The Nazis dissolved the Lodz Ghetto in August 1944 and the remaining Jews were put on two trains and sent to Auschwitz. So there was no liberation.
Lodz Ghetto was liberated by the Red Army on January 19, 1945.
No, but there were some books in the ghetto when it was formed.
Lodz and the Warsaw ghettos
From the very start in March 1940.
The Warsaw Ghetto was easily the largest, followed by Lodz.
in Łódź
yes, many.
The Jewish supremo (head of the Judenrat) of the Lodz Ghetto was Mordechai Chaim Rumkowski. He is very controversial. See the links below for more infomration.
When the Lodz Ghetto was sealed off in May 1940 it had 164,000 Jews. As they died more were brought in ... but the figure fluctuated.
lodz, Poland
Usually not. However, if you are writing about a specific, named ghetto, yes. For example, one write the Warsaw Ghetto and the Lodz Ghetto.
It varied from one ghetto to another. Usually, the Nazis did not like the people in ghettos to have money that was valid outside the ghetto, as they regarded money as a potential source of power. The best known "ghetto money" was that produced by the Lodz ghetto and by Terezin (Theresienstadt). On entering the Lodz Ghetto, Jews had to swap their ordinary currency for ghetto currency, that could not be used outside the ghetto.