Siedlce Ghetto | |
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Siedlce location south ofTreblinka in World War II | |
Also known as | Siedlce Ghetto |
Location | Siedlce,German-occupied Poland |
Date | June 1941 –November 1942 |
Incident type | Imprisonment, starvation, mass shootings, mass deportations |
Organizations | Nazi SS |
Victims | 12,000–17,000Polish Jews; an unknown number ofRoma people |
Memorials | The Jewish cemetery inSiedlce |
TheSiedlce Ghetto (Polish:Getto w Siedlcach), was aWorld War II Jewish ghetto set up by Nazi Germany in the city ofSiedlce inoccupied Poland, 92 kilometres (57 mi) east ofWarsaw.[a] The ghetto was closed from the outside in early October 1941. Some 12,000Polish Jews were imprisoned there for the purpose of persecution and exploitation.[1] Conditions were appalling; epidemics of typhus and scarlet fever raged. Beginning 22 August 1942 duringthe most deadly phase of theHolocaust in occupied Poland, around 10,000 Jews were rounded up – men, women and children – gathered at theUmschlagplatz,[2][b] and deported toTreblinka extermination camp aboardHolocaust trains.[3] Thousands of Jews were brought in from the ghettos in other cities and towns. In total, at least 17,000 Jews were annihilated in the process of ghetto liquidation.[2] Hundreds of Jews were shot on the spot during the house-to-house searches, along with staff and patients of the Jewish hospital.[1]
Over 1,500 persons were temporarily spared death in order to continuesupplying slave labour for the five camps set up locally. They were deported to Treblinka from the so-called "little ghetto" before the end of 1942.[2] Only a few hundred Jews survived in hiding until the German withdrawal from Siedlce.[2]
Prior to theinvasion of Poland, Jews constituted around 50 percent of the town's population of 30,000 inhabitants.[2] Jewish life in Siedlce experienced a revival inthe interwar period. Many Jewish organizations sprung up, as well as printing presses, book stores and commercial establishments; there were several dozen Jewish bakeries, mills, metal shops, and jewelries. Almost all commerce was in the Jewish hands, sparking occasional labour disputes.[4]
During theinvasion of Poland, the GermanPanzer Division Kempf rolled into Siedlce on 12 September 1939 after a fierce battle along theBug River with the PolishModlin Army which surrendered soon afterwards.[5] Siedlce was strafed and bombed several times by the Luftwaffe. In October, the persecution of Jews by the new German administration began with the arrest of 50 most prominent individuals. The creation of the JewishJudenrat Council was ordered at the end of November. Among its 25 members were Icchak (Itzak) Nachum Weintraub (chairman; former head of the Jewish hospital), Hersz Eisenberg (vice-chairman), and Hersz Tenenbaum (secretary, liaison with theGestapo).[5] OnChristmas Eve the Nazis set fire to the synagogue and burned it to the ground, notably with Jewish refugees inside.[2]
Over a thousand Jews expelled fromKalisz were deported to Siedlce in 1940,[1] with their compatriots fromŁódź andPabianice annexed toWarthegau.[6] In order to strike terror in overcrowded neighbourhoods, theGerman police organized a 3-day shooting action in March 1941. The formal creation ofa ghetto in Siedlce was pronounced on 2 August 1941. The smaller number of non-Jewish Poles living in designated areas were ordered to move out before 8:00 p.m. on 6 August. The Jewish families (over half of the city's population) were given two weeks to relocate there, along withRoma people. The ghetto zone consisted of several small city blocks and over a dozen walkable streets in city centre north of the Old Square.[7] The ghetto was closed off by a barbed wire fence, and cut off from the outside world on 1 October 1941 with only three gates leading out, guarded by Nazi patrols.[2]
Conditions in the ghetto were appalling, with grossly insufficient quantities of food. At one point, 15 people lived in single rooms without sanitation. Jews were not allowed to own fur products. People trying to cross the fence illegally were shot in the back by the dozen.[2] A typhus epidemic broke out in the winter of 1941–42. There were five labour camps set up by the Germans in the vicinity of the ghetto.[2]
In early 1942 theFinal Solution to the Jewish Question was set in motion by Nazi Germany during theWannsee Conference; and the fate ofghettoised Jews across occupied Poland was sealed.[8] TheTreblinka extermination camp – built north of Siedlce exclusively for the implementation ofOperation Reinhard – began gassing Jews in July 1942.[9] The next month, on 22 August 1942 the Siedlce Ghetto liquidation action began in earnest, underSS-Obersturmführer Schultz.[5] TheJudenrat has been informed about mass "transfer to the east" personally byGruppenführerLudwig Fischer, the governor ofDistrikt Warschau.[2] People unable to move and attempting to hide were shot in their homes by the roaming squads ofTrawniki men aided by theOrpo battalion who arrived in Siedlce fromŁosice for that express purpose.[10]
