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IX. Living
With Dignity in a World Gone Insane
This Chapter And You...
What's the first word
or thought that comes to mind when you hear
the word "Resistance?" Perhaps the
word was friction as in the study of science,
magnetism or electricity. Perhaps the words
"fight back" as one might do when
facing a bully. When we answer questions we
most often look for "a right answer"
or a single "best choice." Maybe the
word "refusal" occurred to you or
perhaps "confrontation," "rebellion,"
or even "revolution?" All of these
relate to resistance in different contexts and
in different ways.
In the Holocaust too,
RESISTANCE had many meanings. If you want to
understand what caused people to make these
impossible choices you might read #1, for it
was the motivation which forced people to make
their choice. There was ACTIVE RESISTANCE; fighting
back - in the ghettoes, camps in the forests,
guerrilla warfare - usually resulting in many
casualties and few survivors. (Read about examples
of these in Readings #2, 3, 4 and 5). There
was PASSIVE RESISTANCE - almost everywhere -
through which people maintained their dignity
and chose for themselves rather than the enemy,
their time and often the means of death . For
these, survival was in itself a form of resistance.
It said to the enemy, "Your might may overwhelm
and kill me but if I die it will be on my terms."
(Readings 6 and 7 clarify this area)
Other forms included DECEPTION
AS RESISTANCE. This included sabotage (you can
read about that in Readings 8 and 9). Then there
were also those special cases which are impossible
to define or categorize. Such a sample can be
found in Reading # 10. The key factor is that
resistance did happen. Only the methods varied.
If you now go to the two
activities, A and B, you will get a sense of
making choiceless choices - those decisions
where you decide what you might do - but the
outcomes are predetermined. You will get your
chance to evaluate your own "resistance"
choices and those choices others were forced
to make.
On the "March of
the Living" you will stand where they stood
at Mila 18, Umschlagplatz, the Warsaw Ghetto
and more, see some of the things they saw at
Auschwitz, Birkenau and Majdanek, and sense
some of the feelings that they must have felt.
You will have a chance to feel what the likelihood/futility
of the success of any resistance might
have been. And then realize that resistance
happened any way.
Perhaps the most significant
lesson you will learn in this chapter is that
at a time of such hopelessness, when it would
have been easy to write off God completely and
just give up hope and faith, that most Jews
clung to life and retained their religiosity
despite all that was happening.
Finally, you will leave
this chapter with a new and different understanding
of what RESISTANCE in its many forms means and
what it means to DIE AND STILL RETAIN ONE'S
DIGNITY.
READ ON.
Objectives
1. You will learn that
resistance during the Holocaust took many forms.
2. You will develop an
awareness of conditions under which resistance
is feasible.
3. You will study what
types of resistance took place and where.
4. You will learn of the
conditions under which survivors lived, and
how incredible any resistance at all might have
been.
5. You will understand
the obstacles to Jewish resistance during the
Holocaust.
6. You will be able to
use your March experience, to cite specific
instances of heroic resistance by Jews during
the Holocaust despite incredible odds.
7. You will be able to
respond appropriately to the accusation that
Jews went to their death like "sheep to
the slaughter."
8. You will understand
and be able to support the position of "Survival
as Resistance."
9. You may redefine what
the word "resistance" means to you
now.
The Myth Of Cowardice
"Our martyrs
do not owe anybody an answer as to why and how
they died, nor does their agony require any
defense. Their death in itself is the most grievous
accusation against the entire civilized world.
The defamation of the memory of six million
martyrs whose voices have been silenced forever
is the gravest moral wrong and an unparalleled
falsification of history.
...first in a series of
documents we intend to publish to discredit
the myth of Jewish cowardice and make known
the truth: that many, if not most, of those
six million went to their death, not like sheep
to the slaughter, but with a genuine heroism,
a determined awareness of their fate, and a
loyalty to one another which make them the unsung
heroes of the greatest atrocity that man has
committed against man."
World Federation of the
Bergen-Belsen Survivors Association
As Sheep
To The Slaughter, by K. Shabbetai
Kiddush Ha Shem (Sanctification
of God's Name)
"Do Not
Kneel"
As soon as the Germans
reached Kubilnik (Friday, June 27, 1941) there
appeared some hoodlums who began anti-Jewish
agitation. That very day they burst into the
synagogue and beat the worshipers. They opened
the Holy Ark, and commanded the old men who
had not managed to escape to take the Torah
scrolls outside. The hoodlums tore the Torahs
yelling, "Look how strong the parchment
is - just like the Jews."
The next day they called
the rabbi of the town, Hirsch Makowsky, and
ordered him to burn the Torah scrolls. He responded
"You can burn me, but this I will not do!"
On Sukkot, 1942 twelve
of us were taken about a mile out of town and
ordered to dig two ditches. The troop of gestapo
stood over us and pushed us on in our work.
After we had finished digging we were ordered
to stand aside. Suddenly we saw our whole community
being driven toward the ditches. The men were
told to undress and kneel at the ditches. The
rabbi instructed them not to kneel, but to bend
over on the tips of their toes and fingers.
In the few minutes allowed to them before they
were shot, the rabbi spoke again, "All
will be well brothers. Recite the Sh'ma Yisroel."
Not one of them wept.
"Honor
Your Father"
After the last deportation
on August 2, 1943, there remained in Buchnia
legally only about 300 Jews as a cleanup detail.
Among them was the Jewish baker, Herschel Zimet
and his son, who used to bake bread for the
Jews of the ghetto when it was still in existence.
