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Mińsk Mazowiecki Ghetto

Coordinates:52°10′45″N21°34′20″E / 52.1792°N 21.5721°E /52.1792; 21.5721
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Nazi ghetto in occupied Poland
Not to be confused withMinsk Ghetto in the capital of the Belorussian SSR.
Mińsk Mazowiecki Ghetto
Commemorative stone to ghetto victims at theTreblinkaextermination camp museum
Mińsk
Mińsk
Mińsk location south ofTreblinka in World War II
Also known asMińsk Ghetto
LocationMińsk Mazowiecki,German-occupied Poland
Date25 Oct 1940 –21 Aug 1942 [1]
Incident typeImprisonment, starvation, mass shooting
OrganizationsNazi SS
Victims7,000Polish Jews
Survivors250
MemorialsThe Jewish cemetery inMińsk

TheMińsk Mazowiecki Ghetto or theMińsk Ghetto (Polish:Getto w Mińsku Mazowieckim,Yiddish:נאוואמינסק,Novominsk) was aWorld War II ghetto set up by Nazi Germanyin occupied Poland. Some 7,000Polish Jews were imprisoned there from all neighbouring settlements for the purpose of persecution and exploitation.[1][2] Two years later, beginning 21 August 1942 duringthe most deadly phase ofthe Holocaust in occupied Poland, they were rounded up – men, women and children – and deported toTreblinka extermination camp aboardHolocaust trains.[3] In the process of Ghetto liquidation, some 1,300 Jews were summarily executed by theSS in the streets ofMińsk Mazowiecki.[2]

History

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Further information:Jewish ghettos in German-occupied Poland

Following the September 1939 Nazi-Sovietinvasion of Poland, on 25 October 1940 a ghetto was created inMińsk 41 kilometres (25 mi) east of Warsaw,[4] around the heavily shelled town square,[1] and along the streets of Siennicka, Nadrzeczna, Mostowa and Warszawska. Some 5,000 Jews were forced to relocate there from all over the city,[3] which was followed by the ghetto expansion with more dispossessed Jews brought in fromKałuszyn,Kalisz,Lipno, andPabianice.[2] Those confined within the boundaries of the ghetto were allowed starvation rations by theSS for unreasonable amounts of money.[1] Whenever possible, they receivedhelp from the non-Jewish Poles on the outside who smuggled food, and passed aroundkennkartes forged by the underground.[5] Such activity presented a grave danger due to the presence of theGerman minority in Mińsk serving with the localSonderdienst battalion (the gun-wieldingSonderdienst were formed byGauleiterFrank on 6 May 1940).[6] Among thePolish Righteous were Helena andJulian Grobelny, President ofŻegota, who harbored over a dozen Jewish activists in their home nearby.[7] There were also Christian Poles executed by theSS under the charge ofaiding Jews.[5]

Ghetto resistance

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Memorial to the Holocaust victims at the Jewish cemetery inMińsk

The underground resistance formed in the ghetto in mid 1941 and began planning an escape to freedom. Donations were collected for the purpose of buying weapons. A Jewish fund-raising was organized in June and July 1942.[4] However, the very next month aghetto liquidation action began on 21 August,[1] commanded bySS-Untersturmführer Schmidt, the chief of MińskGestapo.[6] Some 5,000 Jews were loaded onto freight trains, locked in and sent away toTreblinka on the following day. Most of the remaining 1,000 to 1,300 Jews (many attempting to hide)[1] were shot at various locations around town,[2] along with all members of theJudenrat including its president Mosze Kramarz, his deputy Majer Bryks, as well as Jankiel Popowski, Hil Morgensztern, Mosze Wajnberg, Mr. Bressler, Mr. Słoń, Mr. Sztutman and others murdered behind theSS building on 35 Warszawska street.[5] Several hundred men were allowed to live and split into prisoner work battalions, temporarily. The first group composed of 150 men was placed at the prewar iron foundryK. Rudzki i S-ka taken over by the Nazis, which was located at 55 Piłsudskiego street. The second group of around 500 men was moved to the premises of the Public School Nr 1 at 39 Siennicka street,[5] as the work force for German companyWolf & Goebel.[1]

German announcement in Mińsk, prohibiting Jews from venturing outside the ghetto specified area. Signed byKreishauptmann Bittrich on 12 December 1941.

