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In total, according to ] archives, "The Germans established at least 1000 ghettos in German-occupied and annexed ] and the ] alone."<ref name="ushmm-7445"></ref> The list of locations of the Jewish ghettos within the borders of ] and postwar ] is compiled with the understanding that their inhabitants were either of Polish nationality from before the invasion, or had ] with Poland. Also, not all ghettos are listed here due to their transient nature. Permanent ghettos were created only in settlements with rail connections, because the food aid (paid by the Jews themselves) was completely dependant on the Germans, making even the potato-peels a hot commodity.<ref name="holocaust-education.dk">Peter Vogelsang & Brian B. M. Larsen, ''The Danish Center for Holocaust and Genocide Studies.'' 2002.</ref> Throughout 1940 and 1941, most ghettos were sealed off from the outside, walled off or enclosed with barbed wire, and many Jews found leaving them were shot. The ] was the largest ghetto in all of Nazi occupied Europe, with over 400,000 Jews crammed into an area of {{convert|1.3|sqmi|km2}}, or 7.2 persons per room.<ref name="ushmm-5069">, ] (USHMM), ]</ref> The ] was the second largest, holding about 160,000 inmates.<ref name="ushmm.org">, ]</ref> In documents and signage, the Nazis usually referred to the ghettos which they built as 'Jüdischer Wohnbezirk' or 'Wohngebiet der Juden'; meaning ']'. By the end of 1941, most Polish Jews were already ghettoized, even though the Germans knew that the system was unsustainable, with most inmates having no chance of earning their own keep, and subsiding without any savings left to pay the SS for further deliveries.<ref name="holocaust-education.dk" /> The quagmire was resolved at the ] of 20 January 1942 near ], where the "]" (die Endlösung der Judenfrage) was set in place.<ref name="Furet">], ''''. Schocken Books (1989), p. 182; ISBN 0805240519</ref> In total, according to ] archives, "The Germans established at least 1000 ghettos in German-occupied and annexed ] and the ] alone."<ref name="ushmm-7445"></ref> The list of locations of the Jewish ghettos within the borders of ] and post-war ] is compiled with the understanding that their inhabitants were either of Polish nationality from before the invasion, or had ] with Poland. Also, not all ghettos are listed here due to their transient nature. Permanent ghettos were created only in settlements with rail connections, because the food aid (paid by the Jews themselves) was completely dependant on the Germans, making even the potato-peels a hot commodity.<ref name="holocaust-education.dk">Peter Vogelsang & Brian B. M. Larsen, ''The Danish Center for Holocaust and Genocide Studies.'' 2002.</ref> Throughout 1940 and 1941, most ghettos were sealed off from the outside, walled off or enclosed with barbed wire, and many Jews found leaving them were shot. The ] was the largest ghetto in all of Nazi occupied Europe, with over 400,000 Jews crammed into an area of {{convert|1.3|sqmi|km2}}, or 7.2 persons per room.<ref name="ushmm-5069">, ] (USHMM), ]</ref> The ] was the second largest, holding about 160,000 inmates.<ref name="ushmm.org">, ]</ref> In documents and signage, the Nazis usually referred to the ghettos they created as ''Jüdischer Wohnbezirk'' or ''Wohngebiet der Juden'', meaning "]". By the end of 1941, most Polish Jews were already ghettoized, even though the Germans knew that the system was unsustainable; most inmates had no chance of earning their own keep, and no savings left to pay the SS for further deliveries.<ref name="holocaust-education.dk" /> The quagmire was resolved at the ] of 20 January 1942 near ], where the "]" (die Endlösung der Judenfrage) was set in place.<ref name="Furet">], ''''. Schocken Books (1989), p. 182; ISBN 0805240519</ref>


{{see|Ghettos in Nazi-occupied Europe|Jewish ghettos in Europe}} {{see|Ghettos in Nazi-occupied Europe|Jewish ghettos in Europe}}

