A diary from the Warsaw Ghetto

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Preacherman

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The following article is pretty blood-chilling... it's written by an unknown woman (her ultimate fate is unknown, but she almost certainly was killed) who was in the Warsaw Ghetto during its final destruction by the Nazis in 1943. I'm posting it in Legal & Political, rather than elsewhere, because it shows the grim reality of what happens when civil liberties and basic rights are denied - and how powerless a disarmed people are to resist oppression and genocide.

From the Sunday Telegraph, London (http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/mai...zi12.xml&sSheet=/news/2004/12/12/ixworld.html):

'It looks like the end of the world. Hell has come to earth'

(Filed: 12/12/2004)

The endgame of the Nazi soldiers in Warsaw was brutally clear: "By 1945, there will not be one Jew left in Europe." Yet, as the residents of the city's Jewish Ghetto began their desperate, doomed 27-day uprising against systematic slaugher, one young woman hiding in a lice-infested, bomb-blasted bunker began to record a diary of the last days.

Written from her underground hideout, while fighting raged all around, the six-page journal has only just been unearthed from archives in an Israeli museum. It is now being put on display for the first time at the Ghetto Fighters' House in western Gaililee as the sole surviving contemporary chronicle of life during the 1943 urban insurrection. It begins five days into the revolt and describes in harrowing detail how she and 45 fellow Jews in the shelter are starving, terrified and awaiting certain death.

The final entry is written as Nazi soldiers mount savage grenade attacks on the hideout. The fate of the woman, thought to have been in her late teens or early twenties, remains unknown. This is her account.


Day 6

Saturday, April 24, 1943


Quiet until 12 o'clock. "Alert", the Germans are inside our house. It went peacefully. We continue sleeping. Our daily schedule is backwards. We sleep during the day, and cook and eat at night. We're in an air-raid shelter. A deep silence prevails within. It's 8 o'clock. Steps are heard outside. Someone knocks on the judasz [camouflaged opening]. For several moments, there is enormous apprehension.

The people knocking are Mr Rosenheim and Miss Sonia, who warn us that the building is going up in flames. We open the tanks of water and pour it on the apartments above us. We look out the window and see how the ghetto is burning, enveloped in flames.

Day 8

Monday, April 26, 1943


The house on the Zamenhof Street side, where people were hiding, is also burning. People are escaping and coming to us. It looks like the disaster is drawing near. The shelter is crowded, and many more want to get in. They bang on the door. The people shout and argue. Everyone wants to get into the hiding place. It's hard to give permission to enter.

Because of the smoke and stench, staying in the basement becomes almost impossible. We seal cracks in the door with strips of paper.

I want to go to my brother, who is in another bunker in the second yard, but it's too far and too dangerous.

The air in the basement is terrible. People are nearly choking. Many faint, lose consciousness. The situation is dire. Sleep is not feasible because of the danger of choking.

Day 9

Tuesday, April 27, 1943


The people who came from other bunkers have no food. They quarrel a lot and make noise. The following decision was made: each day a bowl of soup and a cup of coffee will be distributed to each person. The portions will be distributed by the oldest, those who cook the food.

At 6am everyone lay down in the beds, if you can call them beds. A small boy was put into my bed. He was very restless, throwing himself around in his sleep, to the point that I had pains in my side but, thank God, the day passed quietly.

Suddenly, a bang, an uproar, terrible noise. A hand grenade exploded nearby. The people rise but a deep silence prevails. The enemy is surrounding our house, searching for us.

Day 10 (evening)

Wednesday, April 28, 1943


This is our 10th day in the bunker, 10 days of struggling with our blood-thirsty enemy who intends to annihilate us. [The enemy] started the fighting with grenades and tanks and is finishing it by torching houses. We must survive and hope that we will survive. We are fighting for justice and for the right to live.

Day 11

Thursday, April 29, 1943


It was a dangerous night. At 4pm, the enemy threw a grenade into our basement. The results were grave. A hole gaped in the front wall. They say that the enemy has buried a bomb. Our neighbour, Sowa, had the same kind of night. At his place, the hand grenade lifted the roof. Thank God, everything ended all right. Today was ordinary [normal]. The level of hygiene is "extremely high".

