd, every particle of which
was a living person, a target. The shots drew the crowd
nearer and nearer to the waiting cattle cars. Not enough!
Like mad beasts the Ukrainians ran through the empty
square toward the buildings. Here a wild chase would
begin. The frightened crowd hurried to the upper floors,
gathered in front of the hospital doors, hid in dark
holes in the attic. Just to get away, higher up, farther
from the chase. One might be lucky enough to miss one
more transport, save another day of life. Comrade Mendelson
(Mendele) remained in an attic for three days. A few
girls, Skif members, hid there for five days and were
later led out with a group of nurses.
The Ukrainians did not exert themselves unnecessarily.
The number of those who could not escape fast enough
was always sufficient to fill the cars. The last moment
before the departure, a mother is pushed into a car,
but there is no more room for her child, which is pulled
away from her and loaded farther down the line, in the
next incomplete car. Resistance? An instant shot. Slowly,
with difficulty, the doors close. The crowd is so thick
that it has to be mashed in with the rifle butts. And
then, the train starts. Fresh fodder for the Treblinka
gas chambers is under way.
During this time we lost almost all of our comrades.
Just a few dozen of our members remained from our original
group numbering more than 500 people: the Hechalutz
organization had better luck. It remained almost intact.
They started a few fires for diversionary purposes and
carried out an assault on the Jewish police commander,
J. Szerynski.
The best from among us were deported in such a manner
in the beginning of August 1942: S. Kostrynski, I. Szpilberg,
Pola Lipszyc, Cywla Waks, Mania Elenbogen, Kuba Zylberberg
were all sent out. Hanusia Wasser and her mother Mania
Wasser perished, as did Halina Brandes and her mother.
Comrade Orzech, sought by the Gestapo on several occasions,
had to flee to the "Aryan side".
On August 13th, 1942, Sonia Nowogrodzka was taken from
the W.C. Tobbens Factory. It was strange. Only two days
previously Sonia, looking out the window at the crowd
returning from work, had said: "My place is not
here. Look who remains in the ghetto, only the scum.
The working masses march in formation to the 'Umschlag'.
I have to go with them. If I shall be with them, then,
perhaps, they will not forget that they are human beings
even during their very last moments, in the cars, and
afterwards..."
A small handful of us remained. We did all we could,
but only very little was possible. We wanted to save
whatever we could at any price. We placed our people
in German establishments, the very best it seemed. Just
the same we began losing contact with one another. Only
one larger group of comrades was able to keep together
(20-25 people), the one at the "brushmakers' shops"
at Franciszkanska Street.
This was our most tragic period. We could plainly see
the slow disappearance of our whole organization. We
could see that everything we had so carefully nursed
through the long and difficult years of war was crumbling,
part of the general desolation, that all our work and
efforts were of no avail. It was mostly due to Abrasha
Blum, to his composure and presence of mind, that we
weathered the nightmare of those terrible times.
At about the middle of August, when only 120,000 people
were left in the ghetto, the first part of the "action"
appeared to have ended. The "Umsiedlungsstab"
left Warsaw then without any instructions as to the
future. But even now hopes proved futile. It quickly
became clear that the Germans were using the short pause
to liquidate Jewish settlements in nearby towns--Otwock,
Falenica, Miedzeszyn. The entire staff and all the children
of the Medem Sanitarium were deported from Miedzeszyn.
Roza Eichner died a martyr's death.
After this temporary let-up, the deportations from Warsaw
started again with intensified force. Now the blockades
were even more dangerous for us, because there were
fewer people and the area had become smaller. They were
also more difficult for the Germans, however, because
people had already learned how to hide. Therefore, a
new method was used: every Jewish policeman was made
responsible for bringing 7 "heads" daily to
the "Umschlag". And this is how the Germans
were playing their best game. Never before had anyone
been so inflexible in carrying out an action as a Jewish
policeman, never before had anyone been so unyielding
in holding on to a captured victim as one Jew in relation
to another Jew. So that they might furnish the 7 "heads",
Jewish policemen would stop a doctor in a white coat
(the coat could be sold for a fantastically high price
later, in the "Umschlag"...), a mother with
her child in her arms, or a lonely, lost child in search
of its home.
Yes, the Jewish police certainly wrote their own history
by their deeds.
On September 6th, 1942, all remaining ghetto inhabitants
were ordered to report to an area bounded by the following
streets: Gesia, Zamenhofa, Lubeckiego, Stawki. Here
the final registration was to take place.
From all directions people march, four abreast, to the
designated spot. All our friends are here, too. We hear
Ruta Perenson tell her little Nick: "You must not
be afraid of anything. Terrible things are going to
happen soon. They want to kill us all, but we shan't
let them. We shall hit them just as badly as they hit
us... "
This, however, did not happen. The entire ghetto population
was assembled in the small rectangle of the designated
block: the workers of the plants, the Jewish Council
employees, the public health workers, the hospital workers
(the sick were sent directly to the "Umschlag").
The Germans named a limited number of people who were
permitted to remain in every German establishment, and
in the Jewish Council. These chosen individuals received
numbered slips of paper, a guarantee of life. The chances
of receiving such a life-insuring slip of paper were
almost nil, but the mere fact that such chances did
exist was sufficient to confuse people, to cause their
attention to converge solely on the means of securing
the numbered slip. Everything else was suddenly of no
importance. Some fought for the piece of paper loudly,
shrilly at tempting to prove their right to live. Others,
tearfully resigned, meekly awaited their fate. The last
selection took place in a state of utmost tension. After
two days, every hour of which seemed to last ages, the
chosen ones were escorted back to their places of work,
where they were henceforth to be billeted. The remainder
was led to the "Umschlag". The last to arrive
here were the families of the Jewish policemen.
