they did not publish the results of the ping-pong match between the two, so we will never know.
in order to answer your question sensibly one needs to know under which criteria you want to judge the suffering of hundreds of thousands of people.
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.
There were 1800 Roman Catholics classifed by the Nazis as Jews in the Warsaw ghetto, i will return if i find out where they (and how many in which place) died. It is most likely that most of them died in Treblinka rather than the ghetto.
people lived and died, conditions were worse than ouside of the ghetto, but for a brief period people lived in a micro society
you act ghettoer than the other ghetto poeple
The Jews were (overwhelmingly) unarmed civilians ... They were in no position to stop the Holocaust or 'liberate themselves'. When they did resist, as in the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising, it was out of desperation rather than anything else.Please see the related questions for further information.
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.
yes, however it was not as congested as some and had more work than most.
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.
The only figure that I have been able to find is that of 150,000 people who entered Plaszow. Some of these were moved to other camps at various stages. The only figure that I have been able to find is that of 150,000 people who entered Plaszow. Some of these were moved to other camps at various stages.
There were 1800 Roman Catholics classifed by the Nazis as Jews in the Warsaw ghetto, i will return if i find out where they (and how many in which place) died. It is most likely that most of them died in Treblinka rather than the ghetto.
very bad and cruel. Not many food given or eaten. Chidren Died. -------------------------------------------------- they were all bad, but some were worse than others; Warsaw, the largest was twice as densly populated as Lodz, and Lodz had more jobs. But then Warsaw had a better leader than Lodz. The point is that conditions varied between ghettos. The sumggling routes were another way in which conditions varied, eg. Warsaw had a graveyard with a lower wall, some had aryan trams travelling through. The number of houses with running water varied, Krakau had a pharmacy (run by a Polish Christian), conditions were bad in all of the ghettos, but there were differences.
The first wave of typhus was in 1940, the second in 1941 (110,000-110,000 cases, 20% mortality rate). 92% of cases of typhus were among Jews in Warsaw. Tuberculosid claimed even more lives in the Warsaw ghetto than typhus.
Methods of smuggling into the Warsaw ghetto included secreting items about one's person, in other goods or vehicles. Items would be thrown over the walls and passed under. Also most notably there was an area where there was a fence, rather than a wall where larger items were on occasion smuggled in at night.
people lived and died, conditions were worse than ouside of the ghetto, but for a brief period people lived in a micro society
Please do not confuse the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising of April-May 1943 with the much larger Warsaw Uprising of August-October 1944 by the Polish resistance (Home Army).In the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising (April-May, 1943) a small number of Jews still in the Warsaw Ghetto rose in rebellion against the Judenrat and the Nazis. Obviously, they did not stand a chance against the SS, but at least they went down fighting. The Nazis burned down every building in the ghetto.The later Warsaw Uprising of 1944 was unrelated to the earlier ghetto uprising, though a handful of the 34 Jewish survivors of the ghetto uprising, such as Zivia Lubetkin, took part in both.---After the supression of the uprising the Warsaw Ghetto or part of it was turned into a concentration camp, but very little is known about that camp.
Certainly. It depends on the ghetto, but several ghettos, especially the Warsaw Ghetto erupted in violence in response the Nazi deportations to the Concentration Camps. The Warsaw Ghetto uprising, led by Mordecai Anielewicz, took five weeks for the German soldiers to suppress the revolt (which was longer than it took for German soldiers to overrun the entire country of Poland).
you act ghettoer than the other ghetto poeple