Around 10,000 Jews were herded into the square on 22 August, including all captives brought on foot by Orpo from the transit ghettos in three nearby settlements;[d][10] 500 men were selected to go back to their work camps.[6] The rest were made to sit on the ground overnight, tormented and shot at. The next day they were assembled into columns and marched to the train station in utter terror; the connecting streets were full of dead bodies. The Jews were crammed into awaiting freight cars(pictured) and sent to Treblinka, 62 kilometres (39 mi) distance.[e][6]
While the Jews from out of town were gathered at the square on the first day of roundups, local Jews were forced into the cemetery on Szkolna Street.[5] The squad of UkrainianTrawnikis has been sent by the Gestapo around noon time to conduct a shooting action there in order to inflict terror.[f][2] In the evening of 24 August 1942 – a day after the first Holocaust transport – some 5,000 to 6,000 people from the cemetery have been sent away to their deaths.[5] Meanwhile, the overall number of Jews shot at the cemetery and thrown into mass graves was 3,000 estimated by the Polish historians.[12] On the day of the "aktion", the Jewish hospital was liquidated, with everyone killed on site either in their beds or out in the courtyard.[5]
By 27 August 1942, the ghetto was no more.[5] The town's remaining Jewish slave workers were returned to the "little ghetto" and on 25 November 1942 marched to the Gęsi Borek colony under the pretext of reemerging threat of epidemic typhus; several thousand of them were massacred three days later, on 28 November. Their bodies were nefariously not buried, but sent to Treblinka in a freight train consisting of 40 wagons of corpses, which outraged theSS at the killing factory. The incident was described bySonderkommando prisonerSamuel Willenberg who successfully escaped during the perilous Treblinka revolt,[13] and who took part in the unloading of the freight cars. He described it in the following way in his bookRevolt in Treblinka: "Even as we emptied twenty cattle cars, another twenty pulled up at the platform. These, too, were full of bodies. Again there were the brutal beatings of the Ukrainians and the SS men, and the hell began anew. We were bruised from head to toe. Again we emptied the cars of corpses, only corpses. In several hours, we hauled 6,000–7,000 of them to the Lazarett. We learned that the transport had come from Siedlce, a town about 60 kilometers from Treblinka." The last two box cars were filled with the victims' clothing containing nothing of any value.[14]
The Siedlce Jewish community was not restored after Nazi defeat, and the town's later history lacked the hitherto conspicuous Jewish component. Survivors of the town's population established an association inIsrael which in 1956 published a comprehensive memorial book on the community's history.[15] One of the survivors, Yisrael Kravitz, published his memoires in 1971 as theFive Years of Living Hell under Nazi Rule in the City of Siedlce.[16]
Throughout the existence of the ghetto, there were numerousescape and rescue attempts even though the exact numbers of Jewish survivors are unclear. Some managed to flee from the Nazis into the Soviet-occupied eastern Poland at the beginning of the war. Others managed to obtain Aryan papers from thePolish underground.[17] Many Jews escaped from Siedlce in 1941. Sixteen survivors found refuge at the home of the Osiński family nearby, awarded medals ofthe Righteous Among the Nations in 1990 some fifty years after the fact.[18] Financial help for the purchase of food was provided by the clandestineŻegota Council to Aid Jews,[18] whose presidentJulian Grobelny lived 40 kilometres (25 mi) east of Siedlce.[19]
YoungCypora Zonszajnnée Jabłoń with her little daughter Rachela managed to escape from the ghetto in August 1942. They were rescued by the Zawadzki family from Siedlce.[20] Cypora could not live without her husband and her parents. She left the child with the rescuers and returned to the ghetto alone, in time for mass deportations.[21] She took a poison pill when her husband Jakub was put on a death train to Treblinka, according to witnesses.[20] Little Rachela was whisked toZakrzówek in the summer of 1943 and survived in the care ofZofia Glazer(pl), and one of the Zawadzki sisters; all recognized as the Righteous in 1988.[21] Zofia took care also of another Jewish girl, Dorota Maczyk (Monczyk), who survived the Holocaust with them.[22]
On 17 December 1943 10 people were shot. One of the reasons was hiding of Jews.[5]
W sierpniu 1941 r. Niemcy utworzyli getto, w którym zgromadzili ponad 12 tys. Żydów.
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