No words of any human language are strong enough to
describe the "Umschlag" now, when no help
from anywhere or anybody can be expected. The sick,
adults as well as children, previously brought here
from the hospital, lie deserted in the cold halls. They
relieve themselves right where they lie, and remain
in the stinking slime of excrement and urine. Nurses
search the crowd for their fathers and mothers and,
having found them, inject longed for deathly morphine
into their veins, their own eyes gleaming wildly. One
doctor compassionately pours a cyanide solution into
the feverish mouths of strange, sick children. To offer
one's cyanide to somebody else is a really heroic sacrifice,
for cyanide is now the most precious, the most irreplaceable
thing. It brings a quiet, peaceful death, it saves from
the horror of the cars.
Thus the Germans deported 60,000 people within two days.
From the "round-up" the following of our comrades
were deported: Natan Liebeskind, Dora Kociotek, J. Gruszka,
Anka Wolkowicz, Michelson, Cluwa Krysztat-Nisenbaum,
and many others. Comrade Bernard Goldsztejn, for whom
the Germans were specifically searching, had to hide
on the "Aryan side".
On September 12th the "action" was officially
ended. A nominal number of 33,400 Jews working in factories
and for German employers, 3,000 employees of the Jewish
Council included, remained in Warsaw. Actually, counting
the people who had been able to remain hidden in cellars,
etc., the number of remaining Jews was approximately
60,000. All were billeted at their working posts. New
walls divided the ghetto, and between the inhabited
blocks there were vast, empty, desolated areas, haunted
by the dead quiet of the street, the tapping of the
open window frames in the wind, and the sickly stench
of unburied corpses.
By now the ghetto comprised: (1) The area of Tobbens',
Schultz's, Rohrich's shops--Leszno Street, Karmelicka
Street, Nowolipki Street, Smocza, Nowolipie and Zelazna
Streets up to Leszno; (2) The "brush-makers' area"--
Swietojerska Street, Walowa, Franciszkanska, and Bonifraterska
Streets up to Swietojerska; (3) The "central ghetto"--Gesia
Street, Franciszkanska, Bonifraterska, Muranowska, Pokorna,
Stawki, Parysowski Square, and Smocza Street up to Gesia.
Workers of one shop were now forbidden to communicate
with those of another. The Germans exploited to the
utmost the lives of those whom they had spared. The
usual working hours for Jews were 12 hours daily, and
sometimes even longer, without interruption, while the
working and food condition were simply catastrophic.
As in the first period, when spotted fever had been
the ghetto's plague, epidemics again ravaged the ghetto.
This time tuberculosis was rampant.
Only the garbage collectors and the grave-diggers (the
so-called "Pinker-Boys"--a name derived from
the name of a well-known Warsaw Jewish funeral home)
became wealthy, transporting to the "Aryan side"
in coffins and under garbage piles valuables which the
ghetto could no longer use. It became the dream of every
inhabitant of the harassed Jewish section to escape
to the "Aryan side" and to establish himself
there.
In the beginning of October 1942, talks between our
own Executive Committee and the Command of the Hechalutz
Battle Organization took place. The purpose of the talks
was the establishment of a joint organization. This
matter, argued back and forth among our comrades, was
finally settled at a meeting of the Warsaw Party cadres
which took place on October 15th. We then decided that
a joint battle organization should be formed, and that
its purpose should be to prepare armed resistance for
the time when the Germans might attempt to repeat the
extermination procedure in the Warsaw ghetto. We realized
that only through coordinated work and our utmost joint
efforts could any results at all be expected.
About October 20th the so-called Coordinating Committee
(KK) whose members were representatives of all existing
political parties, was formed. Abrasha Blum and Berek
Sznajdmil represented us on the KK. At the same time
the Command of the new Jewish Battle [Fighting] Organization
(ZOB) was appointed. Mordechaj Anielewicz (Hashomer)
became the ZOB's Commander. Marek Edelman was called
into the Command to represent our groups. Dr. L. Fajner
("Mikolaj") undertook to represent the KK
on the "Aryan side", on our behalf. An executive
committee for the KK was also appointed, as was a propaganda
committee. Abrasha Blum represented us on these committees.
Since the ghetto was divided into separate areas between
which there was almost no contact, the ZOB necessarily
had to organize its work accordingly. We took over the
leadership in the "brush-makers' region" (Grylak),
the W.C. Tobbens area (Paw), and the Prosta Street neighbourhood
(Kersz). We succeeded in forming several battle groups.
Thus B. Pelc and Goldsztejn led two "fives"
in the central ghetto; Jurek Blones and Janek Bilak
headed two "fives" in the "brush-makers'
area"; A. Fajoer and N. Chmielnicki were the leaders
in the Schultz area; W. Rozowski led our group at the
Rohrich shop.
Once again we built a large organization, not alone
this time, but by common efforts, and once again the
major problem of weapons was encountered. There were
almost none at all in the ghetto. In must be taken into
account that the time was the year 1942. The resistance
movement of the Poles was just beginning at the time,
and only vague stories were being circulated about partisans
in the woods. It must be remembered that the first organized
act of armed resistance on the part of the Poles did
not take place until March 1943. Therefore, there was
nothing unusual in the fact that our efforts to obtain
arms and ammunition through the Government Delegate
and through other agencies encountered major difficulties
and as a general rule, brought no results. We were able
to obtain a few pistols from the People's Guard. Afterwards
two assaults took place: on the Commander of the Jewish
police, Lejkin, on October 29th, and on J. First (the
Jewish Council's representative at the "Umsiedlungsstab")
on November 29th.
