Warsaw Ghetto Uprising

The Warsaw Ghetto was the largest ghetto established by the Nazis in Poland. Hundreds of thousands of Jews found themselves confined in overcrowded and unsanitary conditions.

The uprising began on April 19, 1943, when the Nazis attempted to liquidate the ghetto by deporting its remaining inhabitants to concentration camps. Instead of passively submitting to their fate, the Jewish inhabitants organized themselves into various resistance groups, primarily the Jewish Combat Organization (ZOB) and the Jewish Military Union (ZZW).

Despite being vastly outnumbered and outgunned, the insurgents fought fiercely against the well-equipped German forces for almost a month. They utilized homemade weapons, including Molotov cocktails and a small number of firearms smuggled into the ghetto. The ghetto fighters inflicted significant casualties on the Germans and managed briefly to halt the deportation operations.

However, on May 16, 1943, the Nazis succeeded in suppressing the uprising. They systematically destroyed the ghetto and deported its remaining inhabitants to concentration camps, primarily Treblinka. Most of the ghetto’s population perished in the uprise or met their fate in its aftermath.

The Warsaw Ghetto Uprising should not be confused with the Warsaw Uprising, which was an operation by the Polish underground resistance to liberate Warsaw from German occupation in August 1944.

The ghetto, established in October 1940, was initially confined (approximately) 400,000 Jews in a small area of the city. Conditions in the ghetto were appalling, with severe overcrowding, inadequate food, sanitation, and medical care. Disease and starvation were rampant, leading to the deaths of tens of thousands of residents.

The ghetto was surrounded by walls and heavily guarded by German forces to prevent the inhabitants from escaping. Movement—in and out of the ghetto—was strictly controlled, and Jews were subjected to forced labor and arbitrary violence by the Nazi authorities.

In 1942, the Germans began mass deportations from the Warsaw Ghetto to extermination camps, primarily to Treblinka. These deportations, coupled with the harsh living conditions, led to a significant decrease in the ghetto’s population.

On January 9, 1943, Heinrich Himmler visited the Warsaw ghetto. He ordered the deportation of another 8,000 Jews. The January deportations caught the Jews by surprise, and ghetto residents thought that the end had come. The underground leadership, believing it to be the onset of the final deportation, ordered its forces to respond with arms. Upon discovering the Resistance, the Germans decided to halt the Aktion. This incident marked a turning point for most of the ghetto population, which from then on prepared for mass resistance and for hiding in underground bunkers in the cellars of homes.

The uprising started on April 19th, when the ghetto refused to surrender to the police commander SS-Brigadeführer Jürgen Stroop, who ordered the destruction of the ghetto, block by block, ending on May 16th. A total of 13,000 Jews were killed, about half of them burnt alive or suffocated. Stroop reported 110 German casualties, including 17 killed.

Jürgen Stroop issued a report, The Stroop Report, also known as the “Stroop Report on the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising,”

The report, compiled from Stroop’s daily situation reports, provides a chilling account of the brutality with which the Nazis suppressed the uprising. It includes descriptions of street battles, the destruction of buildings, the capture and deportation of Jews, and the use of heavy weaponry against the ghetto fighters.

The Stroop Report is significant as it provides firsthand insight into the tactics and mindset of the Nazi regime during the Holocaust. It serves as a historical document attesting to the atrocities committed against the Jewish population of Warsaw and stands as a grim testament to the horrors of the Holocaust.

The Stroop Report was presented as evidence for the Nuremberg Trials, where Stroop was on trial for his role in the atrocities committed during the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising. Today, the Stroop Report is preserved as an historical record studied by historians and scholars—to better understand the events of the Holocaust and the actions of the Nazi regime.

It is probably one of the more disturbing pictures, not because of its graphics, but because it clearly shows the Nazis enjoying themselves while tormenting the Jews from the ghetto. An interesting point here is that not all of the Nazis are wearing the SS insignia indicating that they were regular Wehrmacht soldiers.