There were also about a hundred Jews hidden
in the bunkers. In the dead of night Herschel
and his son used to sneak bread and water into
the bunkers, and thus kept alive a few dozen
men.
One night the gestapo
men discovered the baker and his son carrying
empty baskets and pitchers on the way back from
the bunkers. The murderers led them to the yard
of City Hall to be shot. In an attempt to discover
the secret hiding place, they separated the
boy from his father and promised to spare his
life if he would disclose the secret. The father
who was afraid that the boy would not be able
to resist the pressure shouted, "I command
you in the name of the Lord God of Israel and
in the name of the commandment, `Thou shalt
honor your father and your mother' - not to
tell anything to these murderers! In either
case, all Jews will be slaughtered!"
The boy approached his
father and as the Nazis aimed their guns, he
shouted "Murderers shoot for I will tell
you nothing." Both of them were shot as
they stood in the last embrace sanctifying God's
name.
From The Book
of the Ghetto Battles,
edited by Yitzhak Zuckerman
and Moshe Basuck,
The Kibbutz Meuchad, Ein
Harod.
"Not
By Arms"
The absence of armed revolt
during the early war years does not mean that
the Jews everywhere unquestioningly accepted
the fate decreed for them by the Nazis. It means
that until the truth about the death camps leaked
out in 1942, resistance was non-violent, designed
to conserve lives and make them as meaningful
as possible.
"This is a
time for kiddush ha-hayyim, the sanctification
of life, and not kiddush ha-shem, the
holiness of martyrdom," wrote Warsaw Rabbi,
Isaac Nissenbaum. "Previously, the Jew's
enemy sought his soul and the Jew sacrificed
his body in martyrdom: now the oppressor demands
the Jew's body and the Jew is obliged therefore
to defend it to preserve his life.
Thus when rabbis and other
leaders in those days counseled against taking
up arms, they did not advocate giving in to
the forces of evil, they meant that the struggle
should be carried on as long as possible by
other life-affirming means. It was a strategy
that seemed well-suited to the circumstances
in 1940-41, when no one could yet know how totally
different Nazi persecution could be from any
sufferings experienced before.
Hitler's War Against
the Jews
by Altshuller & Dawidowicz
Reading #1
This reading tries to
explain the title of this chapter. You will
learn a lot about dignity on the March.
Never To Forget:
The Jews of the Holocaust - Milton Meltzer
To Die with
Dignity
One of the most dangerous
myths to emerge from the Holocaust was the view
that Jews were killed without resisting the
Nazis. Such a charge implies that Jews were
cowards who went "like sheep to the slaughter."
In the minds of some people Jews were partly
responsible for their own deaths; for, according
to the myth, had they resisted violently, more
Jews would have been saved.
First, let us look at
other examples of oppression. Is a woman who
has been raped a coward if she submitted to
an attacker who held a knife at her throat?
How do we react to the Christian martyrs who,
without resistance, were slaughtered in the
gladiator ring? Even if no victim of the Nazis
had resisted, would we charge them with responsibility
for their own murder? The issue of resistance
by the oppressed is tinged with political overtones.
In this selection, originally
from Never to Forget, Milton Meltzer
discusses the general issue of resistance, and
compares Jewish and non-Jewish resistance. The
author tries to explain that resistance was
not easy for Jews or for citizens in the occupied
countries. Are we to condemn the French for
not rising to overthrow their oppressors? As
Elie Wiesel has stated, "The question
to be asked should not be why there was so little
resistance, but how there was so much"?
Meltzer also indicates
that open, armed conflict was not the only form
of resistance. Young people today often think
of resistance as the violent battle between
two well-armed opponents. In reality, there
are a variety of types of resistance, and open
conflict is not always the wisest alternative.
What was the degree of
resistance among non-Jews? Hitler's armies swept
over most of Europe with incredible speed. Everyone
attributed it to the superior power of the German
military forces. The vanquished nations, all
of them, had trained and equipped armies. The
Jews had nothing. The Nazis killed myriads of
people in the parts of Russia they occupied,
a territory whose population greatly outnumbered
the German troops. How much resistance did Hitler
encounter there?
Millions of Russian captives
were transported to German prisons and labor
camps and treated so brutally that 5 million
of them died. How many riots or acts of resistance
took place among them? Yet no one accuses them
of going "like sheep to slaughter."
No, the vast majority in the prisoner-of-war
camps behaved much as did the civilians in the
occupied countries.
The purpose here is not
to criticize or demean others, only to indicate
how hard it is for anyone to resist a ruthless
totalitarian power which commands modern weapons
and employs elaborate means to crush opposition.
The essential fact is
that one can resist in a great many ways, by
acting and yes, sometimes, by refusing to act.
Questions:
1. What point does the
author make about resistance in the occupied
countries?
2. Can you think of an
example in your own life when you performed
an act of resistance? What kind of resistance
was it?
Reading #2
The next four readings
deal with different types of resistance. In
Reading #5, we read, "Jewish self-defense
has become a fact."
Life Unworthy
of Life - Albert Post (A Curriculum)
SAMPLING OF REVOLTS
GHETTOS
Tuchin (too-chin)
Ghetto:
On September 3, 1942,
the Jewish community burned its homes and fled
to the woods. The local Ukrainian populations
hunted down all but 15 survivors of the 700
Jewish families and delivered them to the Germans.