And so the ZOB gained its first popularity. It carried
out several more assaults against a few Jewish foremen
who caused most of the suffering on the part of the
Jewish slave labourers. During such an assault in the
Hallman area (Hallman's was a joinery shop), German
factory guards arrested three of the participants. At
night, however, our group from the Rohrich area, led
by G. Fryszdorf, disarmed the German guards and freed
our prisoners.
The following incident may serve to clarify the conditions
in which we had to work at the time. About mid-November
(in the period of "quiet") a few hundred Jews
from several shops were deported, allegedly to work
in the Lublin Concentration Camp. During the trip Comrade
W. Rozowski broke open the bars in the car window, threw
out six female prisoners, while the train was in motion
(among others, Guta Btones, Chajka Betchatowska, Wiernik,
M. Kojfman), and then jumped out himself. Similar feats
would have been quite impossible to perform at the time
of the first deportations, because even if there had
been somebody brave enough to attempt an escape, the
other victims would never had allowed it for fear of
German revenge. By now the Jews finally began to realize
that deportation actually meant death; that there was
no other alternative but at least to die honourably.
But as was quite natural for human beings, they still
tried to postpone death and "honour" for as
long a time as possible.
At the end of December 1942 we received our first transport
of weapons from the Home Army. It was not much--there
were only ten pistols in the whole transport--but it
enabled us to prepare for our first major action. We
planned it for January 22nd and it was to be a retaliatory
measure against the Jewish police.
However, on January 18th, 1943, the ghetto was surrounded
once again and the "second liquidation" began.
This time, however, the Germans were not able to carry
out their plans unchallenged. Four barricaded battle
groups offered the first armed resistance in the ghetto.
The ZOB was baptized in battle in the first large-scale
street fighting at the corner of Mila and Zamenhofa
Streets. The best part of the Organization was lost
there. Miraculously, because of his heroic attitude,
the ZOB Commander, Mordechaj Anielewicz, survived. After
that battle we realized that street fighting would be
too costly for us, since we were not sufficiently prepared
for it and lacked the proper weapons. We, therefore,
switched to partisan fighting. Four major encounters
were fought in the apartment houses at 40 Zamenhofa
Street, 44 Muranowska Street, 34 Mila Street and 22
Franciszkanska Street. In the Schultz shop area the
SS men taking part in the deportation were attacked
by the partisans. Comrade A. Fajner took an active part
in this action and was killed in its course.
One of our battle groups, still unarmed, was caught
by the Germans and was taken to the "Umschlag".
Shortly before they were to enter the railroad cars,
B. Pelc addressed the group with a few words. It was
only a short address, but it was so effective, that
not a single one of the sixty people moved to enter
the car. Van Oeppen (the chief of Treblinka) shot all
sixty himself on the spot. This group's behaviour, however,
served as an inspiration that always, under all circumstances,
one should oppose the Germans.
Of all the prepared 50 battle groups only five took
part in the January activities. The remainder, not having
been assembled at the time of the Germans' entry into
the ghetto, was caught by surprise and was unable to
reach the place where their weapons were stored.
Once again, as was the case in the first stage of the
ZOB's activities, four-fifths of the Battle Organization's
members perished.
The latest developments, however, reverberated strongly
both within the ghetto and outside of it. Public opinion,
Jewish as well as Polish, reacted immediately to the
ghetto battles. For now, for the first time, German
plans were frustrated. For the first time the halo of
omnipotence and invincibility was torn from the Germans'
heads. For the first time the Jew in the street realized
that it was possible to do something against the Germans'
will and power. The number of Germans killed by ZOB
bullets was not the only important thing. What was more
important was the appearance of a psychological turning
point. The mere fact that because of the unexpected
resistance, weak as it was, the Germans were forced
to interrupt their "deportation" schedule
was of great value.
In the meantime legends about "hundreds" of
dead Germans and the "tremendous" power of
the ZOB started circulating throughout Warsaw. The entire
Polish Underground was full of praise for us. At the
end of January we received 50 larger pistols and 50
hand grenades from the Home Army Command. A reorganization
of the ZOB was carried-out. All battle groups were now
divided among four major areas. We commanded the "brush-makers'
area" (Marek Edelman was in command), where we
had, among others, our own battle group led by Jurek
Blones. The battle groups were quartered in the immediate
vicinity of their operational posts. The purpose of
the billeting arrangement was to prevent the groups
from being taken by surprise by new German regulations,
as had happened before, and to accustom the partisans
to military discipline, military ways, and a continual
use of their weapons. In the vicinity of the ghetto
walls we established guard posts and guards, instructed
to inform immediately about approaching danger, which
kept vigil 24-hours a day.
All that time the German propaganda machine worked and
tried once more to distract the Jews with invented stories
about "Jewish reservations in Trawniki and Poniatowa"
where the Tobbens and Schultz factories were allegedly
to be evacuated and "where productive Jews devotedly
working for the Germans would be able to live through
the war in peace". In the beginning of February
1943, the Germans brought into the ghetto twelve Jewish
foremen from the Lublin Concentration Camp who were
to persuade the ghetto population to volunteer for work
"under excellent conditions". The night following
the arrival of these individuals ZOB members encircled
their quarters and forced their immediate departure
from the ghetto. But the Germans tried once more. They
nominated W.C. Tobbens, the proprietor of the largest
ghetto factory, manufacturing German uniforms, to the
post of Deportation Commissar. This move was designed
to create further impression that the "evacuation
to Trawniki and Poniatowa" was closely related
to the need for workers in German enterprises.
