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Resistance: Jews and Christians Who Defied the Nazi Terror

Page 31

by Nechama Tec


  Russian casualties, in German captivity, 39

  Rytel, Zygmunt

  on anti-Semitism, 21–22

  determination to fight suffering, 18

  early life of, 15–17

  imprisonment in Auschwitz, 17–18

  on motivation of youth, 21

  murder of brother by German officer, 17–18

  photo of (1966), 19

  recognition by Yad Vashem, 17

  view of Jews he helped, 18

  work in films, 20

  work with underground, 18–19, 20, 22

  schools. See education

  Schupper, Hela

  early life of, 171–172

  escape from Warsaw ghetto, 174–176

  photo of, 171

  reaction to Mila 18 suicides, 177

  relationship with Lutek Rotman, 172

  survival of, 178

  work as courier, 172

  Schutzstaffel (SS)

  July 1942 Aktion, 86

  removal of Polish elites by, 89, 181

  routine murder of Jewish civilians by, 26

  Secret Arms Organization (TOB), 154

  self-reliance, role in resilience, 4

  Serafinski, Tomasz. See Pilecki, Witold

  Sereny, Gitta, 145

  “service givers,” 95

  Shefet, Zvi

  acceptance of father’s work assignments, 87

  anti-Semitism endured by, 107

  break-up of family unit, 92–93

  description of Slonim takeover, 85–86

  and partisan groups, 91–92, 93, 107

  refusal to leave family, 87–88

  Shefet family

  attempts to join partisan group, 91–92

  division in, 92–93

  escape from Slonim ghetto, 90–91

  losses in Aktions, 88

  Shoah (film), Jan Karski’s view of, 189

  Sicherheitsdienst (SD), murder of Jewish civilians by, 26

  Sikorski, Wladyslaw, 100–102, 104, 207n18

  Silverstein, Leah

  description of starvation, 161–162, 164–165

  description of Warsaw ghetto, 161

  early life of, 159

  life on the Aryan side, 167–168

  obtains guns for underground, 169–170

  photo of, 161

  relationship with Jurek Wilner, 165–166

  watches Warsaw ghetto burning, 167

  work as courier, 170–171

  Skarzyn, Poland, “missing Jews” of, 28–29

  Skarzysko Kamienna, Poland, 170

  Slapak, Cecylia, study of Jewish women, 62–63

  Slonim, Poland, 85–87

  Slonim ghetto

  burning of, 90

  deportations from, 74

  hiding places in, 88, 90

  Mina Volkowisky in, 95–97

  SS Aktion in, 88

  Smolar, Hersh

  aids other escapees, 110

  assists Bielski partisans, 113–114

  as devout communist, 107–108

  discusses partisan duties, 118–119

  escape from Minsk ghetto, 109–110

  establishes Minsk underground, 109

  imprisonment in Poland, 108

  meets Tuvia Bielski, 113

  move to Kiev, 108

  refusal to leave Poland, 109

  saved by General Platon, 113

  view of Atlas Icheskel, 121

  view of Tuvia Bielski, 121

  Sobibor concentration camp

  number of deaths at, 153

  solidarity in, 153–154

  Soviet POWs at, 154–155

  underground movement at, 154

  Socialist Party, 25, 42, 183

  Soldatenheimat, 168

  solidarity

  importance in survival, 146–148, 149, 196

  in Sobibor camp, 153–154

  Sonderkommandos. See Kommandos

  Soviet Army

  approach to Auschwitz, 133

  collapse of divisions in, 39

  ethnic makeup of, 84

  failure to hold Slonim, 85–86

  Soviet-German friendship treaty, 39

  Soviet-German war

  collapse of Red Army divisions, 39, 84

  German defeat at Stalingrad, 41

  Soviet-occupied Polish territories, as haven for Jews, 48–49, 50, 184

  Soviet partisan movement

  anti-Semitism in, 93, 98, 107

  cruelty of, 99–100

  ethnic tolerance of, 41

  infanticide in, 207n17

