answersLogoWhite

0


Best Answer

1943 (April).

User Avatar

Wiki User

12y ago
This answer is:
User Avatar

Add your answer:

Earn +20 pts
Q: In what year did the Jews of the Warsaw ghetto rebel?
Write your answer...
Submit
Still have questions?
magnify glass
imp
Continue Learning about General History

Did Anne Frank ever go to the Warsaw Ghetto?

No, the Warsaw Ghetto was for Polish Jews and had been completely destroyed over a year before Anne Frank was caught. She was sent to Westerbork transit camp and from there to Auschwitz.


What year did the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising take place?

The Warsaw Ghetto was established between October to November 1940. This ghetto would be the first uprising during World War Two with the 1943 Warsaw Uprising.


What year were the Nazi ghettos in Poland established?

The first German built ghetto was in occupied Poland at Piotrków Trybunalski in October 1939. The Germans went on to establish at least 1,000 ghettos for Jews. The Warsaw and Lodz ghettos were established in 1940.


When did Hitler open the ghettos?

The first ghetto had been established at the year 1939 in Poland.Due to the invasion of Poland the nazis had recognized that Poland had a lot of jews were living in Poland . Since the nazis had hated Jews and since they found a lot of jews in polish cities like Warsaw,Krakow,Lublin and Lodz the nazis decided it wasn't good for Jews to be mixed with people that respected other religions so they decided to split the cities apart based on religion.The nazis had called these separated cites Ghettos.Most ghettos were located in eastern Europe but by the end of the war the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising had took affect and most ghettos and nazi death camps had been liberated from the Red Army (Soviet union/USSR/Russia).


Why did Hitler take the Jews to Poland?

Hitler did not take Jews to the ghettos, he took them out of the ghettos and put them into concentration camps to be degraded, abused, tortured, and killed. It was a very ugly chapter of human history, none uglier. Hitler had chosen a strategy of ethnic selfishness. He wanted his own group, which he called the Aryan supermen (Ubermensch in German) to own everything and to enslave or kill the members of other ethnic groups. Jews were a convenient group to victimize because Europe already had a thousand year history of anti-Semitism, and Jews were widely hated for the crime of not being Christians. Hitler blamed Jews for all of Germany's problems, and many Germans were only too happy to agree with him.

Related questions

What year did Warsaw ghettos start?

The ghetto in Warsaw was established in November 1940.


Did Anne Frank ever go to the Warsaw Ghetto?

No, the Warsaw Ghetto was for Polish Jews and had been completely destroyed over a year before Anne Frank was caught. She was sent to Westerbork transit camp and from there to Auschwitz.


What year did the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising take place?

The Warsaw Ghetto was established between October to November 1940. This ghetto would be the first uprising during World War Two with the 1943 Warsaw Uprising.


What year were the Nazi ghettos in Poland established?

The first German built ghetto was in occupied Poland at Piotrków Trybunalski in October 1939. The Germans went on to establish at least 1,000 ghettos for Jews. The Warsaw and Lodz ghettos were established in 1940.


When was the Warsaw ghetto liquidated?

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.


When did Hitler open the ghettos?

The first ghetto had been established at the year 1939 in Poland.Due to the invasion of Poland the nazis had recognized that Poland had a lot of jews were living in Poland . Since the nazis had hated Jews and since they found a lot of jews in polish cities like Warsaw,Krakow,Lublin and Lodz the nazis decided it wasn't good for Jews to be mixed with people that respected other religions so they decided to split the cities apart based on religion.The nazis had called these separated cites Ghettos.Most ghettos were located in eastern Europe but by the end of the war the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising had took affect and most ghettos and nazi death camps had been liberated from the Red Army (Soviet union/USSR/Russia).


When was The Rebel Year created?

The Rebel Year was created in 2007.


When did The Rebel Year end?

The Rebel Year ended in 2009.


Why did Hitler take the Jews to Poland?

Hitler did not take Jews to the ghettos, he took them out of the ghettos and put them into concentration camps to be degraded, abused, tortured, and killed. It was a very ugly chapter of human history, none uglier. Hitler had chosen a strategy of ethnic selfishness. He wanted his own group, which he called the Aryan supermen (Ubermensch in German) to own everything and to enslave or kill the members of other ethnic groups. Jews were a convenient group to victimize because Europe already had a thousand year history of anti-Semitism, and Jews were widely hated for the crime of not being Christians. Hitler blamed Jews for all of Germany's problems, and many Germans were only too happy to agree with him.


Why did life change for Jewish people in 1940?

It depends on what part of the world you are talking about, but there was no significant change associated with the year 1940 for Jewish people, other than the fact that the Jews of Europe were being exterminated by the Nazis. But the Holocaust did not begin in 1940, nor did it change in 1940. ___ If one is looking for major events for Jews in 1940, one could mention the establishment of the Warsaw Ghetto and the Lodz Ghetto in Poland by the Nazis. Ghettoization had begun on a small scale in October/November 1939 and continued into 1941, but these were the biggest two ghettos set up by the Nazis. In 1939 Hitler attacked poland and began ww2. Hitler also went on to build concentration camps for the jews and exterminate them up to 1945 when the war ended. Jewish property was seized or destroyed. 6 million jewish men, women, and children were murdered.


Who is natus wiessblatt?