The ZOB also conducted large-scale propaganda activities.
Several proclamations were published and posted on the
ghetto walls and houses. In reply, Tobbens prepared
his own appeal to the Jewish population both editions
of which, however, were confiscated in the printing
shop by the ZOB. During this period the ZOB alone ruled
the ghetto. It was the only force and the only authority
recognized by public opinion.
When, at the end of February 1943, the Germans appealed
to the workers to evacuate Hallman's joinery shop, of
the more than 1,000 workers employed there only twenty-five
heeded the call. At night, in a daring patrol, two battle
groups set the shop's stores afire (Comrade Fryszdorf
took part in this action), causing losses of more than
1,000,000 zloty to the Germans. Once again well-laid
German plans were upset. The following morning the Germans
issued a communique blaming the fire on parachutists.
Nonetheless, the Jewish population knew perfectly well
who had actually been behind the fire and who had really
caused the Germans to lose face.
At the beginning of March the Germans again appealed
to the brush-makers' shop to register for evacuation,
but not a single one of the 3,500 workers registered.
The ZOB, on the other hand, carried out its plans to
the last detail: the transport of brush-making machinery
loaded onto railway cars on the "Umschlagplatz"
burned up on its way due to our planting of specially
prepared incendiary bottles with delayed-action fuses.
The Germans became more and more uncomfortable in the
ghetto. They became increasingly aware of the hostile
attitude not only of the battle groups, but also of
the population as a whole, which willingly carried out
all ZOB instructions.
The ZOB broadened its activities and was supported by
the entire ghetto. Bakers and merchants delivered quantities
of food for its members. The wealthy inhabitants were
taxed by it, and the funds thus secured were used for
the purchase of arms and ammunition. The ZOB determined
the amount of contributions to be paid by the Jewish
Community agencies. The discipline was such that everybody
had to pay either voluntarily or forcibly. The Jewish
Council contributed 250,000 zloty. The Office for Economic
Requirements paid 710,000 zloty. Revenues over the period
of the first three months amounted to about ten million
zloty. These sums were smuggled over to the "Aryan
side" where our representatives organized the purchase
of weapons and explosives.
Arms were smuggled into the ghetto in precisely the
same manner as other contraband. Bribed Polish policemen
closed their eyes to heavy parcels thrown over the ghetto
walls at designated spots. ZOB liaison men immediately
disposed of the packages. The Jewish policemen guarding
the ghetto walls had no voice in the matter. Our most
active liaison men with the "Aryan side" were
Zygmunt Frydrych (who arranged the first transport of
weapons), Michal Klepfisz, Celemenski, Fajgele Peltel
(Wladka), and many others. Michal Klepfisz in cooperation
with the PS and WRN groups made the necessary arrangements
for a large-scale purchase of explosives and incendiaries
(e.g. 2,000 litres of gasoline) and later, after transporting
the shipment to the ghetto, set up a factory for the
production of Molotov cocktails and hand grenades. The
production process was primitive and simple, but the
large output of the shop greatly increased the firing-power
of our detachments. By now every partisan was equipped.
on the average, with one pistol (and 10-15 rounds for
it), 4-5 hand grenades, 4-5 Molotov cocktails. 2-3 rifles
were assigned to each "area". There was just
one machine-gun in the entire ghetto.
The ZOB now carried out a programme designed to rid
the Jewish population of hostile elements and of those
individuals who collaborated with the Germans. It carried
out death sentences pronounced by its Command on almost
all Jewish Gestapo agents. Those whom our justice did
not reach were forced to steal away to the "Aryan
side" and did not dare return to the ghetto. Once,
when four Gestapo members appeared unexpectedly in the
ghetto for half an hour, three were killed and the fourth
was heavily wounded. The notorious Gestapo agent, Dr.
Alfred Nossig, was also killed, and a Gestapo identification
card issued as far back as 1933 was found on his person.
During a meeting of the ZOB Command in the first days
of April we resolved to extend our activities to include
the entire area of the General Government. A special
committee was appointed. At the same time the Bund Central
Committee also appointed a committee comprising M. Orzech,
Dr. L. Fajner, Bernard Goldsztejn, S. Fiszgrund, Celemenski,
Samsonowicz to operate on the "Aryan side".
The Germans apparently came to the conclusion that the
remaining Jews could not be persuaded to leave the Warsaw
ghetto voluntarily. "Nabbing patrols" were,
therefore, organized once again to operate in the ghetto.
At the same time German factory guards jailed several
dozen Jews, arrested on the ghetto streets for minor
violations and destined to be evacuated to the Poniatowa
Camp the following morning. The ZOB Command, however,
decided otherwise. At 5:30 p.m. armed ZOB men appeared
in the-guard-house where the victims were being held,
terrorized the policemen and freed the arrested Jews.
The German detachment on guard next door was afraid
to intervene.
The Germans, therefore, tried still another method.
People arrested in the streets were now immediately
loaded on trucks and directed to the "Umschlag".
But the Jewish Fighting Organization was still faster,
the victims were freed in the areas between the particular
blocks (in the so-called ''inter-ghetto"), where
ZOB battle groups were deployed.
In the period immediately preceding the final extermination
drive the Bund maintained four barracked battle groups:
(1) in the brush-makers' area, led by Jurek Blones;
(2) in the Schultz factories area, under the leadership
of W. Rozowski; (3) two groups in the central ghetto
area, led by L. Gruzalc and Dawid Hochberg, respectively.