Sources

https://www.yadvashem.org/exhibitions/photographs-warsaw-ghetto/stroop-collection.html

https://www.yadvashem.org/holocaust/about/combat-resistance/warsaw-ghetto.html

https://www.nationalww2museum.org/war/articles/warsaw-ghetto-uprising

https://encyclopedia.ushmm.org/content/en/article/warsaw-ghetto-uprising

https://www.britannica.com/event/Warsaw-Ghetto-Uprising

Donation

I am passionate about my site and I know you all like reading my blogs. I have been doing this at no cost and will continue to do so. All I ask is for a voluntary donation of $2, however if you are not in a position to do so I can fully understand, maybe next time then. Thank you. To donate click on the credit/debit card icon of the card you will use. If you want to donate more then $2 just add a higher number in the box left from the PayPal link. Many thanks.

$2.00

The Battle of Tange Alterveer

At the beginning of April 1945, the Allies rapidly approached the province of Groningen in the Netherlands. The province’s liberation was in three regions: the border region between Musselkanaal and the Dollard, the city of Groningen, and the “bridgehead Delfzijl.” Local resistance members succeeded in preserving “The Iron Blow.” This was the only bridge over the Stadskanaal in the area that had not yet been destroyed. A reconnaissance unit of the First Polish Armored Division, led by General S.W. Maczek gratefully took advantage of this opportunity and crossed the provincial border at Musselkanaal on April 11. The same day, the Poles advanced further and reached Stadskanaal and Mussel.

The next day, Onstwedde was liberated. At Tange-Alteveer (west of Onstwedde) a Reconnaissance Unit of the German ‘Marinefestungsbataillon 359’, when Polish armored vehicles reached the village on April 13, the Nazis opened fire. The Polish scouts withdrew, after which their artillery shelled Alteveer. Two villagers were killed in this battle, and after the shelling of Alteveer with artillery, the Poles attacked in the afternoon.

Polish tanks set fire to a barn where German naval soldiers were holed up. Polish soldier Bernard Grabowski was shot dead in that shed. When the Germans ran out of the burning barn a little later, they walked straight into a hail of Polish machine guns. The fight was quickly decided. Nine Germans were killed and the remaining soldiers of the “Marinefestingsbataillon” surrendered. Tange-Alteveer was thus liberated.

St. Strz. Bernard Grabowski T. U was born on 15-12-1918 in Krzywka p. Grudziadz in Poland. His army number was 60466 and it belonged to the 1 Pol. Dyv. Panc. (1st Polish Panzer Division). He died on 13-4-1945 in Tange. The exact cause of death is not entirely known. It is said that he was killed by a hand grenade by a German soldier.




Sources

https://www.tracesofwar.com/sights/24026/Pools-Oorlogsgraf-Gemeentelijke-Begraafplaats.htm

https://www.4en5mei.nl/oorlogsmonumenten/zoeken/1847/alteveer-bevrijdingsmonument

Donation

I am passionate about my site and I know you all like reading my blogs. I have been doing this at no cost and will continue to do so. All I ask is for a voluntary donation of $2, however if you are not in a position to do so I can fully understand, maybe next time then. Thank you. To donate click on the credit/debit card icon of the card you will use. If you want to donate more then $2 just add a higher number in the box left from the PayPal link. Many thanks.

$2.00

The “Trawniki Men”

The history of the Trawniki Men stands as a chilling testament to the banality of evil and the role that ordinary individuals can play in perpetrating atrocities on a massive scale. While their actions may have faded into obscurity for many, it is essential to remember their complicity in the Holocaust and to honor the memory of their countless victims. By confronting this dark chapter of history, we reaffirm our commitment—never forget the horrors of the past and strive for a future built on justice, compassion, and human dignity.

Trawniki Men refers to a group of men primarily from the Soviet Union and other Eastern European countries. During World War II, the Nazis recruited them. They received their name after the Trawniki Training Camp, located in Poland. It was where they received their indoctrination and military training.


The recruitment of the Trawniki Men began in 1941 as the Nazi regime sought to bolster its forces for the implementation of their genocidal policies, particularly in the occupied territories of Eastern Europe. These men were often former prisoners of war, volunteers, or coerced individuals who were promised better treatment or privileges in exchange for their collaboration.

The primary role of the Trawniki Men was to assist the SS Einsatzgruppen, mobile killing squads tasked with exterminating Jews, Roma, and other targeted groups. They were involved in a range of activities, including rounding up victims, guarding ghettos and concentration camps, and actively participating in mass shootings and deportations. Their knowledge of local languages and terrain made them valuable assets to the Nazi regime in carrying out its murderous campaigns with ruthless efficiency.