Warsaw Ghetto:
On April 19, 1943, German
troops surrounded the ghetto in order to begin
the final deportations. Over 310,000 Jews had
already been deported since June 1942. Almost
all had been sent directly to the gas chambers
at Treblinka. The Jewish Fighting Organization
(ZOB), led by 23-year old Mordechai Anielewicz
(ann-nee-lev-itch), consisted of about 1,500
young men and women. These young resistance
fighters had lived in the ghetto for over two
years and were nearly starved, suffering from
disease and the sadness of having lost families
and friends. In addition to these terrible conditions,
they had managed to get only three light machine
guns, about 100 rifles, a few dozen pistols,
some hand grenades and explosives. When the
resistors opened fire, the surprised German
troops fled from the ghetto. The Warsaw Ghetto
Rebellion had begun. It would last about one
month.
The ZOB faced 3,000 German
troops who were equipped with armored trucks,
artillery, flame throwers, heavy machine guns
and heavy explosives. The ZOB resisted until
May 16, when the Great Synagogue was blown up
and the ghetto, already in flames, was burned
to the ground. Along with a few Polish non-Jews
who had helped in the battle, 56,065 Jews surrendered.
The prisoners were either shot, sent to Treblinka
or Majdanek death camps or to labor camps where
almost all died. Sixteen Germans had been killed.
The Warsaw Ghetto Rebellion against the Germans
was an utter failure from a military point of
view. But word of it spread across Europe as
a symbolic sign of hope for all those resisting
the Nazis.
Bialystok (bee-al-eh-shtok)
Ghetto:
On August 16, 1943, realizing
the Nazis were going to destroy Bialystok, the
ZOB attacked the Nazi forces. The battle lasted
one day on the outskirts of the city. The resistors
ran out of ammunition and were captured or killed.
One group of young women carried on the struggle
from within the ghetto and were eventually killed.
Several other people escaped and joined partisans
in the nearby forests.
Vilna Ghetto:
On September 1, 1943,
largely because of increasing activity around
the city, the Nazis moved to liquidate, that
is, destroy, the ghetto. The United Partisan
Organization (FPO), active for months, attempted
an uprising within the ghetto. Poorly armed,
they were hunted down and killed. Some escaped
to the forests where they joined partisans until
the liberation of Lithuania in July 1944.
DEATH CAMPS
Treblinka:
On August 2, 1943, after
the camp had existed for one year, the 600 remaining
Jews (800,000 had died there) blew it up and
escaped to the nearby woods. Forty survived.
Sobibor:
On October 14, 1943, armed
with hatchets, Jewish prisoners and some Russian
prisoners of war killed about a dozen Nazi officers.
Four hundred prisoners, almost all who remained
in the camp, rushed to the woods. Half died
in a mine field surrounding the camp, and more
were killed by Nazi and Polish Nazi groups.
About sixty survived and joined Soviet partisans.
Two days later, Himmler ordered Sobibor dismantled.
The camp had been the site of the murder of
over 250,000 Jews.
Auschwitz:
On October 7, 1944, one
of the Sonderkommando units, the special groups
of prisoners used to clear gas chambers of bodies,
blew up one of the crematoria and attempted
an armed escape. The members of this Sonderkommando
were all killed.
Questions:
1. Why do you think so
few examples of revolts are recorded in texts?
2. Why do you suppose
the "military success" (number of
people killed or wounded) was so limited?
3. Do you feel "military
success" is the only gauge of success?
What are some of the other criteria by which
we might gauge the success of military struggle
beside the casualties inflicted on the enemy?
Reading #2a
Atlas of the
Holocaust - Martin Gilbert
Reading #2b
Atlas of the
Holocaust - Martin Gilbert
Reading #3
Lest We Forget
- Leivy Smolar
The myth of Jewish non-resistance
is exploded.
The Holocaust must be
viewed as an unparalleled catastrophe in human
history. Since then, the world has witnessed
other acts of mass destruction, even at close
hand over television. Yet, the willful planned
murder of eleven million members of a single,
civilian people is a unique event in human history.
The Holocaust is unique
also because it describes an act of unparalleled
human dignity - the heroic resistance of the
Jewish people. Never had a Jewish community
confronted an enemy so relentless and determined.
Rather than fall into despair in the years before
World War II, German Jews turned this period
into a time of cultural revival.
THE WAR FOR HUMAN
DIGNITY
Also unique was the daily
war in the ghetto to retain human dignity. The
Jews resisted every attempt to turn them into
automatons. They celebrated their festivals
of national liberation, Pesach and Hanukkah.
They sang the songs of their people. They educated
their children. They fed the hungry, clothed
the poor, and helped widows and orphans sustain
themselves.
ESCAPE, FIGHTING,
ORGANIZING
Jews fled from the ghettos
and had to be hunted down. They fought. They
escaped to the forests. They organized without
arms or food or proper clothing for whatever
resistance they could offer. Above all, Jews
in the ghettos organized for resistance.
Often, when the time came
and Jews were rounded up for transport, they
would refuse to leave their families, even if
it meant a chance to save themselves.
And many endured the worst
days and nights of destruction. They held on
to every spark of hope. They attempted every
means of escape.
And many surrendered their
lives willingly to save others. These were acts
of Kiddush Hashem (sanctification of G-d's name).
The underground newspaper of the Dror (Freedom)
Movement in the Warsaw Ghetto reported the story
of the Rabbi of Radzyn.
There is a report about
an act of Kiddush Hashem. A young Jew was interrogated
by the murderers as to the Rabbi's whereabouts.
He pointed to himself in order to save the Rabbi.
He was shot on the spot.