Finally, the Germans decided to liquidate the Warsaw
ghetto completely, regardless of cost. On April 19th,
1943, at 2 a.m. the first messages concerning the Germans'
approach arrived from our outermost observation posts.
These reports made it clear that German gendarmes, aided
by Polish "navy blue" policemen, were encircling
the outer ghetto walls at 30-yard intervals. An emergency
alarm to all our battle groups was immediately ordered,
and at 2:15, i.e. 15 minutes later, all the groups were
already at their battle stations. We also informed the
entire population of the imminent danger, and most of
the ghetto inhabitants moved instantly to previously
prepared shelters and hide-outs in the cellars and attics
of buildings. A deathly silence enveloped the ghetto.
The ZOB was on the alert.
At 4 a.m. the Germans in groups of threes, fours, or
fives so as not to arouse the ZOB's or the population's
suspicion, began penetrating into the "inter-ghetto"
areas. Here they formed into platoons and companies.
At 7 o'clock motorized detachments, including a number
of tanks and armoured vehicles, entered the ghetto.
Artillery pieces were placed outside the walls. Now
the SS-men were ready to attack. In closed formations
stepping haughtily and loudly, they marched into the
seemingly dead streets of the central ghetto. Their
triumph appeared to be complete. It looked as if this
superbly equipped modern army had scared off the handful
of bravado- drunk men, as if those few immature boys
had at last realized that there was no point in attempting
the unfeasible, that they understood that the Germans
had more rifles than there were rounds for all their
pistols.
But no, they did not scare us and we were not taken
by surprise. We were only awaiting an opportune moment.
Such a moment presently arrived. The Germans chose the
intersection at Mila and Zamenhofa Streets for their
bivouac area, and battle groups barricaded at the four
corners of the street opened concentric fire on them.
Strange projectiles began exploding everywhere (the
hand grenades of our own make), the lone machine-gun
sent shots through the air now and then (ammunition
had to be conserved carefully), rifles started firing
a bit farther away. Such was the beginning.
The Germans attempted a retreat, but their path was
cut. German dead soon littered the street. The remainder
tried to find cover in the neighbouring stores and house
entrances, but this shelter proved insufficient. The
"glorious" SS, therefore, called tanks into
action under the cover of which the remaining men of
two companies were to commence a "victorious"
retreat. But even the tanks seemed to be affected by
the Germans' bad luck. The first was burned out by one
of our incendiary bottles, the rest did not approach
our positions. The fate of the Germans caught in the
Mita Street-Zamenhofa Street trap was settled. Not a
single German left this area alive. The following battle
groups took part in the fighting here: Gruzalc's (Bund);
Merdek's (Hashomer); Hochberg's (Bund); Berek's (Dror);
Pawel's (PPR).
Simultaneously, fights were going on at the intersection
of Nalewki and Gesia Streets. Two battle groups kept
the Germans from entering the ghetto area at this point.
The fighting lasted more than seven hours. The Germans
found some mattresses and used them as cover, but the
partisans' well-aimed fire forced them to several successive
withdrawals. German blood flooded the street. German
ambulances continuously transported their wounded to
the small square near the Community buildings. Here
the wounded lay in rows on the sidewalk awaiting their
turn to be admitted to the hospital. At the corner of
Gesia Street a German air liaison observation post signalled
the partisans' positions and the required bombing targets
to the planes. But from the air as well as on the ground
the partisans appeared to be invincible. The Gesia Street-Nalewki
Street battle ended in the complete withdrawal of the
Germans.
At the same time heavy fighting raged at Muranowski
Square. Here the Germans attacked from all directions.
The cornered partisans defended themselves bitterly
and succeeded, by truly superhuman efforts, in repulsing
the attacks. Two German machine-guns and a quantity
of other weapons were captured. A German tank was burned,
the second tank of the day.
At 2 p.m., not a single live German remained in the
ghetto area. It was the ZOB's first complete victory
over the Germans. The remaining hours of the day passed
in "complete quiet", i.e. with the exception
of artillery fire (the guns were in positions at Krasinski
Square) and several bombings from the air.
The following day there was silence until 2 p.m. At
that time the Germans, again in closed formation, arrived
at the brush-makers' gate. They did not suspect that
at that very moment an observer lifted an electric plug.
A German factory guard walked toward the gate wanting
to open it. At precisely the same moment the plug was
placed in the socket and a mine, waiting for the Germans
for a long time, exploded under the SS-men's feet. Over
one hundred SS-men were killed in the explosion. The
rest, fired on by the partisans, withdrew.
Two hours later the Germans tried their luck once again.
In a different manner now, carefully, one after another,
in extended order formations, they attempted to penetrate
into the brush-makers' area. Here, however, they were
again suitably received by a battle group awaiting them.
Of the thirty Germans who succeeded in entering the
area, only a few were able to leave it. Once again the
Germans withdrew from the ghetto. Once again the partisans'
victory was complete. It was their second victory.
The Germans tried again. They attempted to enter the
ghetto at several other points, and everywhere they
encountered determined opposition. Every house was a
fortress.
In one of the attics we are suddenly surrounded. Nearby,
in the same attic, are the Germans and it is impossible
to reach the stairs. In the dark corners of the attic
we cannot even see one another. We do not notice Sewek
Dunski and Junghajzer who crawl up the stairs from below,
reach the attic, get behind the Germans, and throw a
grenade. We do not even pause to consider how it happens
that Michal Klepfisz jumps straight onto the German
machine-gun firing from behind the chimney. We only
see the cleared path. After the Germans have been thrown
out, several hours later, we find Michal's body perforated
like a sieve from two machine-gun rounds.
