The rule about being back inside the ghetto by sunset applied to ghettos in the period c. 1550-1830. In the case of the Warsaw Ghetto established by the Nazis, the Jews were not allowed out at all unless they had a special pass (which was seldom given).
The Warsaw ghetto was the largest Jewish community in Europe at the time.
See the related link for a site with an interactive map of the Warsaw Ghetto.
Gets destroyed and burned,so that the nazis can build houses other it That was first thing that the nazis did when they took other poland, get jews at their home and send them to ghettos like warsaw ghetto and destroyed all jewish buildings and jewish homes and build new aryan homes,so thought be the nazis
They were of a standard size of the time and place. They were not specially constructed, they were just normal buildings that had been allocated as being in the ghetto.
In the film Schindler's List the Jews live and work from the ghetto, much like many Jews did at that time. Later in the film the Jews are moved to a concentration camp, some two kilometres from the factory from where they walked to work.
The Warsaw ghetto was the largest Jewish community in Europe at the time.
The Warsaw ghetto was the largest ghetto in Poland. More than 400,000 Jewish people were shoved into 1.3 square miles. It was centered in the Polish capital, located in Nazi occupied Europe.
most of the time it was some kind of watered down soup with a bunch of bugs in it. :P
See the related link for a site with an interactive map of the Warsaw Ghetto.
The biggest ghetto established by the Nazis in World War 2 was the Warsaw Ghetto, which at one time had about 400,000 inhabitants.
Gets destroyed and burned,so that the nazis can build houses other it That was first thing that the nazis did when they took other poland, get jews at their home and send them to ghettos like warsaw ghetto and destroyed all jewish buildings and jewish homes and build new aryan homes,so thought be the nazis
The Jews and Gypsies within the ghetto were the most affected.
They were of a standard size of the time and place. They were not specially constructed, they were just normal buildings that had been allocated as being in the ghetto.
From Wikipedia, uncited: "The original name of the town was Richmond Courthouse. In 1830 the town's name changed to Warsaw. A number of other small towns in the United States changed their names to Warsaw at this time (Warsaw, Kentucky for instance), all as a result of sympathy in the United States for the November Uprising in Poland. Because Richmond Courthouse was still unincorporated in 1830, it is unclear who was responsible for the change of name to Warsaw." __________ The really famous Warsaw Ghetto was in Warsaw, the capital of Poland.
Most survived. There was a ghetto but Jews didn't have tolive there and it was not sealed off. At the time Shanghai was under Japanese occupation, and the Japanese were completely bewildered by European antisemitism.
Unfortunately, never. Well over a year before the Soviet Army entered Warsaw, the ghetto had been dissolved. Nearly all those inhabitants who had not died of starvation and/or disease had been sent to extermination camps (mainly Treblinka) and gassed. By the end of May 1943 the Warsaw Ghetto had ceased to exist: all the buildings had been destroyed and the last remaining fighters from the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising had been killed ... The Nazis then established an ordinary concentration camp on the site. Please see the related questions.
yes, but calling them groceries is somewhat of an overstatement as one was most likely to get one item at a time.