The Trawniki Men were directly complicit in some of the most heinous crimes committed during the Holocaust. They played a key role in the systematic murder of millions of innocent civilians, often showing little hesitation or remorse in carrying out their orders. Their participation in mass shootings, deportations to death camps, and other acts of brutality left an indelible mark on the annals of history.

One infamous example of their involvement in the massacre was at Babi Yar, a ravine near Kiev, Ukraine. There more than 33,000 Jews were slaughtered in two days in September 1941. Trawniki men were among those responsible for carrying out the executions, demonstrating the extent of their culpability in the Holocaust.

With the end of World War II and the collapse of the Nazi regime, many Trawniki Men attempted to evade justice by blending back into civilian life or fleeing to other countries. However, in the ensuing years, efforts were made to identify and prosecute those who had participated in Nazi crimes.

One significant legal case involving the Trawniki Men was the 1961 trial of Ivan Demjanjuk in Israel. Demjanjuk, a former Trawniki guard, was accused of being a notorious guard at the Treblinka Extermination Camp known as “Ivan the Terrible.” Although he denied the charges, he was ultimately convicted in 1988, highlighting the ongoing pursuit of justice for those complicit in the Holocaust.


The legacy of the Trawniki Men serves as a grim reminder of the depths of human depravity and the ease with which ordinary individuals can be drawn into committing acts of unspeakable evil under the influence of authoritarian regimes. Their collaboration with the Nazis underscores the importance of vigilance in the face of tyranny and the necessity of holding perpetrators of genocide accountable for their actions.

Sources

https://encyclopedia.ushmm.org/content/en/article/trawniki

https://www.washingtonpost.com/magazine/2020/01/23/how-department-justice-team-exposed-nazis-hiding-america

https://academic.oup.com/hgs/article-abstract/25/1/1/674673

Donation

I am passionate about my site and I know you all like reading my blogs. I have been doing this at no cost and will continue to do so. All I ask is for a voluntary donation of $2, however if you are not in a position to do so I can fully understand, maybe next time then. Thank you. To donate click on the credit/debit card icon of the card you will use. If you want to donate more then $2 just add a higher number in the box left from the PayPal link. Many thanks.

$2.00

Dear Mommy…

I am not going to lie, the text of the letters are the innocent words of an 11-year-old boy, The contents seem harmless enough, not complex at all, but with childish wisdom.

However, put in the context of the time the letters were written, it makes the text devastatingly heartbreaking, with no coming back.

Dear Mommy,

How are you? I got your two letters. I’m healthy. Now you don’t have a stomach ache any more. Mommy, I think you need bread. I’m going to Block 3. I have just enough for myself now. OK, so don’t worry about me. Mommy, when the Army Clothing Depot (A.B.A) was working, were we 3 better off? Hopefully, we’ll all be together soon. When I have bread, I’ll send you some, you know that I will, mommy.

Mommy, I know what it means to live on the allocations. Mommy, please send me some writing paper. That’s why I haven’t written. Our block is going to be gassed. [He means fumigated.]

“Mommy, I kiss you, give my regards to Paula. Soon we will be cooking potatoes again in Sewing Workshop 5.

The letter was written by Siegfried Rapaport in 1944 to his mother while he was imprisoned in the Stutthof concentration camp.

In Stutthof, Siegfried was separated from his sister and mother, but they managed to stay in contact by letter.

The letters are written with sincerity and a sense of hope that can only can come from a child. But his hopes were never realized. Siegfried was murdered in 1945 during a death march from Stutthof. His mother died of typhus about two weeks after liberation. Paula, who survived, gave the letter to her sister Varda, who later passed it on to Yad Vashem for safekeeping.




Sources

https://www.volkswagen-group.com/en/press-releases/holocaust-remembrance-day-volkswagen-commemorates-the-victims-of-nazism-16967

https://www.europeremembers.com/stories/106/liberation-of-stutthof

https://training.ehri-project.eu/b02-siegfried-rappaports-letter-stutthof-his-mother

https://www.yadvashem.org/gathering-fragments/stories/bread.html

Krakow

Today marks the 81st anniversary of the liquidation of the Krakow ghetto. Rather than posting photographs, I thought it would be better to read the testimonies of two who survived.