The brush-makers' area could not be taken.
Now something unprecedented took place. Three officers
with lowered machine-guns appeared. They wore white
rosettes in their buttonholes-- emissaries. They desired
to negotiate with the Area Command. They proposed a
15-minute truce to remove the dead and the wounded.
They were also ready to promise all inhabitants an orderly
evacuation to labour camps in Poniatowa and Trawniki,
and to let them take along all their belongings.
Firing was our answer. Every house remained a hostile
fortress. From every storey, from every window bullets
sought hated German helmets, hated German hearts.
On the fourth storey, at a small window, our old soldier
Diamarit is at his combat post. His is a long rifle
whose glorious history reaches back to the Russo-Japanese
War. Diamant is phlegmatic, his movements are slow but
deliberate. The young boys near him impatiently try
to hurry him along. But Diamant is imperturbable. He
aims at the stomach, hits the heart. Every shot finishes
off another German.
At the second storey window is Dwojra, firing away rancourously.
The Germans spot her: "Schau, Hans, eine Frau schiesst!"
They try to get her, but somehow their bullets miss.
She, apparently, does not miss often, for, strangely
enough, they withdraw quickly.
On the first floor, on the stairway (Post No. 1) are
Szlamek Szuster and Kazik throwing one hand grenade
after another. After a while the supply of grenades
becomes exhausted, while two Germans are still moving
about the courtyard below. Szlamek reaches for an incendiary
bottle and throws it at the German so accurately that
the latter, hit squarely over his helmet, instantly
catches fire and is burned to death.
The partisans' stand was so determined that the Germans
were finally forced to abandon all ordinary fighting
methods and to try new, apparently infallible tactics.
Their new idea was to set fire to the entire brush-makers'
block from the outside, on all sides simultaneously.
In an instant fires were raging over the entire block,
black smoke choked one's throat, burned one's eyes.
The partisans, haturally, did not intend to be burnt
alive in the flames. We decided to gamble for our lives
and to attempt to reach the central ghetto area regardless
of consequences.
The flames cling to our clothes which now start smouldering.
The pavement melts under our feet into a black, gooey
substance. Broken glass, littering every inch of the
streets, is transformed into a sticky liquid in which
our feet are caught. Our soles begin to burn from the
heat of the stone pavement. One after another we stagger
through the conflagration. From house to house, from
courtyard to courtyard, with no air to breathe, with
a hundred hammers clanging in our heads, with burning
rafters continuously falling over us, we finally reach
the end of the area on fire. We feel lucky just to stand
here, to be out of the inferno.
Now the most difficult part remains. There is only one
possible way into the central ghetto--through a small
breach in the wall guarded from three sides by gendarmes,
Ukrainians and "navy-blue" police. Five battle
groups have to force their way through this breach.
One after the other, their feet wrapped in rags to stifle
the sound of steps, under heavy fire, tense to the utmost,
Gutman 's, Berlinski's and Grynbaum's groups force their
way through. Success! Jurek Blones' group covers from
behind. While the first of this group emerge on the
street, a German search-light illuminates the entire
wall section. It seems as if not a single person more
will be able to save his life here. Suddenly Romanowicz's
single well-aimed shot puts out the search-light and,
before the Germans have time to collect their wits,
our entire group manages to cross over to the other
side.
We continued the fight in the central ghetto in cooperation
with the battle groups existing in that area. As in
the brush-makers' area before, it was almost impossible
to move freely through the area. Entire streets were
sometimes blocked by tremendous fires. The sea of flames
flooded houses and courtyards, wooden beams burned noisily,
walls collapsed. There was no air, only black, choking
smoke and heavy, burning heat radiating from the red-hot
walls,from the glowing stone stairs.
The omnipotent flames were now able to accomplish what
the Germans could not do. Thousands of people perished
in the conflagration. The stench of burning bodies was
everywhere. Charred corpses lay around on balconies,
in window recesses, on unburned steps. The flames chased
the people out from their shelters, made them leave
the previously prepared safe hide-outs in attics and
cellars. Thousands staggered about in the courtyards
where they were easy prey for the Germans who imprisoned
them or killed them outright. Tired beyond all endurance,
they would fall asleep in driveways, entrances, standing,
sitting, lying and were caught asleep by a passing German's
bullet. Nobody would even notice that an old man sleeping
in a corner would never again wake up, that a mother
feeding her baby had been cold and dead for three days,
that a baby's crying and sucking was futile since its
mothers arms were cold and her breast dead. Hundreds
committed suicide jumping from the fourth or fifth storeys
of apartment houses. Mothers would thus save their children
from terrible death in flames. The Polish population
saw these scenes from Swietojerska Street and from Krasinski
Square.
After such exemplary lessons in the central ghetto and
in the brush-makers' area, the Germans assumed that
other shops would no longer oppose a "voluntary"
evacuation from the ghetto. They, therefore, announced
a deadline for appearing at the collection points threatening
with like persecutions in the event of disobedience.
By now, however, neither pleading nor threats could
convince the population.
The partisans were on the alert everywhere. In the Tobbens
and Schultz area they first of all attempted to disrupt
the regular movements of German units into the central
ghetto. From balconies, windows, and rooftops they showered
the moving truckloads of SS-men with hand grenades and
with rifle and pistol fire. Once even a truck speeding
on the "Aryan side" was blown up. On one occasion
Rozowski and Sziomo, during the course of an area inspection,
noticed an approaching German truck. They thought for
an instant and then swiftly climbed to a balcony. From
here they threw a four-pound powder charge straight
down into the truck killing all but five of the sixty
SS-men in it.