  lack of attacks upon Germans by, 85

  motivation of, 84–85

  Stalin’s politicizing of, 41

  view of ghetto escapees, 85

  women’s participation in, 94–95

  Soviet-Polish cooperation, 106, 117

  Soviet Union

  attempts to organize partisans, 85

  denial of Polish officers murders, 181

  refusal of Zionist entry, 122

  Spitzer-Tichauer, Helen (Zippi), work with underground, 139–141

  SS. See Schutzstaffel

  Stalin, political agenda of, 41, 181–182

  Stangl, Franz, 145

  Starachowice, Poland, 171

  Star of David, wearing of, 27, 87

  starvation, Leah Silverstein’s description of, 161–162, 164–165. see also food

  Story of a Secret State (Karski), 188

  Stroop, Jurgen, 81, 205n86

  Sudouwicz, Israel, 152

  suicide

  as alternative to capture, 173

  euthanasia of Warsaw orphans, 195

  as honorable death, 81

  as response to deportation, 67–68

  survivors, attitude of “rich” vs. “poor,” 18

  Swietokrzycka Street, Oneg Shabbat archives at, 71

  Szafirstein, Regina, 137, 138–139, 142

  Szczara River, 85

  Szengut, Tuwia (Tadek), 168–169

  Szerynski, Jozef, 72–73, 73

  Szternfeld, 70

  Szwajger, Adina, 194–196

  Tarnow underground, 169

  Tec, Nechama

  Defiance: The Bielski Partisans, 110

  meeting with Antoni Zieleniewski, 22–31

  meeting with Ephraim Bleichman, 32–46

  meeting with Richard Glazar, 144–145

  meeting with Tuvia Bielski, 110

  meeting with Zygmunt Rytel, 16–22

  Resilience and Courage, 194

  Tennenbaum, Mordechai, 123

  Teresianstadt ghetto, 149

  They Fought Back (Ainsztein), 14

  TOB. See Secret Arms Organization

  Tolman-Zlotnicki, Hadassah, 131

  topography, effect on resistance efforts, 5

  Trap with a Green Fence, The (Glazar), 145

  Trawinki concentration camp, 68–69

  Treblinka

  deportations from Warsaw ghetto to, 67–69

  Julian Chorazycki’s work in, 150

  prisoner escape from, 156–157

  rebellion at, 144–145, 147, 151–152, 155–157

  Richard Glazar’s memories of, 145–149

  Trunk, Isaiah, research on the Judenrat, 14

  Umschlag Platz, 68

  underground movement

  in ghettos, 62

  inexperience of commanders, 5–6

  Julian Chorazycki’s work in, 150

  leadership in, 5

  new definition of, 12–13

  Zygmunt Rytel’s work in, 20

  Under the Eagle pharmacy, 102

  Unger, Karl

  escape from Treblinka, 151–152

  life at Treblinka, 146

  work with underground, 150

  Union factory, 131

  Union of Armed Struggle (ZWZ), 125

  United States

  power shift created by, 181

  pressure to honor Ribbentrop-Moltov Agreement, 41

  See also Allies

  uprisings,
as suicidal gestures, 13

  urban national resistance, focus of, 12–13

  Vassia, Dziadzia, 107

  Vilna ghetto

  1942 New Year’s Manifesto, 6

  fighters join Markow brigade, 119–120

  final liquidation of, 191–192

  manipulation of inmates in, 57–58

  murder of inmates, 74

  prohibition against procreation in, 60–61

  Sonia Madejsker’s work in, 178

  Tosia Altman’s work in, 178

  Yitskhok Rudashevski’s transfer to, 54–55

  Vilna Partisan Organization (FPO), 6, 76–77

  Volkowisky, Mina

  attempts to leave ghetto, 96–97

  befriended by Nikolai Bobkov, 99

  betrayal by “friend,” 98–99, 100

  invitation from General Sikorski, 100–102

  joins Soviet partisans, 98

  relocation to Slonim ghetto, 96

  reunites with husband, 100

  separated from husband, 97–98

  Voroshilov, Marshal Clement Efremovich, 39

  Wachalska, Stanislawa. See Meed, Vladka

  Wagner, Gustav, 155–156

  Wajcblum, Ester, 137, 138–139, 142