On March 13-14, 1943, the SS and police carried out the operation, shooting some 2,000 Jews in the ghetto. The SS transferred another 2,000 Jews, those capable of work and the surviving members of the Jewish Council and the Jewish police force (Ordnungsdienst), to the Plaszow forced-labor camp. The rest of the Jews, approximately 3,000, were deported to the Auschwitz-Birkenau killing center in two transports,

Willie Sterner:
“Then, my father, my brothers, and I were pushed into another cattle car, which soon began to move. We too were pressed in like sardines in a can; there was no room at all to move. After spending many terrible hours in the cattle car, our train arrived in Krakow. Tired and hungry, we were pushed into military trucks and driven to the Krakow ghetto.

The Krakow ghetto was yet another place of horror, an ugly, dirty place. During the month that we were there, we were terrorized by the Nazis and by many of the OD, the Jewish police. We had little food or medical help, so many people died from illness and starvation. There were so many corpses lying on the streets that nobody paid any attention — we just walked over them. Our people died so fast that it was impossible to take care of them all. The burial squad was overworked, tired, hungry, and stressed. We were homeless and dressed like beggars, wearing old, dirty, torn clothing, and most of us had no shoes. Little children had no shoes for their small feet and wore rags. Hungry, dirty, and lonely, they asked passersby for food, but it was impossible to find a helping hand. There was so little food. Many of the children couldn’t even walk anymore and lay on the sidewalks. It was heartbreaking.

We were the lost people. We were nobodies. We had so little strength that we felt we couldn’t even think anymore; our minds felt shut down. We lived with indescribable brutality. We didn’t know where our loved ones were. We were no longer a proud Jewish people.”

Tauba Biber:
“This one morning, orders – ‘get out, get out’ – and whatever. By then we only had a few bits belongings – you, we grabbed the belongings and lined up to march to Plaszow. Plaszow is the outskirts of Krakow, and it, in Plaszow children were not allowed, older people were not allowed and there were shot on the spot. But some people took a chance and smuggled in some children in the bag, in the rucksack, whatever way the could. Plaszow was a Jewish cemetery. When we got to Plaszow, as we arrived through the gates and it wasn’t even ready – it was no huts even built for us – we saw already three men hanging. Frightened, I, I just don’t know, and when I think back, we must have been completely already numb, without no feeling, we just obeyed and did what we had to do. There were inspections by the Gestapo. So the children had no right to be there, so for some, something happened that they decided, they knew that, they found out that there are children in the camp, so they decided to set up a nursery. So of course the parents were glad, the children would be able, will be looked after in the nursery, so of course the children were put there. And it didn’t take long, maybe two weeks after, we were standing on the appell, and the music was blaring – always in the most terrifying moments there was music. We see from a distance a lorry, an open lorry, with the children. Next to me was standing a mother with twins, two little girls, if there were 10, on the appell and they were going around looking – the Gestapo – if there was any children, or anybody that shouldn’t be there, and these two children clinging to their mother, ‘mother they’re coming, they’re going to take us away’. And so they did. And this lorry, while we were standing there on the appell, this lorry with the children drove off and never seen again. And that’s how those parents lost their children, with a trick that the children will be looked after. Well when I think back today – I don’t know – how can anybody survive? The first two years when we were still at home, with family, and knowing the peasants in our town, it wasn’t so bad, because the peasants were always helping, bringing us food, in exchange for other goods, but in the camps, that was impossible. And how we survived on this black water in the morning that was supposed to be coffee, or the grey soup at lunchtime with the little square of black bread that was like lime, and when we ate it, we didn’t feel any different. It didn’t satisfy in any way, and we were forever hungry…If you’re tired, you’re scared, you’re hungry, lack of sleep and always in fear from one minute to the next, we didn’t know what’s going to happen to us.”

Sources:

https://www.iwm.org.uk/history/concentration-camp-survivors-share-their-stories

Donation

I am passionate about my site and I know you all like reading my blogs. I have been doing this at no cost and will continue to do so. All I ask is for a voluntary donation of $2, however if you are not in a position to do so I can fully understand, maybe next time then. Thank you. To donate click on the credit/debit card icon of the card you will use. If you want to donate more then $2 just add a higher number in the box left from the PayPal link. Many thanks.

$2.00

My interview with Hans Knoop.

I had the privilege today to interview Hans Knoop.

