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The little known first uprising of the Warsaw Ghetto, January 1943

by Mojambo ( 100 Comments › )
Filed under Anti-semitism, History, Holocaust at January 18th, 2013 - 7:00 pm

Many people are familiar with the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising of April 1943. However three months earlier, there was a little known Warsaw Ghetto Uprising which took place 70 years ago this month.

by Robert Rozett

Warsaw Ghetto monument in Poland

Warsaw Ghetto monument in Poland Photo: Agencja Gazeta/Reuters
In January 1943 there were only 60,000 Jews left in the Warsaw Ghetto.They were what remained of the approximately 440,000 Jews who had been confined there. One-fifth had died of disease and starvation during the past two years, and the previous summer some 265,000 had been deported to the Treblinka extermination camp, and over 30,000 to other camps.At the start of the great deportation, the head of the Jewish Council, Adam Czerniakow, had committed suicide rather than comply with German demands to provide census information about the ghetto, realizing the Germans would use it for the coming Aktion. His death, however, did nothing to stop the trains from rolling out of Warsaw.With Czerniakow dead, in the wake of the deportations a new de facto leadership emerged in the ghetto – the Jewish Fighting Organization (ZOB), headed by Mordecai Anielewicz. The ZOB was a coalition primarily of various Zionist youth movements and the Jewish socialist Bund.

Alongside it there was a smaller armed underground group, the Jewish Military Union (ZZW) which represented the Revisionist Zionists.

ON MONDAY, January 18, 1943, 70 years ago, German forces entered the ghetto to round up Jews for transport.

They planned to take about 8,000 people, but the ghetto population believed the final destruction of the ghetto was at hand. To the great surprise of the German forces, they met armed resistance.

A group of Hashomer Hatsair members, led by Anielewicz and armed with pistols they had received from the Polish Home Army, intercepted a column of Jews being led by a German force and fired upon the solders. In a nose-to-nose battle, most of the underground contingent was killed, but Anielewicz managed to overpower the soldier with whom he was struggling and he escaped unharmed.

The news of the clash spread quickly to other cells of the underground and they too began to resist. Yitzhak Zuckerman, with a party from the Dror Youth Movement, lay in wait for the German force on Zamenhof Street, and when they approached fired a volley at them.

During four days the Germans tried to round up Jews and were met by armed resistance. The ghetto inhabitants went through a swift change.

With the news of the first incident of fighting they stopped responding to the Germans’ calls that they gather in the Umschlagplatz. They began devising hiding places, and the Germans had to enter many buildings and ruthlessly pull out Jews. Many were killed in their homes when they refused to be taken.

On the fourth day, having only managed to seize between 5,000 to 6,000 Jews, the Germans withdrew from the ghetto. The remaining inhabitants believed that the armed resistance, combined with the difficulties in finding Jews in hiding, had led to the end of the Aktion. As a result, over the next months the armed under-grounds sought to strengthen themselves and the vast majority of ghetto residents zealously built more and better bunkers in which to hide.

All of this would be put to the test on April 19, 1943, when the Germans reentered the ghetto, this time to liquidate it completely.

Again they met armed resistance. The fighting would continue for three weeks before the ghetto was razed, and it would come to be known as the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising.

THE FOUR days of Jewish armed resistance in the Warsaw Ghetto in January 1943 is much less known than the April uprising, but its significance was great at the time and remains consequential.

[……]

Nonetheless, this first uprising provided a glimmer of hope, and was an enormous source of pride – tremendously important to people who had been profoundly traumatized by preceding events and had a good idea what was in the offing for them.

[……] We would be hard pressed to say they survived directly because of the armed resistance in the ghetto, but unquestionably, that resistance was crucial in helping the few survivors maintain their pride, dignity and motivation to survive, and ultimately rebuild their shattered lives.

The January 1943 Warsaw Ghetto Uprising teaches us a great deal about the human spirit, about resilience and about courage. It demonstrates that the very act of resistance against oppression can inspire further resistance.

In taking up arms against those who considered them less than human, the men and women in the Warsaw Ghetto on January 18, 1943, issued a resounding clarion call asserting their humanity.

It is this, above all, that we must remember and hold dear.

Read the rest – The little-known uprising: Warsaw Ghetto, January , 1943

The Nobel Committee Ignored a Genuine Heroine to Promote a Climate Scammer

by 1389AD ( 41 Comments › )
Filed under Climate, History, Holocaust, United Nations at April 20th, 2011 - 7:00 pm

By Gramfan

Irena Sendler

Irena Sendler – Sleeping With The Angels – Irena Sendler Symphony

The clip above is self-explanatory.

A film was made about her, starring Anna Paquin.

In 2007 Irena Sendler was nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize for saving around 2,500 children from the certain death of being taken from the Warsaw Ghetto to Treblinka.