Jews secretly managed
to bake matzoth in the death camps. One survivor
described Pesach:
"Actually we
were more hungry than usual these eight days,
but how wonderful a feeling it was to eat matzo
in a German concentration camp. We had a feeling
of being part of something and as one of us
put it: `Matzohs are now being eaten by millions
of Jews in New York, Tel Aviv and Jerusalem.
Hitler did not conquer the world - and he will
not - and one day we will also be free.'"
There were acts of individual
heroism, choices that were made to enhance the
dignity of life. The case of Wanda, her underground
name. She was 24. She had long braids, wore
a flowered kerchief. She was slight, looked
16 years old, and there was a price on her head
of 150,000 zlotys. She would dazzle German officers
with her gentle loveliness and when they lowered
their guard, she would shoot them. Wanda is
known to have said, "I am a Jew...My place
is among the most active fighters against fascism
in the struggle for the honor of my people for
an independent Poland, for the freedom of humanity."
In time, Wanda was found,
tortured and executed.
At least 34 rebellions
flared up in Poland. Lithuania and the western
regions of the Soviet Union. Jews played a dominant
role in some of the national resistance units
such as the famous French Maquis. In
southern France, the L'Armie Juive, consisting
of two large units, fought in the hills and
later joined the Allies. In Holland, Belgium,
Italy, Yugoslavia, Hungary, Czechoslovakia,
Poland and Russia, there were Jewish resistance
units. An estimated 10,000 Jews fought in the
Soviet Resistance. Two Jewish resistance units
operated in Germany until the Gestapo caught
them.
In the following ghettos,
uprising against the Germans took place:
Niewicz Bialystok Kobryn
Tarnow
Lachwa Minsk Warsaw Bedzin
Tuchin Lvov Krynk Czestochowa
Lida Cracow Bandzin
Slonim Braslaw Sosnowiec
Vilna Adamov Kopyl
and there were others...
Questions:
1. What are some of the
different types of resistance listed in this
article?
2. Given this information,
how do you think the myth of Jewish non-resistance
got started?
3. Compose the response
you would give if faced with the allegations
in this Reading.
4. Why do you think passive
resistance is suspect in the eyes of some people?
5. Do you agree/disagree?
Why?
HIDDEN
CHILDREN by: Margo Averbook
During the war children
were hidden in two different ways. Some were
in hiding and hidden, meaning that they could
not be visible, and others were hiding and visible.
Both steps were physically and psychologically
difficult for the children.
To go into hiding meant
to sever all ties from society. The children
were cut off from the community, their friends,
and had no access to goods or services. Each
child's experience was unique, but there were
some aspects of being hidden that they all shared.
For younger children, the main question was
why? Why did they have to leave their families,
friends and homes behind? Judith Ehrmann-Denes
was three years old when she, her 18-month old
brother and her mother went into hiding in Budapest.
"We lived with my father's gentile friend...
I remember being there and not understanding.
I remember anxiety all the time, and I thought
life was like that. What does a three year old
know? This is the way life is. You just have
anxiety all the time, and fear."
When children were hidden
and could not be seen, several problems occurred.
They could leave no evidence or sign of one's
presence, they had to live without trace of
their existence. This was accomplished through
concealment and dissimulation. Herta Monstrose-Heymans
was 15 when she went into hiding with her family.
"Nobody was supposed to know that we were
there; we couldn't hang two shirts out when
there was only one man living there." Children
like Herta were not supposed to exist and, therefore,
could not be seen, go near windows and when
visitors came they were restricted to a confined
space and had to maintain complete silence.
As children could not be seen, they could not
be heard either. Nothing could be done to reveal
their presence. Activities had to be done that
could be attributed to those who were known
to be present in the house.
The children passed their
time in several ways. Philip Maas and his parents
were hidden by a working class family, and their
activity was "to think about food. From
the moment we got to that hiding place food
was a big problem and we talked about it all
the time." Other children, who were old
enough, took up hobbies. Anne Frank wrote short
stories, as well as her diary. Freida Menco-Brommet
crocheted. "I made curtains, and I made
tablecloths too." Most children were expected
to continue with their schoolwork, therefore
reading and studying were common activities.
The most important factor
in determining what a child did was the culture
of the host with whom she hid. Sara Spier was
hidden by farm laborers, who did not believe
in reading. "I felt the difference very
forcefully but of course I didn't say anything.
They accepted that I had my schoolbooks, but
when I would ask for some book to read, they
said you can do something more useful."
Children, like Sara Spier,
were forced to adapt to the customs and manners
of the family that hid them. Realizing that
their hosts risked a great deal on their behalf,
many did all they could to please them. These
differences between the host and the children
proved to be emotionally oppressive for the
children. Many of the difficulties arose from
the host family's lack of affection. Max Gosschalk,
who had been hidden from his youth felt estranged
from his foster parents. "They were hiding
not a Jew, but a human being, a child at that
time, and that they did not recognize. You were
never welcomed; you were tolerated."
To be hiding and hidden
was a difficult step for a child. They were
stripped of a normal childhood, robbed of education,
development of abilities and a normal socialization
process. Many suffered from depression and deprivation.
Children who were hiding
and visible, experienced similar problems to
children who were hiding and hidden. Children
"hid" their lives as a Jew, and were
fortunate to live life as a normal child, but
many suffered from anxiety that they would be
revealed and deported. Eugenie Lee-Poretzky
was sent to a convent when she was nine years
old. "The convent episode was the worst
for me. I had to participate in all the goings-on,
I had to go and take confession. I didn't know
all these rites, and I thought I would be found
out any minute." Children like Eugenie
always had anxiety in their lives.