Born 1926 in Warsaw, PolandNatus, the son of Rena and Mark Weissblatt, was a thirteen year-old schoolboy when the Germans occupied Warsaw in September 1939. Warsaw was a large, cosmopolitan city, home to Europe's largest Jewish community. His father was one of the few Jews who was permitted to work for the Polish government. Natus's mother gave private Hebrew lessons, and his grandfather was highly involved in the Jewish community. They lived in an affluent area of Warsaw. Natus was an outstanding student. Part of a large, loving, and highly educated family, Natus had a comfortable, secure early childhood.In October 1940, Natus and his family, along with all the other Jewish residents of the city, were forced to leave their homes and to live in a ghetto. On November 15, after an 8-foot wall was built around the area, the Jews of Warsaw were cut off from the rest of the world. Over 265,000 people were packed into apartments within 73 streets. That number would soon grow by another 200,000. Lacking money and the means to earn it, most residents were quickly impoverished. Food, medicine and heat were inadequate. Thousands died from starvation, exposure and disease. Children often risked their lives to smuggle food into the ghetto so that their families could eat. Yet, amidst all the horror, schools and other cultural events were organized.In July 1942, the Germans began rounding up and deporting ghetto residents in massive raids. Few were exempt. Packed like cattle into freight cars, they were sent to the nearby Treblinka death camp, where most were immediately taken to the gas chambers and murdered.The Germans soon turned the ghetto into one great burning torch. On May 16, 1943, it was over.Nothing is known of the fate of Natus and his family after they were forced into the ghetto and cut off from the world.


What was like at Warsaw in the world war 2?

The Warsaw Ghetto In September 1939 the Germans took control of Poland and Warsaw after a three week siege. There was no love lost between the Germans and the Poles and it soon became clear that the Nazis, considering themselves a 'Master Race', valued Polish life at next to nothing. As was later demonstrated, on an unprecedented scale, this was one step up from the value they put on Jewish life. As early as November 1939 in Warsaw the first decrees intended to denigrate the Jewish people were issued by the Nazis - the most notable of which was that all Jews over the age of twelve years were forced to identify themselves by wearing a Star of David on their sleeve. These first measures were just the start of a long process however, and with more edicts issued every month it wasn't long before the Jews were reduced to the status of slaves and chattel. They were forbidden to work in either key industries or government institutions, to bake bread, to earn more than 500 zloty a month, to travel by train or trolley-bus, to leave the city limits without special permits, to possess gold or jewellery, plus all Jewish shops and enterprises had also to be marked with the Star of David. In addition to these official oppressions, Jews were summarily humiliated, beaten or even executed for little or spurious reason. In short they lived their lives in a state of constant fear. Plans for a Jewish ghetto had in fact existed since the beginning of the Nazi occupation of Warsaw, but in October 1940 they finally began to take form. A small district South West of the Old Town, in the centre of the city, was chosen and 113,000 Poles were evacuated to make way for Warsaw's 400,000 Jews. Thirty percent of the city's population were now living in an area that constituted less than three square miles, or 2.4 % of the capital. In November that area was closed off by a formidable wall, topped with barbed wire. Life in the ghetto started off tough and quickly got worse. At first some semblance of normal life presided: cafes were still open, newspapers published (newspapers from 'the outside' were forbidden), school lessons took place and people strived to continual a normal existence as best as they could. Those who had managed to hold on to any of their wealth in particular were able to live in a small degree of comfort. Smuggling food into the ghetto was common, either by bribing guards at the gates, or carrying it in via underground canals - whilst poorer people would send their children over to the 'Aryan side' to steal what they could. The official food ration of around 200 calories a day per person was less than 10 percent of the ration for Germans (and about 25% of the ration for Poles). As more and more Jews were brought in from the neighbouring towns and villages, conditions became yet more cramped. Money for bribes was drying out (and was only ever the privilege of a few) and the poor people of the ghetto, skeletal and wretched, began starving en masse. In addition to death by starvation a typhoid epic, caused by the poor sanitary conditions, broke out; meaning that by April 1941 the mortality rate in the ghetto was a staggering six thousand people per month. Funeral carts would come and collect the bodies every morning, between 4-5am; mostly the corpses were dumped naked on the streets - the families were forced to strip their relatives in order to sell the clothes. Whilst the Jews in the ghetto were dying, they weren't dying quickly enough as far as Berlin was concerned. Hitler's original plans to ship all European Jews to Africa were proved impractical, and so it was that the chilling 'Final Solution' was decided upon, early in 1942. Between July and September of that year 300,000 ghetto Jews were transported to the Treblinka Extermination Camp, in the Nazis first mass deportation effort. At first few believed, including the Jews themselves, that the rumours of these death camps were real - preferring to believe that they being sent to hard labour camps. Eventually the evidence that was fed back (by escapees from the camps and by various secret agents and journalists) became irrefutable. The 60,000 remaining occupants of the ghetto had no choice but to confront the awful truth. When the Nazis prepared to organise a second deportation to Treblinka in 1943 the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising began. * Several survivors of the ghetto are still alive today. And out of respect to all the internees of the ghetto, we kindly ask that reviewers write only essential comments. Thank you. This article on the Warsaw Ghetto is meant to be an informative introduction to Warsaw's history for travellers, and is not meant to be used for academic research. Please do not use it for any academic papers, but instead refer to published academic works and textbooks.*