It won't be possible to exist for a long time in our basement. The air is terrible, lice and overcrowding dominate everything. What else can be done? To leave and risk our lives? Or perhaps die here?

Day 12

Friday, April 30, 1943


The day passed as usual. There was great apprehension during the night. The enemy is searching for us everywhere. Listening, knocking, circling around us. Our main defence – deepest silence.

Day 14 (morning)

Sunday, May 2, 1943


Our activities begin with cleaning the blood in front of our hiding place. The Germans found people who were living in our house and demanded that they reveal the entrances to the bunkers. Happily, these people knew nothing about it.

I am on guard duty. I have two hours ahead of me. I'll sketch the layout of our bunker, with all the entrances. The idea of building the bunker came up only after the action in January.

We always thought that we had to be well hidden. Even those with papers and authorisations [Ausweis] who appeared on the street during an action, were taken. Only those who hid remained. For this reason, the building of bunkers became common.

The work continued day and night with great fervour. Bunks, floors and stairs were made. A well was dug. The wood needed for building was taken from the [abandoned] apartments. The building continued for six weeks. During the construction, food stores were also prepared for the future. We paid for all this with our health and our nerves, but it's not worth elaborating on that.

To reach our bunker, a hidden aperture must be opened, and this is located in the left wall of the building. The dimensions of the aperture are 30cm x 45cm. After it is opened, you must descend to a depth of 90cm, pass through half a metre in a stooped position and descend several steps, and then you are in our hiding place.

Day 19

Friday, May 7, 1943


Five difficult and tragic days have passed. In this short time, we have had many experiences. Our living conditions were difficult from the moment we entered our hideaway and they became worse since we have taken in 45 people. Most of them had no food.

At midnight on Monday, the electricity was cut off. We are now faced with a serious problem: how will we cook? We do not have stoves connected to a chimney. The bunker leaders deliberated this problem for three days and, in the meantime, arguments broke out. Brother fought with sister, friend fought with friend and they all fought among themselves. Hunger skipped no one.

The quarrelling was so loud that the echoes were probably heard outside the bunker. The situation was terrible, and dangerous as well.

The emotional state of the people is dreadful. Some of them lie on the ground unconscious. The most vulnerable are the children. We have already been through three days without hot food.

In the end, the problem of the kitchen was solved. But it is preferable to avoid addressing someone in order to maintain the silence because every question brings offensive and coarse replies. The people in the bunker are behaving without courtesy and consideration.

The night was horrific. There was terrible irritability. I witnessed a shocking event when Jews were removed from the bunker in a neighbouring house.

During my night guard duty I lay next to the judasz and listened to conversations going on outside. The conversation between the Germans, full of irony and sadism, made my body go cold and my blood boil. Yes, the Germans are certain that they are justified. We are considered murderers and they want to present themselves as the epitome of morality and humanity. Descriptions of the blind hatred towards us, the persecuted and tortured, made me feel as though salt was being spread on my open wounds. Their words always ended with coarse laughter.

Wham! Boom! The enemy is shooting machine guns and throwing grenades into the bunker. The bunker is partially covered with an avalanche of rubble. The people inside are acting courageously. With complete serenity, they look death in the face.

In silence, we honour the death of the people who are burning in the flames. The Germans are shooting every Jew that they find or taking and burning the bodies on the bonfire in the community courtyard at 19 Zamenhof Street. Hitler's devotees, his dedicated servants and hangmen, who obey their leader's orders, execute everything in accordance with the order which states that in 1945 there will not be a single Jew left in Europe.

Today, silence reigned for a long time. We lay on the bunks until late in the evening after four days of hunger. Everyone was satisfied because we ate something and went to sleep in a better mood.

The appearance of these people, whose cheeks were already sunken, improved, their eyes brightened and a spark of life was once again discernible within them. Now everyone believes that he will be able to hold on.