Hans Knoop is a Dutch journalist who was best known for the role he played in the unmasking and arrest of the war criminal Pieter Menten.
Knoop was born during the Second World War to Jewish parents in hiding. Knoop grew up in Amsterdam. In 1963, Knoop started his journalistic career as a reporter at De Telegraaf. For this newspaper he would repeatedly write about the Weinreb affair. Later he was a correspondent in Brussels and Tel Aviv, also for the AVRO. From 1968 to 1971 he was editor-in-chief of the Nieuw Israëlietisch Weekblad.

From 1974 to October 1977, Hans Knoop was editor-in-chief of the opinion weekly Accent. The Menten case took place at that time. Knoop managed to discover material that was incriminating for Menten and continued to report the case in the news. After Menten fled the country, Knoop tracked him down in Switzerland.

Menten was involved in the massacre of Polish professors in Lviv and the robbery of their property. According to witnesses, he helped shoot as many members of the offending family in Galicia, then turned on other Jews in the area. It is believed that Menten personally oversaw the execution of as many as 200 Jews.

He had an estate in Waterford, in Ireland. After his release from Dutch jail in 1985. he was denied entry to Ireland by the then minister of Justice, Michael Noonan, a Limerick man.

Hans Knoop’s story is currently on Apple TV and Amazon Prime TV as “The Menten Files” and in some regions as “The Body Collector” on Netflix

It is quite a long interview, but is well worth it.

source

The Ghettos

One aspect of the Holocaust, which often is overlooked, is the life in the ghettos. The Nazis created at least 1,143 ghettos in the occupied eastern territories. There were three kinds of ghettos.

Closed ghettos were set apart by walls or fences with barbed wire. The Nazis compelled Jews living in the surrounding areas to move into the closed ghetto, thus exacerbating the extremely crowded and unsanitary conditions. Starvation, chronic shortages, severe winter weather, inadequate and unheated housing, and the absence of adequate municipal services led to repeated outbreaks of epidemics and a high mortality rate. Most ghettos were of this type.

Open ghettos had no walls or fences, but there were restrictions on entering and leaving. These existed in Poland and the Soviet Union, as well as in Transnistria, the province of Ukraine occupied and administrated by Romanian authorities.

Destruction ghettos were tightly sealed off and existed for between two and six weeks before the Germans or their collaborators deported and murdered the Jewish population concentrated there. These existed in the Soviet Union (especially in Lithuania and the Ukraine), and Hungary.

How many people were murdered in the ghettos is hard to ascertain because many ghettos were only in existence for a relatively short time. Also, many died as a result of starvation and diseases.

None of the ghettos were pleasant places to live. They often were described as hell on Earth.

The largest ghetto was Warsaw, where 400,000 Jews were crowded into 1.3 square miles of the city. Other ghettos included those in the cities of Łódź, Kraków, Białystok, Lvov (L’viv), Lublin, Vilna (Vilnius), Częstochowa, and Minsk. Many thousands of Western European Jews were. deported to ghettos in the East. Men, women, and children were forced to leave their homes taking only the possessions they could carry, and move into overcrowded houses and rooms. Leaving the ghetto was strictly prohibited.

The ghetto in Lodz, Poland’s second-largest city and major industrial center, was established on April 30, 1940. It was the second largest and most severely insulated ghetto from its surroundings and from other ghettos. It had interned approximately 164,000 Jews, which tens of thousands of Jews from the district, other Jews from the Reich, and also Sinti and Roma were added. The ghetto, although intended to be a temporary transit facility, lasted for more than four years after the interests of local Nazis led to a decision to exploit the Jewish labor force.

Mordechai Chaim Rumkowski, the overbearing and controversial chairman of the Lodz Judenrat, thought that labor would give the Jews an opportunity to go on living and the hope to survive. Consequently, he set up a multifaceted system in which the Jews of the ghetto worked for the Germans, including “Ressorts” (workshops) where even young children were subjected to slave labor. The Nazis, however, regarded the ghetto’s output as only a brief pause in the final solution, the extermination of Jews.

On January 15, 1942, deportations from Lodz to the Chelmno extermination camp began, where Jews were murdered utilizing gas vans. Rumkowski was forced to prepare lists of candidates for deportation and organize the rounding up of the Jews. He was unsuccessful in his attempts to lower the quota of Jews for deportation. By the end of the year, almost half of the Jews interned in Lodz had been murdered in Chelmno. The murder of the Jews of the Lodz ghetto and the surrounding areas continued intermittently until January 1945.

Despite the inhumane conditions that endured in the ghettos, communal institutions and voluntary organizations tried to instill life with meaning and to provide for the public’s needs.

