Preserved Evidence: Ghetto Lodz, Band 1H. Eibeshitz Institute for Holocaust Studies, 1998 A history of the Łódź ghetto, interspersed with numerous excerpts from survivors' testimonies and documents from the Yad Vashem archives. Vol. I discusses the first days of the occupation; the activities of Chaim Rumkowski and the Judenrat; work in the ghetto, which the Jews believed could save them; the situation of the children; religious life, which went on despite the unbearable conditions; the deportations to Chełmno; attempts at passive resistance; and the ghetto's liquidation in 1944. Only 870 Jews from the ghetto survived. In Vol. II, pp. 377-447, "Auschwitz", contain excerpts from accounts by Jews of Łódź who survived Auschwitz. Pp. 448-502, "The Marches", contain accounts of those who were transferred from Auschwitz to various labor camps. Pp. 515-684 contain personal accounts on the Łódź ghetto and on postwar Poland. One of the accounts deals with the activities of the Hashomer Hatzair youth movement in the ghetto. |
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Seite 23
... Russian empires before 1918 . -- Hitler resented the very existence of Poland , born out of the hated Versailles Treaty . To him , the Slavic Poles were Untermentschen " subhumans , " fit only for servitude . The Poles , ironically ...
... Russian empires before 1918 . -- Hitler resented the very existence of Poland , born out of the hated Versailles Treaty . To him , the Slavic Poles were Untermentschen " subhumans , " fit only for servitude . The Poles , ironically ...
Seite 345
... Russian artillery and aircraft . About 72,000 Jews were left in Lodz by the summer of 1944 , all that remained of a local community which had numbered a quarter of a million in 1939 , and a prewar national community of over three ...
... Russian artillery and aircraft . About 72,000 Jews were left in Lodz by the summer of 1944 , all that remained of a local community which had numbered a quarter of a million in 1939 , and a prewar national community of over three ...
Seite 360
Ghetto Lodz Anna Eilenberg-Eibeshitz. The Russians were already in the city . Just at that time , Poles broke into the ... Russian army , began to arrive , asking for their relatives . But they found none . They were disappointed and ...
Ghetto Lodz Anna Eilenberg-Eibeshitz. The Russians were already in the city . Just at that time , Poles broke into the ... Russian army , began to arrive , asking for their relatives . But they found none . They were disappointed and ...
Inhalt
Preface | 9 |
The Onslaught | 27 |
Infamy | 34 |
Urheberrecht | |
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
addition apartment arrived asked became began body bread brother brought called camp carried continued Council courtyard dead death decided deportation died door eyes face factory father felt finally five followed forced friends gave Germans ghetto give guards hands happened head heard hiding hospital hundred hunger inmates Jewish Jews knew labor later learned leave liquidation lived Lodz looked mind months morning mother move Nazi needed never night noticed Once ordered organized parents Poles police Polish potatoes prison ration reached received remained returned Rumkowski schools selection sent sick side sister soldiers soon soup Sperre standing stopped Street suffered thought thousand told took tried truck turned wagon waiting walk wanted week workers young