Surprisingly, we have light again, the electricity is back. Maybe the sun will also shine for us. It's really about time. We are cut off from the entire world, helpless and relying only on our own powers. No one talks about rescue. We are extending our existence with great effort.

Our lives are extremely threatened now, the danger is constant. The living standard is very low. The people are half-naked, dressed in rags, running around morosely on the stone floor. They can't live and they can't die.

I am amazed that in such conditions we have succeeded in surviving for three weeks. We know very well what kind of action this is because they announced it in advance. This is the extermination of Warsaw Jewry and, afterwards, our end.

The Germans usually attacked us at night. Now they are expanding their attacks to the daytime as well. We must maintain absolute silence on our bunks so that the enemy will not discover us.

I am going out into the street. The streets – Mila, Zamenhof, Kurza, Nalewki, Lubecki – all are on fire. Workshops, apartments, stores, entire houses are burning. The ghetto is nothing more than a sea of flames.

A very strong wind is blowing, which fans the fire and carries the sparks from the burning houses to those that have not yet caught fire.

The fire destroys everything. The sight is horrifying, shocking. The fire spreads so quickly that people cannot escape from the buildings and they perish tragically.

People with bundles run from house to house, from street to street. There is no salvation; no one knows where to hide. They search in desperation but there is no deliverance, no refuge, death rules everything.

The walls of the ghetto are surrounded. No one goes out and no one comes in. Clothing is burning on people's bodies. Screams of pain, sobbing. Everyone wants to be saved, everyone tries to save his own life.

People are choking from the smoke. All are begging for help. Most of them, almost all of them, cry out to God: "God, show your power, have mercy on us." God is as silent as a Sphinx and does not answer. And you, the nations, why are you silent? Don't you see that they want to annihilate us? Why are you silent?

Despite the danger, Jews are running through the streets just to save their lives. Everything is engulfed in fire. It looks like the end of the world has come. "Save yourselves if you can!" The situation is horrifying, terrible. Everyone wants to be saved. Hell has come to earth. Dante's Inferno – it cannot be believed and it cannot be described.

A new day is beginning. With the new day, there is a deathly silence. People are in their corners without food or water. A cemetery in flames. The sound of metal falling and of burning walls collapsing is heard.

The ghetto is burning for the fourth day. All we see are chimneys standing and the frames of the houses that burned down. In the first moment, this spectacle arouses a shudder of horror: yes, this is the work of Hitler's vandals, who hope that the entire world will look this way. There is no doubt that they will not succeed in this.

In our thoughts, we return to the past. We've lost many things. The only thing left to us is our hiding place. Of course, it is not a safe place.

We live the day, the hour, the moment.
 
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Pity that most were denied the means of fighting back.
 
Monkeyleg took the words right out of my mouth. I read it last night and came here to bump the thread, but it looks like others have moved i back up already.
 
More a product of socialization, actually.

There's a reason why the Roman Empire eventually scattered us to the four winds, and it wasn't because we were being calm and docile :scrutiny:

Those of us who have broken free of the "ghetto Jew" mentality are ready and able to fight as fiercely as our ancestors did.
 
What a horrifying account of what happened in Warsaw so many years ago. Thanks for sharing Preacherman
 
A lot of Meir Kahane's (founder of the Jewish Defense League) views on expulsion of the Palesinian Arabs from Israel were disturbing, but I am left with more respect for him than for Joe Lieberman, Diane Feinstein, Michael Barnes, Charles Schumer, and some other American Jews who have apparently forgotten to "never forget."

Kahane at least had the common sense to realize that everything in this world is based first and foremost on armed self-defense.
 
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The story of the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising is one of the most inspiring stories humankind has ever produced. Poland fell to the Germans faster than the Ghetto did.
 
As far as I am concerned, anyone who would advocate disarming me is related to the murderous fiends who destroyed the Warsaw ghetto.

I will not be disarmed, I will not be herded into a camp, I will not shiver for fear in a basement.