To live as a gentile among
gentiles and to give up their past proved to
be problems for children. Many children had
false names and histories, and one slip of the
tongue could betray the child. With time, many
questions arose about the value of their Jewish
identity. Children felt shame about being a
Jew, either from hearing an anti-Semitic remark,
or shame at lying. Isabelle Silberg Riff experienced
this shame.
"I was walking
with this strange woman. She was protecting
me... She said, 'You mustn't say that you are
Jewish. You don't look Jewish so don't say that
you are Jewish. You can say even that you are
Protestant or Catholic, anything but that you
are Jewish' and that feeling, that because you
are Jewish you should feel guilty about it.
This is a terrible feeling to be aware that
what you are is a reason that you have to hide
it. This is to feel ashamed for what you are."
These feelings intensified
in the case of children who had to lie within
their foster homes, to keep their Jewish identity
to themselves. It was easier to forget the past
and remember their new histories. To hide their
Jewish identity not only from the Germans, the
host families, the outside world but from themselves
was a way to ease their fears and tensions.
Jana Levi hid as a child and had to remember
only her new gentile name. "I didn't remember
anymore what my real name was. I knew that I
had a different name, but it was so important
to me to forget it that I actually did completely
forget it... I had completely become someone
else and the real person, no one would know
who it was. I mean, nobody knew."
Some children even adopted
the Christian faith. This depended on the child's
age and religious factor before hiding and the
environment where the child was hiding. Children
who hid alone were more inclined to adapt to
the foster family's religion. The most common
instance is when a young child who lived in
a religious home or pious institution, adopted
the Christian faith. The foster parents did
not need to tell the child that he was Jewish,
it would only make the risk greater that the
child would betray himself.
Although the hidden children
were not deported and did not live in concentration
camps, their lives were just as frightening
and hard. Many children were belittled to the
point where they had to vanish and disappear.
Their old lives ceased to exist. They were lonely
and withdrawn. These experiences left permanent
scars on the lives of the hidden children.
Reading #5
The Holocaust
and Genocide: A Search for Conscience-
Harry Furman (A Curriculum)
SONG OF THE PARTISANS,
Hirsch Glick
Hirsch Glick, a Polish
Jew in the Vilna Ghetto, wrote the "Song
of the Partisans" in Yiddish in 1943
after the Warsaw Ghetto uprising. It spread
to all concentration camps. By the war's end,
it was sung by Jews the world over.
O never say that you have
come to your journey's end. When days turn black,
and clouds upon our world descend. Believe the
dark will lift, and freedom yet appear. Our
marching feet will tell the world that we are
here.
The dawn will break, our
world will yet emerge in light. Our agony will
pass and vanish as the night. But if our hoped
for rescue should arrive too late. These lines
will tell the world the drama that was played.
No poet's playful muse
has turned my pen to write. I wrote this song
amidst the anguish of our plight. We sang it
as we watched the flames destroy our world.
Our song is a banner of defiance we unfurled.
O never say that you have
come to your journey's end. When days turn black,
and clouds upon our world descend. Believe the
dark will lift, and freedom yet appear. Our
marching feet will tell the world that we are
here.
(Translated by Ben Zion
Bokser)
Questions:
1. How do you respond
to revenge as a motive for survival?
2. Inspirational songs
written by oppressed people have been common
in history. What does this tell us about the
will of the oppressed? Can you think of other
songs that have encouraged the oppressed to
overcome their plight?
3. What do you think motivated
Glick to write this song?
4. Can you think of any
contemporary songs with messages which might
have been motivated by similar thoughts? If
so, bring one to class (or share with a friend)
and explain to a listener how you think they
are similar? (If the song is one of resistance,
what is it resisting?)
Reading #6
Mordecai Anielewicz's
Last Letter
The Last Wish of My Life
Has Been Fulfilled
It is now clear to me
that what took place exceeded all expectations.
In our opposition to the Germans we did more
than our strength allowed - but now our forces
are waning. We are on the brink of extinction.
We forced the Germans to retreat twice -but
they returned stronger than before.
One of our groups held
out for forty minutes; and another fought for
about six hours. The mine which was laid in
the area of the brush factory exploded as planned.
Then we attacked the Germans and they suffered
heavy casualties. Our losses were generally
low. That is an accomplishment too. Z. fell,
next to his machine gun.
I feel that great things
are happening and that his action which we have
dared to take is of enormous value.
We have no choice but
to go over to partisan methods of fighting as
of today. Tonight, six fighting-groups are going
out. They have two tasks - to reconnoiter the
area and to capture weapons. Remember, "short-range
weapons" are of no use to us. We employ
them very rarely. We need many rifles, hand-grenades,
machine-guns and explosives.
I cannot describe the
conditions in which the Jews of the ghetto are
now "living." Only a few exceptional
individuals will be able to survive such suffering.
The others will sooner or later die. Their fate
is certain, even though thousands are trying
to hide in cracks and rat holes. It is impossible
to light a candle, for lack of air. Greetings
to you who are outside. Perhaps a miracle will
occur and we shall see each other again one
of these days. It is extremely doubtful.
The last wish of my life
has been fulfilled. Jewish self-defense has
become a fact. Jewish resistance and revenge
have become actualities. I am happy to have
been one of the first Jewish fighters in the
ghetto.
Where will rescue come
from?
Mordecai Anielewicz, During
the Revolt, 1943, Warsaw
Questions:
1. Who was Mordecai Anielewicz?
Why is a letter from him so important?
2. In the letter he mentions
"revenge." Are there times when revenge
is a worthwhile and proper response or motivation?
