Lodz (Lizmannstadt) Ghetto, Poland

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Lodz Ghetto

Map of Lodz Ghetto from The Holocaust Education and Archive Research Team http://www.holocaustresearchproject.org/ghettos/Lodz/images/lodzmap.jpg

Background:

Origin of the word ghetto, 1605–15. The name of an island near Venice where Jews were forced to reside in the 16th century (Dictionary.com, Random House Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2009).

The policy of building ghettos was set out in a secret memorandum of 21 September 1939 by Reinhard Heydrich to the commanders of the SD Einsatzgruppen and other central offices of the Third Reich. The letter contained general instructions on solving the “Jewish question,” in two main stages. The first stage was the concentration of all Jews in designated areas, the second stage followed the total annihilation, camouflaged under the term “final goal” (Endziel). Rumours regarding the creation of a ghetto spread through the city already at the end of September or the beginning of October 1939.

Story:

The city of Lodz is located about 75 miles southwest of Warsaw and had the second largest Jewish community in prewar Poland. In early February 1940, the Germans established a ghetto in the northeastern section of the city. About 160,000 Jews, more than a third of the city’s population, were forced into a small area. Lodz had been a key industrial center in prewar Poland. The Lodz ghetto thus became a major production center under the German occupation. As early as May 1940, the Germans established factories in the ghetto and used Jewish residents for forced labor. By the summer of 1941 there were some 40,000 Jews at work in the ghetto, moving it toward its eventual status as “the most industrialized ghetto in Europe” [1] By August 1942, there were almost 100 factories within the ghetto. The major factories produced textiles, especially uniforms, for the German army. Living conditions in the ghetto were horrendous. Most of the quarter had neither running water nor a sewer system. Hard labor, overcrowding, and starvation were the dominant features of life. More than 20 percent of the ghetto’s population died as a direct result of the harsh living conditions.

“Resettlement Action”

On Friday, 9 Jan 1942, the first 2,000 warrants were sent out for those to be resettled, including prisoners, laborers and other “undesirables.” A proclamation dated 9 Jan 1942 (No. 353) instructed families on how to settle property (ie. Sell or donate their furniture). Approximately 1,000 summonses per day were mailed. The summons enjoined its recipient to report beginning on 13 Jan 1942 to an assembly point at 7 Szklana Street. Approximately 700 people per day were expected to leave on transports beginning Friday, 16 Jan 1941. This was the beginning of a “resettlement action” to deport 10,000 people from the ghetto by the end of the month. Registration occurred at the assembly point from 9 a.m. until 9 p.m. without interruption. In the first few days, mostly the homeless reported voluntarily and others had to be taken by force. Beginning on schedule, 55 deportees each were loaded onto approximately 20 passenger cars and transported by rail daily to Chelmno where they were put to death[2]. By 29 Jan 1942, more than 10,000 people had been taken from the ghetto and killed, including 5,353 men and 5,750 women, roughly 6% of the entire ghetto population.

Another 10,000 were deported on seven transports from 22 – 28 Feb 1942. Unlike provisions made for the earlier deportees, these people were not allowed to carry possessions, food or money on the trains. No one in the ghetto knew for sure the destination of these transports, but rumors circulated that this was actually a resettlement to other areas of occupied Poland. Rumors also persisted that the deportations would soon be suspended. All rumors proved false. In fact, March 1942 saw the increase in deportations to Chelmno; nearly 27,000 people were removed from the ghetto never to be heard from again.

April saw a temporary suspension of deportations to Chelmno. Transport No. 40 left the station in Lodz on 1 Apr 1942, bringing the total number of deportees executed to 44,056 since the resettlement action began. In addition, nearly 6,300 others died of disease, starvation and other causes, some natural. The suspension lifted in May and the first transport consisting of one thousand newly arrived Jews from Western Europe were removed from the ghetto Monday, 4 May 1942. Again, all personal belongings were stripped from the deportees as they boarded trains for Chelmno. By 18 May 1942, nearly 11,000 Western European Jews had been deported while another 4,000 had died in the ghetto. Further deportations to Chelmno were suspended until September.[3]

When the camp was reactivated in April 1944 until July 1944, another 25,000 Jews were deported from the ghetto and gassed at Chelmno.

Chelmno Extermination Camp

The camp was established in November 1941. The extermination process began on 8 December 1941, with the ghetto population of the cities and towns of the Warthegau, first from the neighboring Kolo, Dabie, Sompolno, Klodawa and many other places, and later from Lodz itself. The first Jews arrived at Chelmno from Lodz in the middle of January 1942. From that time onwards an average of 1000 a day was maintained, with short intermissions, till April 1943.

Until the spring of 1942 the remains were buried in large common graves. In the spring of 1942 two crematoria were built, and after that, all the dead were burnt in them (and the bodies previously buried as well). Details about the furnaces are lacking, for the investigator could find no witnesses who had been in the wood in 1942 or 1943. Those who lived near had only noticed two constantly smoking chimneys within the enclosure.

The furnaces were blown up by the camp authorities on 7 April 1943. Two new ones were, however, constructed in 1944, when the camp activities were resumed. The ashes and remains of bones were removed from the ash-pit, ground in mortars, and, at first, thrown into especially dug ditches; but later, from 1943 onwards, bones and ashes were secretly carted to Zawadki at night, and there thrown into the river. An estimated 340,000 deaths occurred from 8 Dec 1941 until January 1945 when the camp was “liquidated.” [4]

There were few survivors of the most intense phase of murder at Chelmno. In mid-January 1942, Yaakov Grojanowski escaped and made his way to Warsaw where he informed the ghetto leadership of what he had witnessed. As a result, fairly accurate information about the mass killings at Chelmno was transmitted via the Polish underground and reached London in June. 

LINKS OF INTEREST
Lodz Ghetto in Pictures

Personal stories

Survivors recall Lodz ghetto horror (BBC)

Voices from Lodz ghetto (USHMM)

Survivors, Officials remember… (CBS News)

Jew Wishes On Lodz…and Shabbat

Ghetto deportations

SOURCES

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3 Responses to “Lodz (Lizmannstadt) Ghetto, Poland”

  1. [...] But the radio reports shock you back into the present. The German army has surged towards the Vistula River and the angels of death cannot be far behind. It’s time to gather your family’s belongings and plan your escape. But it’s too late, the Nazi officers are beating down your door, forcing you to evacuate and leave your valuables behind. Your destination? Lodz. [...]

  2. I would like to recommend you my new website concerning Lodz ghetto. I hope you will find it interesting http://www.lodz-ghetto.com

  3. yeah you need more pictures

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