Revision as of 21:57, 5 July 2011

A child lies on the street in the Warsaw Ghetto, May 1941. Photo by Nazi officer P.K. Zermin, now in German Federal Archive
The Holocaust
By territory
Overview
Response
Camps and ghettos
Concentration
Extermination
Transit
Methods
Nazi units
Ghettos (list)
Poland
Elsewhere
Judenrat
Victims
Jews
Roundups
Pogroms
"Final Solution"
Mass executions
Resistance
Rescue
Others
Responsibility
Organizations
Units
Collaborators
  • Early elements
  • Aftermath
  • Remembrance
Early elements
Aftermath
History and memory

This article presents a list of locations where the Jewish ghettos in German-occupied Poland were established during World War II. The ghetto system had been imposed by Nazi Germany roughly between October 1939 and July 1942 in order to confine Poland's Jewish population of 3.5 million for the purpose of persecution, terror, and exploitation. In smaller towns, the ghettos often served as staging points for Jewish slave-labor and mass deportations, while in the urban centers they resembled walled-off prison-islands described by some historians as little more than instruments of "slow, passive murder," with dead bodies littering the streets. In most cases, the large ghettos did not correspond to traditional Jewish neighborhoods. As a result, the displaced non-Jewish Poles and members of other ethnic groups were ordered to take up residence elsewhere. Smaller Jewish communities with populations under 500 were dissolved immediately following the invasion.

The Holocaust

The liquidation of the Jewish ghettos across Poland was closely connected with the formation of highly secretive killing centers built in early 1942 by various German companies, for the sole purpose of annihilating a people. The Nazi extermination program depended on death factories as much as on the effectiveness of their railways. Rail transport enabled the SS to run industrial-scale mass-extermination facilities and, at the same time, openly lie to their victims about the "resettlement" program. Jews were delivered to their deaths in cattle trucks from liquidated ghettos of all occupied cities, including Litzmannstadt, the last ghetto in Poland to be emptied in August 1944. In some larger ghettos there were armed resistance attempts, such as the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising, the Białystok Ghetto Uprising and the Łachwa Ghetto uprising, but in every case they failed against the overwhelming German military force, and the remaining Jews were either executed or deported to the death camps. By the time Nazi-occupied Eastern Europe was liberated by the Red Army, not a single Jewish ghetto in Poland was left standing. Only about 50,000–120,000 Polish Jews survived the war on native soil with the assistance of their Polish neighbors, a fraction of their prewar population of 3,500,000.

Further information: The Holocaust in Poland

In total, according to USHMM archives, "The Germans established at least 1000 ghettos in German-occupied and annexed Poland and the Soviet Union alone." The list of locations of the Jewish ghettos within the borders of pre-war and post-war Poland is compiled with the understanding that their inhabitants were either of Polish nationality from before the invasion, or had strong historical ties with Poland. Also, not all ghettos are listed here due to their transient nature. Permanent ghettos were created only in settlements with rail connections, because the food aid (paid by the Jews themselves) was completely dependant on the Germans, making even the potato-peels a hot commodity. Throughout 1940 and 1941, most ghettos were sealed off from the outside, walled off or enclosed with barbed wire, and many Jews found leaving them were shot. The Warsaw Ghetto was the largest ghetto in all of Nazi occupied Europe, with over 400,000 Jews crammed into an area of 1.3 square miles (3.4 km), or 7.2 persons per room. The Łódź Ghetto was the second largest, holding about 160,000 inmates. In documents and signage, the Nazis usually referred to the ghettos they created as Jüdischer Wohnbezirk or Wohngebiet der Juden, meaning "Jewish Quarter". By the end of 1941, most Polish Jews were already ghettoized, even though the Germans knew that the system was unsustainable; most inmates had no chance of earning their own keep, and no savings left to pay the SS for further deliveries. The quagmire was resolved at the Wannsee conference of 20 January 1942 near Berlin, where the "Final Solution" (die Endlösung der Judenfrage) was set in place.

