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The Warsaw Ghetto Rebellion Part 9
In January of 1942, as I have related earlier, the Germans at the Gross Wansee Conference had decided, based upon the personal orders of Adolf Hitler, to exterminate the Jews of Europe. By May of 1942, their initial plans for this were complete. One of the first targets was the Warsaw Ghetto, with its 500,000 Jews, then the largest grouping of Jews on the continent. The death camp that would "treat" the Warsaw Jews was Treblinka, only a days' travel by rail.
Thanks to informers among the Big 7 and the Jewish police, the Germans were well aware of the growing Jewish resistance movement and decided to snuff it out before the "resettlement" would begin. (The Germans, in their extermination of the Jews, used all sorts of code words apparently designed to mask what they were doing, perhaps even to themselves. "Final Solution", "Resettlement", "Treatment", etc. were all euphimisms for the genocide that was carried out.) In May, German SS Troops rushed into the Warsaw Ghetto. Hiding places thought to be secret were forced open. The leadership of the Labor Zionists, Revisionists, Bund, and ZOB were located and shot in a single day known to the Jews as "Black Friday". Mordechai Anielewicz survived only because he was outside the Ghetto attempting to purchase guns. But almost all of his top subordinates in the ZOB were killed. So were the heads of the Zionists and Bund. Whatever organized resistance might have been planned was now in shreds, thanks to the Nazis and their informers.
A week after "Black Friday", German officials met with the Judenrat to declare that, in order to lessen the overcrowding that plagued the Ghetto, the Jews of Warsaw would be "resettled to the East". They would find good working conditions in labor camps that were being established for them somewhere in the Ukraine. 6,000 Jews were to reprot to the train station for transport each day. It would be up to the Judenrat to decide which Jews would be chosen for the resettlement. Any disobedience to these commands would be met with instant death.
The Judenrat obeyed. It was not difficult during the first few weeks to find volunteers for the transports. Jews who were starving were hopeful there might be better conditions to the east, and were eager to go. Others were unsure. Anielewicz, who was busy trying to reorganize his shattered ZOB, determined to find out the destination of the trains. He managed to get some contacts outside the Ghetto to investigate. Meanwhile, the transports continued. But soon the volunteers dried up. At that point, the Jewish police were told they must produce three "volunteers" per day per policemen, or they and their families could go. There followed days when these policemen dragged and kicked half starved wretches into the streets towards the train station.
From his contacts outside of the Ghetto, Anielewicz learned the awful truth: the destination was not the Ukraine, as the Germans had told the Judenrat, but a concentration camp called Treblinka only a day's travel away! There, the Jews were forced off the train, stripped of their clothing and belongings, and told to enter strange buildings called "bathhouses" in order for delousing. The Jews who entered these buildings never left. They were being gassed to death.
In January of 1942, as I have related earlier, the Germans at the Gross Wansee Conference had decided, based upon the personal orders of Adolf Hitler, to exterminate the Jews of Europe. By May of 1942, their initial plans for this were complete. One of the first targets was the Warsaw Ghetto, with its 500,000 Jews, then the largest grouping of Jews on the continent. The death camp that would "treat" the Warsaw Jews was Treblinka, only a days' travel by rail.
Thanks to informers among the Big 7 and the Jewish police, the Germans were well aware of the growing Jewish resistance movement and decided to snuff it out before the "resettlement" would begin. (The Germans, in their extermination of the Jews, used all sorts of code words apparently designed to mask what they were doing, perhaps even to themselves. "Final Solution", "Resettlement", "Treatment", etc. were all euphimisms for the genocide that was carried out.) In May, German SS Troops rushed into the Warsaw Ghetto. Hiding places thought to be secret were forced open. The leadership of the Labor Zionists, Revisionists, Bund, and ZOB were located and shot in a single day known to the Jews as "Black Friday". Mordechai Anielewicz survived only because he was outside the Ghetto attempting to purchase guns. But almost all of his top subordinates in the ZOB were killed. So were the heads of the Zionists and Bund. Whatever organized resistance might have been planned was now in shreds, thanks to the Nazis and their informers.
A week after "Black Friday", German officials met with the Judenrat to declare that, in order to lessen the overcrowding that plagued the Ghetto, the Jews of Warsaw would be "resettled to the East". They would find good working conditions in labor camps that were being established for them somewhere in the Ukraine. 6,000 Jews were to reprot to the train station for transport each day. It would be up to the Judenrat to decide which Jews would be chosen for the resettlement. Any disobedience to these commands would be met with instant death.
The Judenrat obeyed. It was not difficult during the first few weeks to find volunteers for the transports. Jews who were starving were hopeful there might be better conditions to the east, and were eager to go. Others were unsure. Anielewicz, who was busy trying to reorganize his shattered ZOB, determined to find out the destination of the trains. He managed to get some contacts outside the Ghetto to investigate. Meanwhile, the transports continued. But soon the volunteers dried up. At that point, the Jewish police were told they must produce three "volunteers" per day per policemen, or they and their families could go. There followed days when these policemen dragged and kicked half starved wretches into the streets towards the train station.
From his contacts outside of the Ghetto, Anielewicz learned the awful truth: the destination was not the Ukraine, as the Germans had told the Judenrat, but a concentration camp called Treblinka only a day's travel away! There, the Jews were forced off the train, stripped of their clothing and belongings, and told to enter strange buildings called "bathhouses" in order for delousing. The Jews who entered these buildings never left. They were being gassed to death.