Work in each ghetto differed. Inhabitants were used for anything from construction work to making clothes. Forced laborers worked extremely long hours in brutal conditions. Some work was used as a form of torture rather than for productivity, although most work did attempt to be productive by using free labor, typically for the war effort.

I can’t imagine how life must have been in the ghettos.




Sources

https://www.yadvashem.org/holocaust/about/ghettos/daily-life.html

https://www.yadvashem.org/holocaust/about/ghettos/lodz.html

https://encyclopedia.ushmm.org/content/en/article/ghettos

Donation

I am passionate about my site and I know you all like reading my blogs. I have been doing this at no cost and will continue to do so. All I ask is for a voluntary donation of $2, however if you are not in a position to do so I can fully understand, maybe next time then. Thank you. To donate click on the credit/debit card icon of the card you will use. If you want to donate more then $2 just add a higher number in the box left from the PayPal link. Many thanks.

$2.00

Aktion Erntefest—Operation Harvest Festival

Today marks the 80th anniversary of Aktion Erntefest. (German: for Operation Harvest Festival) a mass murder by the SS conducted at the Majdanek concentration camp and its subcamps, Poniatowa and Trawniki. The purpose was to liquidate the remaining Polish Jews in the Lublin reservation and the Lublin Ghetto, including its entire slave-labour camp workforce.

After the Sobibor uprising, Heinrich Himmler worried that the Jews might
attempt to revolt elsewhere. He thus ordered the execution of all Jews in the labour camps by the General Government.

The operation took place on the 3rd and 4th of November 1943—leading to the approximate murder of 43,000 Jews on the orders of Christian Wirth and Jakob Sporrenberg.

At Majdanek, near Lublin, the SS shot them in large prepared ditches outside the camp fence near the crematorium. Jews from the other labour camps, in the Lublin area, were also taken to Majdanek and shot. Music was played through loudspeakers at both Majdanek and Trawniki to drown out the noise of the mass shootings.

One of the killers described the murders in a TV documentary in 1984:
“There were young ones, too. Many young women came up to us and said, “Why? What have we ever done to you?” I said, ‘I’m sorry. There’s nothing I can do.’ There were men, women and children. They were separated, the men and women. And they did curse us. They cursed us, and some came at us with raised fists. And they yelled, ‘Nazi pigs.’ You can hardly blame them. We might have done the same thing, if we’d been the ones feeling the heat.”

Operation Harvest Festival was the single largest German massacre of Jews during the Holocaust. At Majdanek, they separated the Jews from the other prisoners, then brought them over to long, deep trenches and shot them one by one under the leadership of pathological killer Erich Muhsfeld.

The main camp, as well as the Trawniki and Poniatowa subcamps of the Majdanek Extermination Camp, were surrounded by SS and the Reserve Police Battalion 101 (a unit of the German Order Police from Hamburg) augmented by a squad of Hiwis called Trawniki Men, from Ukraine.

Removing all traces of the killing was a priority of the Nazi leadership because of Soviet military victories on the Eastern Front. After the German defeat at Stalingrad, Soviet forces recaptured most of Ukraine, Russia, and eastern Belarus by the end of 1943. At Majdanek, the cleanup took two months under the supervision of Erich Muhsfeldt, previously an executioner at Auschwitz.

The 600 men and women from the airfield camp had to sort the clothing of the Jews murdered at Majdanek.

Then, the women were deported to Auschwitz and murdered in the gas chambers.

The men had to cremate the bodies, and they were either murdered or recruited into Sonderkommando 1005. Witnesses recalled that for months, the stench of burning flesh hung around the vicinity. The ditches were filled with soil and levelled.

I cannot remember all of the 43,000 souls murdered, but I can remember one—Fanny Landsmann was born in Gelsenkirchen, Germany (near the Dutch border). She was murdered on 1 November 1924 in Majdanek, Lublin. She reached 19 years of age.


Sources

https://www.joodsmonument.nl/en/page/221947/fanny-landsmann

https://encyclopedia.ushmm.org/content/en/article/aktion-erntefest-operation-harvest-festival

http://www.camps.bbk.ac.uk/documents/082-majdanek.html

Donation

I am passionate about my site and I know you all like reading my blogs. I have been doing this at no cost and will continue to do so. All I ask is for a voluntary donation of $2, however if you are not in a position to do so I can fully understand, maybe next time then. Thank you. To donate click on the credit/debit card icon of the card you will use. If you want to donate more then $2 just add a higher number in the box left from the PayPal link. Many thanks.