Some things are worse than death, and slavery is at the top of the list.
 
Chuck Schumer and Diane Feinstein need to not only read this, but take it to heart!!

This presumes that either of those spawns of Satan actually have hearts. When it comes to self-defense and defense of liberty for us proles, they don't.

"Never again" seems to have lost it's luster!!

The correct phrase should be: "Never again; but IF again, not for free."

Most people assume that the only thing that can be done to prevent another Holocaust/Shoah is to educate the rest of the world. This proposition assumes that all others are of good will, and negates the existence of evil or evil people. I prefer the safer method of assuming and preparing for the worst, and being very happy when it doesn't happen. Oftentimes there is a direct correlation between being prepared for the worst and the failure of it to occur - driven by the fear of those evil people that they may actually have to pay a price to victimize others.

If every 10th Jew who was murdered by the Nazis had, before or after they were taken away, killed only one of them, then some 600,000 German soldiers, SS men and associated police and paramilitary non-Germans would have paid to murder Jews. One of two things would have resulted: either the effort would have stopped due to its high cost, or the war would have ended sooner as the tremendous strain of the higher casualties (and there would obviously have been wounded to care for as well) had an impact on the ability of the Germans to raise new divisions and replenish old ones. Either way, it would have saved lots of Jewish lives.

Rest assured that not all Jews are like those who passively went to the cattle cars in the early 1940's. Many of us are armed to the teeth, and know how to use our weapons. "Never Again" is meaningless without the means to enforce it. I have the means, as do many of those I know. I will ensure that my children and their children also have the means and the knowhow to defend themselves.
 
Warning signs

This is a chilling and great account.
We need to make sure it never happens here, and need to educate everyone, no matter how well meaning, as to the effects of their efforts to "protect" us from ourselves.

From the political left you get the vision of the maternal state that needs to regulate everyone because somehow the state is a better guardian and protector than well-informed individuals.

From the political right you get rampant xenophobia and fearmongering and the chilling and insane argument that "others" hate us for our freedoms, which is why we have to take those freedoms away to protect us from them!
 
". And you, the nations, why are you silent? Don't you see that they want to annihilate us? Why are you silent?"

I suspect "the nations" is translated from "goyim," which in this case would refer not necessarily to the Alliance but to the Poles right next door and the Polish resistance.
 
One of the books written about the Holocaust was written by a participant in Warsaw. It was amazing how much difference a few handguns made . He was a teenager and the first time his mother saw him with a gun [when their whole world was collapsing around them ] she asked 'what am I raising , a gangster ? Even under those circumstances some could not deal with reality.
 
I agree with all the replies and more so. Never again at least not with out paying the price. I have started teaching youth for free the NRA basic rifle course to at least get the youth of this country thinking about things.

I was substitute teaching at a high school last month and asked what Europe democratic government was not taken over or invaded by Nazi Germany. For most of the day no one could name Switzerland. We had a very quick history lesson on why Switzerland was not invaded or taken over. We have to teach the youth ASAP.
 
If anybody is interested more in the subject of the Warsaw Ghetto and the uprising, you can get Dan Kurzman's 1976 book "The Bravest Battle". A very good read.

Kurzman had the benefit of interviewing over 500 people including most of the surviving fighters. He even interviewed some of the Nazis, one of which was the SS commander Gen. Jurgen Stroop's driver.

I got a 1993 edition from Borders & Books.

There is also the book the "The Pianist" by Wladyslaw Szpilman a Jew who survived Warsaw from 1939 to 1945. There is also a movie about the same man. Szpilman escaped the Ghetto before the fighting started. Another good read. Written right after WWII ended.
 
I posted the above to a college board I post on (with only a short summary and a statement saying "For some, 'Never Again' is more than just words" at the bottom as my commentary), one of the big lefties on the board replied with "Whats this have to do with anything?" :rolleyes: Some people just dont understand history. :(

The nice thing was, I baited the same guy into a firearm discussion, and used the above to clobber him over the head that sometimes civilians need weapons of war. :evil:

Kharn
 
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