Further information: Ghettos in Nazi-occupied Europe and Jewish ghettos in Europe

Table of Jewish ghettos created by Nazi Germany in occupied Poland

The settlements listed in the Polish language, including major cities, had been all renamed after the 1939 joint invasion of Poland by Germany and the Soviet Union. Renaming everything in their own image had been one way in which the invaders sought to redraw Europe's political map. All Polish territories were confiscated as either Nazi zones of occupation (i.e. Bezirk Bialystok, Provinz Ostpreußen, Reichskommissariat Ostland, etc.), or Soviet brand-new extensions to the two fledging western republics, soon overrun again in Operation Barbarossa. The names of ghetto locations in both other languages are available through active links.

For a chronological list of ghetto operations, please use table-sort buttons.
# Ghetto location in prewar
and postwar Poland  
Number of
Jews confined  
Date of
creation  
Date of
liquidation  
Deportation route  
Only 38 days after the 1939 Nazi German Invasion of Poland the first large ghetto was set up at Piotrków Trybunalski on October 8, 1939.
Within months, the most populous Jewish ghettos in World War II included the Łódź Ghetto (set up in April 1940), and the Warsaw Ghetto (October 1940)
1 2Aleksandrów Lódzki 3,5003 19392 Dec 19392 2to Głowno ghetto
2 2Bełżyce 4,5003 Jun 19402 May 19432 2to Budzyń ghetto, Sobibor and Majdanek
3 2Będzin Ghetto 7,000–28,000{{{1}}} Jul 19402 Aug 19432 2to Auschwitz (7,000).
4 2Błonie 2,1003 Dec 19402 Feb 19412 2to Warsaw Ghetto (all 2100)
5 2Bodzentyn 7003 19402 Sep 19422 2to Suchedniów ghetto → Treblinka.
6 2Brześć Kujawski 6303 19402 Apr 19422 2to Łódź Ghetto, Chełmno extermination camp
7 2Brzeziny 6,000–6,8003 Feb 19402 May 19422 2to Łódź Ghetto, Chełmno extermination camp
8 2Brzozów 1,0003 19402 Aug 19422 2to Belzec extermination camp
9 2Bychawa 2,7003 19402 Apr 19412 2to Belzyce
10 2Chęciny 4,0003 1940 – Jun 19412 Sep 19422 2to Treblinka
11 2Dąbrowa Górnicza 4,000–10,0003 19402 Jun 19432 2to Auschwitz
12 2Dęblin 3,300–5,8003 Apr 19402 Oct 19402 2to Sobibor and Treblinka
13 2Działoszyce 15,000?3 Apr 19402 Oct 19402 2to Płaszów and Bełżec extermination camp
14 2Gąbin 2,000–2,3003 19402 Apr 19422 2to Chełmno extermination camp
15 2Głowno 5,6003 May 19402 Mar 19412 2to Łowicz ghetto and Warsaw Ghetto (5,600)
16 2Gorlice (labor camp 1st) ?3 19402 19422 2to Buchenwald, Muszyna, Mielec, see Gorlice
17 2Góra Kalwaria 3,3003 Jan 19402 Feb 19412 2to Warsaw Ghetto (3,000), 300 killed locally
18 2Grodzisk Mazowiecki 6,0003 1940 – Jan 19412 Oct 19402 2to Warsaw Ghetto (all 6,000)
19 2Grójec 5,200–6,0003 Jul 19402 Sep 19422 2to Warsaw Ghetto (all 6,000) → Treblinka
20 2Izbica Kujawska 1,0003 19402 Jan 19422 2to Chełmno extermination camp
21 2Jeżów 1,6003 19402 Feb 19412 2to Warsaw Ghetto (all 1,600)
22 2Jędrzejów 6,0003 Mar 19402 Sep 19422 2to Treblinka
