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Mordechai Chaim Rumkowski

 
Holocaust: Mordechai Chaim Rumkowski

(1877--1944), Chairman of the Judenrat in the Lodz Ghetto in Poland. Formerly an unsuccessful businessman and an orphanage director, Rumkowski was appointed Judenrat chairman on October 13, 1939, soon after the German invasion of Poland that launched World War II. Like all Judenrat heads, Rumkowski was torn between helping his constituents survive, and giving in to the demands of the German authorities. Rumkowski, however, is considered to be one of the most controversial of all Judenrat leaders, in that he often cooperated with the Germans and treated the Jews of his Ghetto dictatorially.

Rumkowski reported directly to the German ghetto administration, which was headed by Hans Biebow. He was completely responsible for everyday life in the ghetto: he had to provide food, housing, heat, work, and health and welfare services for the suffering ghetto population. Rumkowski controlled all aspects of the ghetto, even its cultural life. When rabbis were forced to stop working, he himself began performing marriages. His picture even appeared on the ghetto's money. Rumkowski was also charged with setting up factories for the Germans inside the ghetto. He established 120 of them, where he could employ thousands of the ghetto's Jews: Rumkowski believed that if he could create a productive and vital work force for the Nazis, then they would not destroy the ghetto.

Rumkowski also believed that in order to save the ghetto as a whole, he would have to cooperate with the Nazis and give in to their Deportation demands. By the end of 1941, the Extermination Camp at Chelmno had been instituted and the Germans forced Rumkowski to organize the deportation of some of the ghetto population. At first, Rumkowski tried to convince the Germans to cut down the number of Jews to be deported. However, the Germans refused and made Rumkowski responsible for deciding who was to be deported. During the first five months of 1942, 55,000 Jews from Lodz were sent to their deaths at Chelmno.

Another deportation was carried out during the second week of September 1942. The Nazis demanded that Rumkowski turn over all children and old people. He cooperated with their demand, and even calmly asked families to surrender their own children. Twenty thousands Jews were brutally rounded up and sent to Chelmno. For the next while, there was a respite from the deportations, encouraging Rumkowski in his belief that keeping the peace and working for the Germans would help prevent further deportations. In fact, during that period of time, the Lodz Ghetto was left alone while other ghettos all over Poland were being destroyed.

However, by the late spring of 1944, the Soviet army was advancing towards Lodz. At that point, the Germans decided to liquidate the Lodz Ghetto once and for all. They made Rumkowski arrange the deportation. From June 23 to July 14, 1944, about 7,000 Jews were sent to Chelmno. The Jews of Lodz resisted the deportations passively, leading the Nazis to decide to liquidate the ghetto immediately, with SS and German police units carrying out the evacuation. The Germans closed the ghetto's factories and dissolved all Judenrat-run institutions. They also changed the Jews' destination from Chelmno to Auschwitz. Rumkowski encouraged the Jews to calmly report for deportation, but they ignored his request. The Germans completed the liquidation of the ghetto in late July and August, sending the Jews to their deaths. Only a few hundred Jews managed to hide successfully. Rumkowski and his family were not spared---they were deported to Auschwitz on August 30, 1944, and were soon killed there. Lodz was liberated by the Soviet army on January 19, 1945.

Some historians view Rumkowski as a collaborator and traitor. Others believe he made a serious, yet flawed, attempt to rescue as many Jews as possible.

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Holocaust. Encyclopedia of the Holocaust. Copyright © H.H. The Jerusalem Publishing House, Ltd. © Yad Vashem, the Holocaust Martyrs' and Heroes' Remembrance Authority. All rights reserved.  Read more