3. You will visit
Mila 18. Remember the contents of the letter
and see how you feel when standing on the ground
and experiencing the surroundings of the headquarters
of the Warsaw Ghetto.
Reading #7
Resistance implies fighting
back. The March will teach you that there are
many ways to show your feelings. Sometimes,
the "action" is very subtle.
Life Unworthy
of Life - Albert Post (A Curriculum)
SURVIVAL AS RESISTANCE
Under unique circumstances
like those of the Holocaust, "resistance"
has to be redefined. Armed resistance was almost
impossible - yet, it did occur. But another
type of resistance became a way of life for
Jews: to defeat death, from moment to moment
and hour to hour. Even if survival was a result
of what some survivors say was "pure luck,"
it represented resistance. Each day of survival
meant successfully resisting the Nazi plan of
genocide. To survive, to live, meant resistance.
It was apparent from "A
Normal Day in Auschwitz," that prisoners
lost the freedom to make choices. To make choices
was to act like a human being. One scholar has
noted that committing suicide was one of the
first signs of resistance by prisoners. They
chose to die when they could make no choices
about anything else. Some chose to attempt escape,
although few succeeded. Survivors described
small acts of "sabotage." Some at
Auschwitz tore clothing apart as they sorted
clothes in the Brezhinka (where personal belongings
were taken). Others reported pouring sand into
machinery they were forced to build in slave
labor camps. People learned how to use bribery,
smuggling, forgery, theft, spying, violence.
They saw these as weapons of defense against
a power committed to their destruction. They
bribed the enemy; they smuggled food and people;
they stole bread and guns; they forged papers
- birth and baptismal certificates, residence
cards, ration cards, work cards, registration
forms, passports. They planted spies in the
enemy's ranks.
One prisoner of Auschwitz
washed his hands in extremely filthy water each
day. When another prisoner asked him why he
bothered to "wash" in such water,
he replied: "To prove to myself that I
still a human being." As he stood on the
Appelplatz on his first full day in Auschwitz,
a fourteen-year-old boy, alone after being separated
from his family the day before, met an old man
standing next to him. "What portion of
the Bible were you studying at home?" the
old man asked him. The boy told him. "We
will begin reciting at that place today and
go further each day," the old man whispered.
"Why?" asked the boy. "To continue."
Simple, routine or ritual acts become choices
that allowed people to maintain links with their
former lives.
Praying, one of the most
serious "crimes" in any of the concentration,
labor or death camps, was an act of resistance.
Several survivors recall conducting secret religious
services in the barracks. They risked their
lives with this action but maintained their
identity as Jews. This, to them, was resistance.
One survivor of a labor camp recalled that on
the Jewish Day of Atonement, Yom Kippur, she
and many other prisoners chose to observe the
religious tradition of fasting. When the SS
guards discovered that these Jews were not eating,
they forced them to do hours of punishing exercise.
Then, those prisoners were not given rations
for two days.
Many expressed that resistance
by carrying on their traditional life - praying,
singing, studying the Talmud, observing the
Holy Days - and their cultural activities in
the ghettos. Others hid from the enemy as long
as they could. Some bore children as if to say,
No matter what you do, the generations will
go on.
Those who survived have
spoken of these acts as resistance - defeating
the Nazi insistence that they become less than
human.
The Nazis forced their
victims to give up part of what it meant to
be human: the freedom of choice. They tried
to rob Jews of their human status.
SUGGESTIONS FOR
DISCUSSION: THE DIFFERENCES ARE IMPORTANT:
1. Survival as resistance
affirms the self even while submitting to force.
2. Only each prisoner
knew he or she was resisting because a more
public display would have meant death.
3. Antagonism to authority
automatically rejects all authority.
Questions:
How is "survival
as resistance" different from automatic
antagonism toward authority?
Reading #8
Pathways Through
the Holocaust - Clara Isaacman
VOICES FROM TRADITION
The historian Josephus
tells us that Eliezer ben Yair led the Jews
on Masada, at the end of the great Jewish rebellion
of the first century of the common era, to take
their own lives rather than be captured and
made slaves by the Romans.
Modern rabbinic authorities
differ on whether a person must sacrifice himself.
Rabbi A.I. Kook said, yes, martyrdom is obligatory
if it saves the community. Other rabbis have
taught that although martyrdom is laudatory
and meritorious, it is not mandatory.
When Akiba was being tortured,
the hour for saying the Shema arrived. He said
it and smiled. The Roman officer called out,
"Old man, you are a sorcerer, or do you
mock your sufferings, that you smile in the
midst of your pain?" "Neither,"
replied Akiba, "but all my life, when I
said the words, `Thou shalt love the Lord thy
God with all thy heart and soul and might,'
I was saddened, for I thought, when shall I
be able to fulfill the command? I have loved
God with all my heart and with all my possessions
(might), but how to love God with all my soul
(i.e. my life) was not assured to me. Now that
I am giving my life, and that the hour for saying
the Shema has come, and my resolution remains
firm, should I not laugh?" And as he spoke,
his soul departed.
Jerusalem Talmud (Berachot
9:7)
Questions:
The two situations described
above both involve martyrdom. Tradition understands
both, but would seem to approve only of the
latter as a role model for Jews.
1. Why do you think this
is so? (consider the aftermath)
2. What is the major difference
between the two?
3. Do you agree with the
traditional position?
4. What does each story
tell us of the nature of tradition?