The final wave of mass shootings began several months later. A large group of Jews from the school building (renamed CampKopernikus) were transported to the Jewish cemetery on 24 December 1942 and murdered there; those who remained (around 250slave workers) were killed on 10 January 1943 following theKopernikus prisoner revolt.[1][5] TheSS surrounded the premises planning a deportation action, but the prisoners locked themselves inside and resisted, putting theSS in a state of shocked disbelief. After a struggle, the building was eventually set on fire and burned down with the Jews inside.[1] Meanwhile, at the K. Rudzki foundry (renamedKrupp AG) over 100 Jewish workers were extracted on 5 June 1943, and executed as the last.[5] Theghetto was no more.[5] An underground resistance movement developed in Mińsk,[8] and later the PolishHome Army (AK) got a chance to retaliate. On 22 July 1943 the Gestapo chief Schmidt was ambushed and shot by the partisans.[9]

At the end of the German occupation of Poland, Mińsk Mazowiecki was liberated not by the advancing Red Army, but by the Polish soldiers of theAK who entered the town ahead of them.[9] Although 250 Jews of Mińsk are known to have survived – many of them saved by the Polish families on the "Aryan" side of the city (including those who managed to escape Treblinka deportations), the prewar Jewish community was effectively wiped out in Mińsk during the Holocaust. There was no-one, and nothing to go back to, after the war ended.[1] The community, which had thrived since 1768, ceased to exist entirely. It has not been re-established.[5]

Notable individuals

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See also

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References

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  1. ^abcdefghijAlicja Gontarek, historian of the„Biuletyn Gminy Wyznaniowej Żydowskiej w Warszawie” (2014)."On the 70th Anniversary of the Eradication of Mińsk Mazowiecki Ghetto" [W 70. rocznicę zagłady mińskiego getta].Wojna, Getto, Zagłada. Tygodnik Strefa Mińsk.pl weekly, Jarosław Rosłoniec (Mińsk official website). Archived from the original on October 27, 2015. Retrieved15 May 2014 – via Internet Archive.
  2. ^abcdJustyna Laskowska, Krzysztof Bielawski (2014)."Getto w Mińsku Mazowieckim".Miejsca martyrologii - Zabytki: Mińsk Mazowiecki. Wirtualny Sztetl (Virtual Shtetl), Muzeum Historii Żydów Polskich. Retrieved12 May 2014.Stłoczono w nim [w Mińsku Mazowieckim] około siedmiu tysięcy osób [7 000], w tym także przesiedleńców z Kałuszyna, Kalisza, Lipna, Pabianic.
  3. ^abStatistical data compiled on the basis of"Glossary of 2,077 Jewish towns in Poland"Archived 2016-02-08 at theWayback Machine byVirtual ShtetlMuseum of the History of the Polish Jews  (in English), as well as"Getta Żydowskie," byGedeon,  (in Polish) and"Ghetto List" by Michael Peters at Deathcamps.org(in English). Accessed 23 April 2014.
  4. ^abJustyna Laskowska (trans. Katarzyna Majdan) (2014)."Mińsk Mazowiecki".History - Jewish community.Virtual Shtetl. pp. 6 of 6. Archived fromthe original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved13 May 2014.
  5. ^abcdefghMałgorzata Frąckowiak & K. Bielawski (2014)."Gmina żydowska dla Mińska Mazowieckiego".Cmentarz żydowski w Mińsku Mazowieckim. Kirkuty.xip.pl. Retrieved12 May 2014.
  6. ^abThe Erwin and Riva Baker Memorial Collection (2001).Yad Vashem Studies. Wallstein Verlag. p. 57.ISSN 0084-3296. Retrieved12 May 2014.
  7. ^Irena 'Jolanta' Sendlerowa,Julian Grobelny i jego żona Helena, FKCh "ZNAK" – 1999–2008. Internet Archive.
  8. ^U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum."Jewish Resistance in Ghettos and Camps". Jewish Virtual Library. Retrieved12 May 2014.
  9. ^ab"The history of Mińsk Mazowiecki".Polsko-Amerykańska Fundacja Wolnosci (in Polish). Polski Portal Edukacyjny "Interkl@sa". Retrieved12 May 2014.

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