It remains unclear why the Nobel Committee took so long to recognize her achievement with a nomination. One can only speculate on their agenda.

Suffice it to say Al Gore and the IPCC won the Peace Prize that year.

If you ever had any doubts that the Nobel Committee is totally beyond contempt I hope these doubts are now dispelled.

It is worthwhile to refresh the memory, or possibly inform people who may not know of Irena Sendler.

The way thinks are looking now regarding Jews, no only in Europe again, but everywhere, it is up to the good and righteous to make sure that another Jewish Holocaust never happens again.

In fact it is up to the good and righteous to make sure NO genocide ever occurs again.

The United Nations is not going to stop any further attempts at genocide, even though they “appear to care”, and have the “Responsibility to Protect Doctrine”.

The UN proved this in Rwanda. They pulled out their “peace keepers”.

The UN is also beneath contempt, just like the Nobel Committee.


Originally published on The West, Islam, and Sharia.

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Today Is Holocaust Martyrs and Heroes Rememberance Day

by WrathofG-d ( 20 Comments › )
Filed under Holocaust at April 21st, 2009 - 7:38 am

NEVER FORGET!

(the martyrs)

April 1945, Former inmates of Buchenwald

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(more information & photos)

On this day we remember the six million Jews murdered in the Holocaust. Holocaust Martyrs’ and Heroes’ Remembrance Day (Yom Hashoah in Hebrew) is a national day of commemoration in Israel, on which the six million Jews murdered in the Holocaust are memorialized.   It is a solemn day, beginning at sunset on the 26th of the month of Nisan (Monday evening, April 20, 2009) and ending the following evening, according to the traditional Jewish custom of marking a day.  About one and a half million of the six million Jews murdered in the Holocaust were children.  The number of children who survived is estimated in the mere thousands.

http://www.ushmm.org/museum/exhibit/focus/maps/images/encyclopedia.jpg

From the day the Nazis came to power, Jewish children became acquainted with cruelty, first in Germany and, as time passed, in every other country the Germans conquered or forged an alliance. The parents and families of these children were unable to grant them the security and protection they needed. Jewish children were separated from their non-Jewish playmates and expelled from state-sponsored schools. They saw their parents lose the right to support their families, and often witnessed the descent of the family unit into an abyss of despair.

As war broke out and antisemitic policies worsened, the suffering of Jewish children increased: many were doomed to the horrific suffering of life in the ghetto – the bitter cold, the never-ending hunger and a multitude of dangerous diseases.   There, cut off from the world, they lived in the shadow of endless terror and violence.   At the end of the war, many of these children were lost to their families and their Jewish heritage forever.

Although officially World War Two began on September 1, 1939 and ended on September 2, 1945, the mistreatment of the Jews began long before then, and progressively got worse.  To ensure that Hitler’s “final solution” would be accepted by the highly educated German public, the soil necessary for the Nazis to sow their seeds of evil had to be worked slowly over many years.   This was accomplished through numerous State sponsored so-called humorous propaganda, and seemingly innocuous acts such as vandalism, public “outing”/humiliation of Jews in the schools, and boycotts as early as the 1920s.    Kristallnacht, often falsely described as the beginning of the “Final Solution”, wasn’t until November 10, 1938.   (side note: along with creating an excuse for Nazis to arrest innocent Jews by the thousands, it was also used as a pretext and a means for the wholesale confiscation of firearms from German Jews by the Nazis.)

These are the acts of the actual Nazis.  Mass murder, unimaginable cruelty, and true evil.  An ideology that culminated in a plan to wipe an entire people off the face of the earth.   A political movement that encouraged an highly educated society, and continent (Europe) to forget they were human, scapegoat an innocent people, and act with the utmost cruelty against their own citizens.  These were the Nazis!  These were the acts of the Nazis in Poland, Czechoslovakia, Hungary, France, Italy, Germany, Russia, Austria, Romania, The Netherlands, Belarus, Latvia, and Ukraine.  They were not monsters, or aliens but human beings who justified their actions, and performed them without remorse.  They were doctors, teachers, social workers, lawyers, carpenters, mechanics, train drivers, union leaders, mothers, fathers, brothers, sisters….

Below is a video of an ss guard describing the murders he was personally a part of at Treblinka.  (this is part 1.  There are 6 other parts)

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(*Update: #1 4/21/2009 13:09:54 pst) Teenager Who Escaped From Auschwitz Tells His Story

(*Update #2 4/21/2009 13:39:13 pst) MUST SEE Video: Aftermath of the Holocaust! (Warning Graphic Images)

(*Update #3 4/22/2009  12:54:23 pst) Poignant Reading & Personal Tale:  On Work and Freedom.