After five days the deadline for "voluntary"
evacuation passed and the Germans once again began to
"subdue" the area. They again met with determined
opposition. Unfortunately, the previously planted mines
could not be set off because by now there was no electric
current in the ghetto. But heavy fighting took place.
Partisans, barricaded in the houses, kept the Germans
from advancing into the area. As was the case in the
other areas, every house fought. Particularly heavy
fighting occurred in the following apartment houses:
41 Nowolipki Street, 64 Nowolipie Street, 67 Nowolipie
Street, 72 Leszno Street, 56 Leszno Street.
At 56 Leszno Street Jurek is cornered at an outpost.
A group of SS-men surrounds him and one throws a grenade.
Jurek adroitly catches the grenade in mid-air and tosses
it back at the SS-men before it has time to explode.
Four of them are killed on the spot.
Sziomo, the Deputy Area Commander, his arm wounded,
covers the withdrawal from 72 Nowolipie Street. Suddenly
the group is surrounded. Everything seems lost. There
is no time to prevent disaster. Sziomo quickly pulls
a sheet from a bed and with it he lowers everyone present
down to the courtyard. There is nobody to hold it for
him, however, and he jumps from the second storey.
In this area, as in the others, the Germans finally
"saved" their military honour by setting house
after house on fire.
In view of the changed conditions the ZOB now resolved
to change its tactics, viz., to attempt the protection
of larger groups of the population hidden in bunkers
and shelters. Thus two ZOB detachments (Hochberg's and
Sznajdmil's) escorted a few hundred people from the
ruined shelter at 37 Mila Street to 7 Mila Street in
broad daylight. The partisans were able to hold this
latter hide-out, where several thousand people found
shelter, for over a week.
The burning of the ghetto came to an end. There simply
were not any more living quarters and, still worse,
there was no water. The partisans themselves now descended
to the underground shelters occupied by the civilian
population to defend whatever could still be defended.
Battles and armed encounters were now fought mostly
at night, while in the daytime the ghetto was completely
lifeless. The Germans and the ZOB patrols met only when
the streets were completely dark, and whoever had time
to fire first, won. Our patrols were spread over the
entire ghetto area. A great many died on both sides
every night. The Germans and Ukrainians made it a practice
to patrol the streets in larger groups, and lay in ambush
for the partisans only.
On May Day the Command decided to carry out a "holiday"
action. Several battle groups were sent out to "hunt
down" the greatest number of Germans possible.
In the evening a May Day roll-call was held. The partisans
were briefly addressed by a few people and the Internationale
was sung. The entire world, we knew, was celebrating
May Day on that day and everywhere forceful, meaningful
words were being spoken. But never yet had the Internationale
been sung in conditions so different, so tragic, in
a place where an entire nation had been and was still
perishing. The words and the song echoed from the charred
ruins and were, at that particular time, an indication
that socialist youth was still fighting in the ghetto,
and that even in the face of death they were not abandoning
their ideals.
The partisans' situation was becoming more grave every
hour. Not only were there shortages of food and water,
but ammunition was also becoming scarce. We no longer
had any communications with the "Aryan side"
and we were, therefore, unable to arrange for the transportation
of additional weapons that we had received (on the "Aryan
side") from the People's Army while the fighting
in the ghetto was going on (20 rifles and ammunition).
The Germans now tried to locate all inhabited shelters
by means of sensitive sound-detecting devices and police
dogs. On May 3rd they discovered the shelter on 30 Franciszkanska
Street, where the operation base of those of our groups
who had formerly forced their way from the brush-makers'
area was at the time located. Here one of the most brilliant
battles was fought. The fighting lasted for two days
and half of all our men were killed in its course. A
hand grenade killed Berek Sznajdmil. But even in the
most difficult moments, when there was almost nothing
left, Abrasha Blum kept our spirits up. His presence
among us meant more to us and gave us more strength
than the possession of the best possible weapon. One
can hardly speak of victories when Life itself is the
reason for the fight and so many people are lost, but
one thing can surely be stated about this particular
battle: we did not let the Germans carry out their plans.
They did not evacuate a single living person.
On May 8th detachments of Germans and Ukrainians surrounded
the Headquarters of the ZOB Command. The fighting lasted
two hours, and when the Germans convinced themselves
that they would be unable to take the bunker by storm,
they tossed in a gas-bomb. Whoever survived the German
bullets, whoever was not gassed, committed suicide,
for it was quite clear that from here there was no way
out, and nobody even considered being taken alive by
the Germans. Jurek Wilner called upon all partisans
to commit suicide together. Lutek Rotblat shot his mother,
his sister, then himself. Ruth fired at herself seven
times.
Thus 80% of the remaining partisans perished, among
them the ZOB Commander, Mordechaj Anielewicz.
At night the remnants, who had miraculously escaped
death, joined the remaining few of the brush-makers'
detachments now deployed at 22 Franciszkanska Street.
That very same night two of our liaison men (S. Ratajzer--"Kazik"
and Franek) arrived from the "Aryan side".
Ten days previously the ZOB Command had dispatched Kazik
and Zygmunt Frydrych to our representative on the "Aryan
side", Icchak Cukierman ("Antek"), to
arrange the withdrawal of the fighting groups through
the sewer mains. Now these liaison men arrived.
Unfortunately, it was too late. For one thing, the ZOB
was already almost non-existent, but even the remnants
that had remained could not all be taken out of the
ghetto together.