$2.00

Last Letters—The Final Thoughts

The title, Last Letters—The Final Thoughts, doesn’t reflect entirely their reality. The letters that were sent or received were often checked and edited by the Nazis, especially the letters in the camps. The Red Cross distributed the posts. The words in the letters may not have always been the final thoughts, but they may have been the last words seen by loved ones. Below are some examples of some of those final letters.

The Last Telegram from Erna and Arnold Korn.

These words were written by Erna and Arnold Korn in their last telegram from Berlin to their son Walter and his wife Chava (Chawa) on Kibbutz Matzuva, a month before the former were sent to their deaths in Auschwitz.

21 December 1942

Sender:
Korn Eliyahu
Matzuba Group
Post Office, Nahariya

We both, all the relatives, [and] Gerda, are healthy. Expecting baby at the end of January. Hope Reni, Paula and Oskar are well. Work is good. We were happy to get your letter.

Kisses, Chava [and] Eliyah

Sincere thanks for your words. Hope you are happy parents. We are both fine. No news of our dearest ones. Gerda is happy that you are well. Kisses.

Mother, Father

11 February 1943

Note written by Bella Kaminski from the train deporting her to Auschwitz.

Date unknown, Belgium. Language: German

“I’m leaving, am healthy, don’t worry, with the help of God we will soon see each other again”

Postcard written by Otto Bondy to his children

Otto was a prisoner of the Malines transit camp (Belgium) Hasselt, 20/9/43 (September 20, 1943)


“Dear Family,
We are still on this journey. I cannot complain, there is much variety on this journey.
Someone tried to escape and was shot but not killed. It was bad luck that I lost my good shoes.
The journey goes to Holland (Haeren). I hope we can write from there. It should be a good camp – secluded. We are together with people from Belg. J.
Greetings and kisses
Otto”

This one is not a letter as such, but a drawing.

Page that nine-year-old Zalman Levinson sent from Riga to his aunt, Agnes Hirschberg, in Eretz Israel

“Thank you for the present. Zalman Levinson”

I want to reiterate the drawing was from a 9 year old boy

The Last Letter From Aron Liwerant

Aron Liwerant wrote these words on a deportation train in France to his daughter, Berthe. Aron was murdered in Majdanek. Berthe survived.

“March 3 1943

Dear Berthe. It is already day four. I am now in the railroad car. We are surely traveling to Germany. I am also certain we are going to work. We are about 700 people, 23 railroad cars. In each car, there are two gendarmes. This is a commercial railroad car, but it is neat with benches and a heater. Of course, German railroad cars. Of course, without compartments. They put a pail in it. Imagine the impression this makes. Not everyone can use it. You have to be strong in every situation.

I hope, my child, that you receive all my letters. If you can, keep them for a memento. Dear Berthe, I enclose two lottery tickets. I don’t have a newspaper. I believe I will be able to write a letter to Aunt Paula. I hope, my child, that you will know how to behave as a free person, even though you are without your parents for now. Don’t forget that you must survive, and don’t forget to be a Jew and also a human being. Tell this also to Simon. Remain free people and observe everything with open eyes. Don’t be influenced by first impressions. Know that you cannot open up a person to look inside, at his concealed thoughts, if he has a serious face, or even if he laughs and is pleasant. I don’t mean one specific thing only, but everything that lives around you and everything you see. Both false thoughts and honest thoughts are often blurred, and you should watch how a person behaves in your presence. You don’t see the falsehoods or the honesty of a person in one day. You understand that my advice is for your benefit. Always remember these ideas. My dear child, I think this letter will be my last because we are nearing Paris. If I can – I will write again. My dear Bertshi, take care of your health, don’t drink cold drinks when you sweat so I will be able to see my healthy children once again. Tell Simon everything I have written you. Tell him to study and be a good student, because he is gifted. I am finishing my letter. Many kisses. I am going with confidence that you will grow up and be a good, healthy and smart girl.

Your Father, hoping to see you soon”




Sources

https://www.yadvashem.org/yv/en/exhibitions/last-letters/1941/levinson.asp

https://www.yadvashem.org/yv/en/exhibitions/last-letters/1943/index.asp