Reading #9
Holocaust
Kingdom - Alexander Donat (a survivor
of the Warsaw Ghetto)
Never was so unique...a
smuggling system put into operation as that
devised by the Ghetto Jews in their struggle
to survive. The official food ration barely
sustained life for two or three days a month,
and smugglers...became the Ghetto's most important
citizens, its heroes...Hearses served to transport
foodstuffs. Garbage collectors and Poles were
employed..."
Perhaps the most dramatic
part in keeping the Ghetto supplied...was played
by hundreds of poor children between the ages
of four and fourteen, who clustered at the gates
looking for a chance to slip out...On their
small legs, and with their bulging middles,
they looked like sparrows. Occasionally a guard
would look the other way...Often, however, they
opened fire on them; children, too, were enemies
of the Third Reich."
- Ira Zornberg, "Classroom
Strategies for Teaching About the Holocaust"
People often ask, "Why
did the Jews go like sheep to the slaughter?"
Sheep to the slaughter? How can they know what
it was like, crowded together in a way that
even animals are not treated -weakened by months
of hardship and hunger, locked up in sealed
wagons, without food, weapons, without friends
- knowing that even if one escaped the Nazis,
who was there that would welcome them, who cared!
Who would lift a finger?...Sheep to the slaughter?
What do those who use the phrase know about
honor, about the thousands of parents who would
not desert their little ones, who stayed behind
to embrace them, cuddle them, to exchange glances
with them just one more time? What do they know
about reverence, about those who gave up their
daily ration of food so that a father, a grandmother,
a rabbi might live another day? What do they
know of a people who refused to believe in the
death of mankind, who in forsaken places called
hell organized schools, prayed and studied Talmud,
wrote poems, composed lyrics, sang songs of
today, of eternity, of tomorrow, even when there
was to be no tomorrow?..."
Questions:
1. Read the quotations
on this page. Both refer to issues of survival.
In what way do they also address the issue of
resistance?
2. In what ways might
you use these quotations to refute the claim
that Jews went to their deaths "like sheep
to the slaughter?"
3. Do you feel that these
quotes are representative or isolated cases
of what happened? Explain!
Reading #10
There are four quotes
in this reading. All are different and very
provocative.
QUOTATIONS IN RETROSPECT
"Hazak V'Amatz"
- "Be Strong and Brave," Genocide
- Grobman & Landes
Some mistakenly think
only of men when talking of heroism. Read Rosa's
story and note that like Rosa, heroism was not
the distinction of any one group. Women, children
were all equally valiant in resistance.
Rosa Robota from Ciechanow
was twenty-one as she watched her family taken
to the gas chambers in a selection at Birkenau
in November, 1942. Her opportunity to avenge
came two years later. Able to make contact with
some of the slave laborers, she and a group
of girls working with her at the Krupp munitions
plant at Auschwitz arranged to smuggle out dynamite
to the resistance organization in the camp.
Hiding the little wheels of explosives in their
bosoms or in special packets they had sewn into
the hems of their dresses, the material was
passed to a Russian prisoner of war, Borodin,
who converted them into bombs. Some of the girls
were caught and hanged. But the smuggling went
on. Then, on October 7, 1944, everyone at Auschwitz
heard and saw something unbelievable - one of
the crematoria, in which the bodies of so many
mothers, fathers, and young had been burned,
was blown to pieces. Five SS men were killed.
As the flames burst forth, more than 600 people
escaped - most were hunted down and shot in
a few days. In an investigation that led to
the arrest of Rosa, the SS used all their sadistic
methods of torture on her. She betrayed no one.
Her last words scribbled on a piece of paper
just before she was hanged in front of the assembled
inmates at Auschwitz were "Hazak V'Amatz"
- "Be Strong and Brave."
Question:
Can you think of other
unlikely heroes from your Holocaust studies?
Inscription on
the walls of a cellar in Cologne, Germany, where
Jews hid from Nazis
I Believe
I believe in
the sun even when it is not shining. I believe
in love even when feeling it not. I believe
in God even when He is silent."
Questions:
1. Try to understand and
explain the part that faith played in resistance.
How does this oft used quote support/deny your
feelings and your experience?
2. Write a description
of the person who might have written these words.
Explain why you described him/her as such.
When There is Nothing
Left to Lose
In 1961, the Israeli daily
newspaper, Davar, published some comments relevant
to this subject by a very talented writer, Louis
M. Shifier, a gentile who was himself an inmate
of a concentration camp. His opinion was that
one can write about war, even if one has not
participated in it, but that it is impossible
to write about concentration camps unless one
has lived in one. One of the most devastating
things about such camps is the special kind
of terror they create, and this is an emotion
which cannot be imagined by anyone who has not
felt it personally."
About The
Holocaust - Dorothy Rabinowitz
Questions:
1. Do you agree with the
author about his contention that, unless one
was there one cannot write about the camps?
2. Why do you think he
feels this way? Does this help explain why our
camp information has been so limited (most died,
few wanted to reexperience the pain by telling
of it) until now?
"The Warsaw
Ghetto Uprising will always serve as an inspiration
to the free world."
John F. Kennedy
Questions:
President Kennedy called
the Warsaw Ghetto an inspiration. Do you agree?
In what way was it an "inspiration?"
An "inspiration" to whom?
Reading #11
The Little Boy - turn
the page first. Most of you have seen the picture.
Imagine yourself in that picture. Imagine taking
that photograph.
When God and
Man Failed - Harry James Cargas, Ed.
THE LITTLE BOY
IN THE PHOTOGRAPH
How Old Is The Little
Boy In The Photograph? Perhaps seven. But his
eyes contain centuries. What a pitiful incongruity.
Innocence, by its very nature, does not encompass
experience. But then this photograph is of a
situation that is not consistent with nature.