All night we walked through the sewers, crawling through
numerous entanglements built by the Germans for just
such an emergency. The entrance traps were buried under
heaps of rubble, the thoroughways booby-trapped with
hand grenades, exploding at a touch. Every once in a
while the Germans would let gas into the mains. In similar
conditions, in a sewer 28 inches high, where it was
impossible to stand up straight and where the water
reached our lips, we waited 48 hours for the time to
get out. Every minute someone else lost consciousness.
Thirst was the worst handicap. Some even drank the thick,
slimy sewer water. Every second seemed like months.
On May 10th, at 10 a.m. two trucks halted at the trap
door on the Prosta Street-Twarda Street intersection.
In broad daylight, with almost no cover whatsoever (the
promised Home Army cover failed and only three of our
liaison men and Comrade Krzaczek--a People's Army representative
specially detailed for this assignment--patrolled the
street), the trap door opened and one after another,
with the stunned crowd looking on, armed Jews appeared
from the depths of the dark hole (at this time the sight
of any Jew was already a sensational occurrence). Not
all were able to get out. Violently, heavily the trap
door snapped shut, the trucks took off at full speed.
Two battle groups remained in the ghetto. We were in
contact with them until the middle of June. From then
on every trace of them disappeared.
Those who had gone over to the "Aryan side"
continued the partisan fight in the woods. The majority
perished eventually. The small group that was still
alive at the time took an active part in the 1944 Warsaw
Uprising as the "ZOB Group". At present the
following of our comrades are still among the living:
Chajka Betchatowska, B. Szpigel, Chana Krysztal, Masza
Glejtman, and Marek Edelman.
* * *
In the period preceding the last German extermination
drive the Bund's activities were closely intertwined
with the history of the ZOB. I think that never before
had there existed a similar degree of unanimity and
coordination of people of different political parties
as during the various groups' collaboration in that
period. We were all fighters for the same just cause,
equal in the face of history and death. Every drop of
blood was of precisely the same value.
However, I should like to mention a few of our comrades,
although there were many like them, simply because I
came in contact with those particular ones in our daily
work.
ABRASHA BLUM. He was the ideological father of armed
resistance in our Party. Physically very weak, but of
exceptional force of conviction and strength of character,
he was always the one to decide about our most momentous
moves, and he always sided with the youth. He did not
permit the flame of zeal and work to die out. Calm and
collected in the most difficult moments, he was forever
thinking of and looking after somebody else. He simply
considered it his duty, as he always did with the most
difficult assignments. Whatever he did was simple and
obviously the right thing to do. On several occasions
friends concerned about his safety urged him to leave
the ghetto and move to the "Aryan side". He
did not agree to do so, however, wanting to remain in
the ghetto until the very end. And he did remain at
his post despite the fact that he was physically unable
to fight. He carried no weapons, but he was a partisan
nonetheless, at heart. On May 3rd, in the course of
the fighting for the brush-makers' base, when the order
"All to the attack" was given and Abrasha
asked the Commander whether it applied to him too, the
latter, in the general confusion and without time to
consider, answered "yes". Abrasha, unarmed,
went to the attack with the others.
JUREK BLONES. He was commander of a battle group in
the brush-makers' area, a young enthusiast. Twice, during
the hardest fighting, when everything seemed lost, when
everyone around him was already giving up, he remained
on his post alone and fought off the Germans singlehandedly,
thus saving not only partisan lives, but the lives of
hundreds of civilians as well. He did not live to tell
the tale.
MEJLACH PERELMAN. As Commander of the Combat Patrols
in the central ghetto, he led his men himself on several
occasions, penetrating to the very ghetto walls. During
the last patrol he was wounded three times by German
rifle fire. A severe stomach wound almost immobilized
him, but he did not relinquish his leadership. He covered
the patrol's withdrawal to its base. When the base was
reached, however, he was unable to enter through the
narrow passage and had to remain on the outside. His
comrades made him as comfortable as possible in one
of the outside rooms and left an armed guard at his
side. When the Germans approached at 11 a.m., he gave
his arms and ammunition to the guard "so it may
serve further" and ordered him to join the others
inside. He remained upstairs alone, and perished. His
voice could be heard from amidst the flames for a long
time.
DAWID HOCHBERG. He was a battle group commander in the
central ghetto. Almost a child, his mother wanted to
save him so badly that she forbade him to join the ZOB.
When the Germans approached a bunker where five battle
groups and several hundred civilians were sheltered
and their death seemed inevitable, Dawid relinquished
his weapons and blocked the narrow passageway with his
own body. In this position he was killed by the Germans,
but before his wedged-in body could be removed, the
entire civilian group as well as the partisans had time
to leave the endangered shelter.
TOBCIA DAWIDOWICZ. A liaison woman between the Schultz
and Tobbens areas during the fighting, she walked that
horrible path under fire more than a dozen times. When
she led her group for the last time, to the sewer entrance,
she sprained an ankle and could no longer walk unaided.
Her friends helped her along, but when, the last in
line, she was about to enter the sewer trap door, she
said: I shall not come along, I do not want to make
the difficult passage still more difficult for you...".
And she remained in the ghetto, alone, where she perished.
* * *
On May 10th, 1943, the first period of our bloody history,
the history of the Warsaw Jews, came to an end. The
site where the buildings of the ghetto had once stood
became a ragged heap of rubble reaching three storeys
high.
Those who were killed in action had done their duty
to the end, to the last drop of blood that soaked into
the pavements of the Warsaw ghetto.
We, who did not perish, leave
it up to you to keep the memory of them alive--forever.
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