  Warsaw, Poland

  food shortages in, 51–52

  Jewish Historical Institute, 22

  refugees’ arrival in, 47

  Warsaw ghetto

  Bernson and Bauman Hospital, 194–195

  conditions in, 65, 161–163

  construction of, 52

  converted Jews in, 72–73

  deportations to Treblinka, 67–69

  escape from, 175

  Frania Beatus’ work in, 179–180

  Itzchak Giterman’s death in, 66

  orphan euthanasia at, 195

  planned destruction of, 79

  sealing of, 160–161

  Warsaw ghetto uprising

  April 1943, 78, 79–80

  August 1944, 13, 106

  Himmler’s destruction command, 77–78, 79

  Israel Gutman’s research on, 14–15

  Yitzhak Zuckerman’s view of, 10–11

  Warsaw University, attacks on Jewish students at, 23

  Wehrmacht

  Hitler’s view of, 181

  and Slonim ghetto Aktion, 88

  Wengrover, Jehuda, 177

  White Rose, 118

  Wieliczka, Poland, 50

  Wilczynska, Stefania, 70

  Wilner, Jurek (Arieh)

  arrest and torture of, 166

  relationship with Leah Silverstein, 165–166, 167

  suicide of, 176

  work with Jewish underground, 72, 76

  Wirths, Eduard, 133

  Wlodawa, Poland, 151, 153

  Wolski, Mieczyslaw, arrest/execution of, 83

  women

  in Auschwitz munitions factory, 131

  carrying arms, 94

  conditions endured by, 50–51, 62–63, 95–96, 207n17

  contribution to ghetto survival, 55–57, 63

  physical resistance to deportation, 68

  prohibition against procreation, 60

  serving on Judenrat, 50

  in Soviet partisan movement, 41, 94

  work as couriers, 158, 163–164, 167–168, 172, 178–179

  work in German factories, 193–194

  work in kibbutz, 164

  World Zionist Congress (1939), 47

  Yaari, Bela Chazan, 122–124

  Yad Vashem

  historian at, 6

  recognition of Jan Karski, 183

  recognition of Zygmut Rytel, 17

  Zabludowicz, Noah

  resistance work of, 132

  transfer to Auschwitz, 127

  visits Roza Robota’s cell, 141–142

  Zamenhof Street, 77

  Zarki farm (Zionist experiment), 165

  Żegota

  Julian Alexandrowicz’s work with, 104

  Zygmunt Rytel’s work in, 20

  Zieleniewski, Antoni

  commissioned as Polish officer, 24

  decision to help “missing Jews,” 29–30

  delay in revealing wartime activities, 31

  early life of, 22

  escape to Podlesie, 28

  joins PPS, 22

  relationship with Lolek Leczynski, 22–24

  views on anti-Semitism, 31

  witnesses anti-Semitism as Warsaw University, 23–24

  work with Home Army, 30

  ŻOB. See Jewish Fighting Organization

  Zoliborz neighborhood (Warsaw), 18–19

  Zuckerman, Antek, 72, 174, 176

  Zuckerman, Yitzhak

  armed confrontation by, 77

  description of armed confrontation, 82

  photo of, 78

  Warsaw ghetto uprising commemoration, 10–11

  work with Frania Beatus, 180

  Zwiazek Walki Zbrojncj. See Union of Armed Struggle

  ZWZ. See Union of Armed Struggle

  żydowska Organizacja Bojowa. See Jewish Fighting Organization

  Żydowski Zwiazek Wojskowy. See Jewish Military Union

  Zygielbojm, Szmuel, 186

  Zyskind, Sara, experience in Lodz ghetto, 56–57

  ŻZW. See Jewish Military Union

  Table of Contents

  Cover Page

  Title Page

  Copyright Page

  Dedication

  Contents

  Introduction: At the Edge of Nowhere

  Chapter 1 Learning How to Oppose

  Chapter 2 The Ghettos

  Chapter 3 The Forests

  Chapter 4 The Concentration Camps

  Chapter 5 The Couriers

  Chapter 6 The Special Case of Jan Karski

  Conclusion: “Not Alone”

  Acknowledgments

  Notes

  Works Cited

  Index

 

 

 


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