The Holocaust was, by every civilized measure,
anti-natural. The boy intuits this. Something
is horribly topsy-turvy, terribly frightening.
A man is holding a weapon on him, during the
roundup of the Jews in Warsaw. For what reason?
No reason could ever be invented to justify
what is happening in this scene, and the real
cause is ludicrous in the root sense of the
word. This boy is being taken to his death because
he has been judged a danger to European equilibrium.
He is a Jew. That is crime enough in some people's
minds. And while we could focus our attention
exclusively on him in this picture, there are
others who need to be considered. For instance,
the child with his hands raised isn't even the
youngest in the group. Just above his right
shoulder we see another who is about four or
five years old.
A second boy to the left
of center, looking off to his right, also exhibits
in his eyes a terror no child should know. Eyes,
in fact, can be considered a theme, if we dare
to be academic about this setting. The camera's
eye must be considered . It must be.
Who has dared to take this photograph? For
what purpose? Why memorialize this sin? What
is the intended audience? Who will enjoy
viewing this? Clearly this picture could not
have been made without official permission.
The victims were not snapping shutters. No the
persecutors were. Note that no eyes of prisoners
are looking at the camera. Those eyes are concentrated
on something other than publicity. There
is one, however, who is looking directly into
the lens: the guard who has his gun directed
at the little boy up front. We may take
it that he is posing for this photographer.
Why? Is he proud of what he is doing?
Is he pleased to be carrying out his government's
policy concerning Jews? Did he request a copy
of the photo to show his friends and family?
I have heard that after this photograph
became famous, this guard was found as a civilian.
I do not know the accuracy of this, but if true,
he really has seen himself in this situation.
How does he feel about it? Does he ever wonder
if G-d's eye has recorded the same event? Does
he have some thoughts about Judgment Day?
What else did he do in the war that is memorable?
Questions
1. The comments on the
previous page were composed by a non-Jew. Imagine
yourself interviewing both the officer and the
photographer. How might each respond to the
questions in bold print?
2. Do you agree with the
assessment of the person asking these questions?
3. The Germans used the
title "Bandits" to describe women
and children who were rounded up and considered
threats to Germany. How do you feel about that
label?
4. Have you any other
questions for the officers?
Reading #12
There are real people,
facing real-life decisions. Many times we think
that Jews had no choices during the Shoah. They
had choices, but most of them were "life
and death" decisions.
Single Acts
Of Resistance
In the book Atlas of
the Holocaust by Martin Gilbert, there are
depicted 100's of acts of resistance. These
are not the famous ones, such as the Warsaw
Ghetto Uprising, or the Lodz Ghetto Revolt or
even the break-out at Sobibor. These are everyday
acts of courage and martyrdom which combine
to tell a more accurate story of the daily lives
of the Jews on their inexorable journey towards
the Nazi death machine. Allow us to share just
a few with you.
At Treblinka on August
26th, 1942, a young deportee from the town of
Kielce (name unknown), having been forbidden
by one of the Ukrainian guards to say farewell
to his mother, attacked the guard with a knife.
The guard survived, but the entire trainload
of Jewish deportees was machine-gunned to death.
In August, 1942, 87,000
Jews from Volhynia were killed by the Einsatzgruppe
D. As the Germans approached, 15,000 others
escaped, but were tracked down. About 1,000
survived.
At Treblinka on September
11, 1942, a young Jew from Argentina, Meir Berliner,
who had been trapped in Warsaw at the outbreak
of the War, stabbed an SS man to death with
a penknife. There were no repercussions.
In January, 1943, a group
of Jewish partisans killed 25 German soldiers.
As a reprisal, the SS shot 250 old people and
children.
At Treblinka on September
2nd, 1943, an 18-year-old Polish Jew, Seweryn
Klajman, attacked a Ukrainian guard with a crowbar,
put on the dead guard's uniform and marched
out of the camp with 12 fellow inmates, yelling
at and hitting his 'prisoners'. They all escaped
unharmed and survived.
Questions:
1. In the first example
above, if you knew the reprisals which would
come, would you still have killed the guard?
Explain.
2. Is there anything or
any principle which you would die for? Explain.
Activity A
The Holocaust
and Genocide: A Search for Conscience
, Harry Furman (A Curriculum)
LIFE IN EXTREMES: MORAL
ACTION AND THE CAMPS
You may feel uncomfortable
responding to each of these situations; they
all actually happened.
In each of the following
situations, indicate with either a Yes or No
how you would answer the question.
Yes No
____ ____1. A chance for
escape from Auschwitz appears for one inmate,
but he must accept leaving his younger son who
is simply too weak to travel. The father and
son have shielded each other during their camp
experience.
Knowing this, should the
father attempt the escape?
____ ____ 2. A young man
breaks down when told of the death of his family.
He decides that in the morning he will commit
suicide by attacking an SS officer. Because
of the Nazi practice of mass reprisal, his act
will cost the lives of all 400 men in the barracks.
If the young man cannot
be convinced to change his mind, should he be
killed by the underground to protect the interest
of the larger group?
____ ____ 3. An inmate
desperately needs certain medicines to survive.
Medicines can be obtained by giving in to the
sexual desires of a particular SS officer who
has access to medicines. Should a friend of
the man try to obtain the medicines if this
is the only way he can get them?
____ ____ 4. An inmate
in the barracks has been found to be an in-
former for the SS. He acts the role of a cooperative
katzetnik, but several inmates know he is a
spy for the Germans. Should the informer be
killed?
________ 5. A number of
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