23 2Kazimierz Dolny 2,000–3,5003 1940 – Apr 19412 Mar 19422 2to Sobibor, and Treblinka
24 2Kobyłka 1,5003 Sep 19402 Oct 19402 2to Treblinka
25 2Koło 2,000–5,0003 Dec 19402 Dec 19412 2to Treblinka (2,000) and Chełmno
26 2Koniecpol 1,100–1,6003 19402 Oct 19402 2to Treblinka
27 2Konin 1,500?3 Dec 19392 1940 – Mar 19412 2to Zagórów & other ghettos, many killed locally
28 2Kozienice 13,0003 Jan 19402 Sep 19422 2to Treblinka
29 2Koźminek 2,5003 19402 Jul 19422 2 to Chełmno
30 2Krasnystaw 2,0003 Aug 19402 Oct 19402 2to Belzec
31 2Krośniewice 1,5003 May 19402 Mar 19422 2to Chełmno extermination camp
32 2Kutno 7,0003 Jun 19402 Mar 19422 2to Chełmno
33 2Legionowo 3,0003 19402 19422 2to Treblinka
34 2Łańcut 2,7003 Dec 19392 Aug 19422 2to Belzec
35 2Łasko 4,0003 Dec 19402 Aug 19422 2to Chełmno extermination camp
36 2Łowicz 8,000–8,2003 19402 Mar 19412 2to Warsaw Ghetto (all, including labor camp)
37 2Łódź Ghetto 200,0003 8 Feb 19442 Aug 19442 2to Auschwitz and Chełmno extermination camp
38 2Marki ?3 1940 – Mar 19412 19422 2to Warsaw Ghetto
39 2Mielec 4,000–4,5003 19402 Mar 19422 2to Belzec
40 2Mińsk Mazowiecki 5,0003 Oct 19402 Aug 19422 2to Treblinka
41 2Mława 6,000–6,5003 Dec 19402 Nov 19422 2to Treblinka and Auschwitz
42 2Mogielnica 1,5003 19402 28 Feb 19422 2to Warsaw Ghetto (all) → Treblinka.
43 2Mordy 4,5003 Nov 19402 Aug 19422 2to Treblinka
44 2Muranów 445,0003 19402 19422 2see also Warsaw Ghetto (all) → Treblinka
45 2Nowy Dwór Mazowiecki 2,000–4,0003 1940 – Jan 19412 Dec 19422 2to Pomiechówek ghetto → Auschwitz
46 2Nowy Korczyn 4,0003 19402 Oct 19402 2to Treblinka
47 2Opoczno 3,000–4,0003 Nov 19402 Oct 19402 2to Treblinka
48 2Otwock 12,000–15,0003 Dec 19392 Aug 19422 2to Treblinka, and Auschwitz
49 2Pabianice 8,500–9,0003 Feb 19402 May 19422 2to Łódź GhettoChełmno extermination camp
50 2Piaseczno 2,5003 19402 Jan 19412 2to Warsaw Ghetto (all 2,500)
51 2Pionki 5,0003 19402 Jan 19422 2to Zwolen ghetto
52 2Piotrków Trybunalski (open) 25,000{{{1}}} 8 Oct 1939 14/21 Oct 19442 2to Majdanek and Treblinka (22,000), killed locally
53 2Płock 7,000–10,0003 1939 – 19402 Feb 19412 2to Działdowo ghetto
54 2Płońsk 12,0003 Sep 19402 Nov 19422 2to Treblinka, Auschwitz
55 2Poddębice 1,5003 Nov 19402 Apr 19422 2to Treblinka(?)
56 2Pruszków 1,4003 19402 19412 2to Warsaw Ghetto (all 1,400)
57 2Przedbórz 4,000–5,0003 Mar 19402 Oct 19402 2to Belzec and Treblinka
58 2Puławy 5,0003 Nov – Dec 19392 19402 2to Opole LubelskieSobibor
59 2Radomsko 18,000–20,0003 1939 – Jan 19402 21 Jul 19432 2to Treblinka extermination camp (18,000)
60 2Radzymin 2,5003 Sep 19402 Oct 19402 2to Treblinka
61 2Serock 2,0003 Feb 19402 Dec 19402 2to other ghettos
62 2Sieradz 2,500–5,0003 Mar 19402 Aug 19422 2to Chełmno extermination camp
63 2Sierpc 500–3,0003 19402 Feb 19422 2to Warsaw GhettoTreblinka
64 2Skaryszew 1,8003 19402 Apr 19422 2to Szydlowiec
65 2Skierniewice 4,300–7,0003 Dec 19402 Apr 19412 2to Warsaw Ghetto (all 7,000)
66 2Sochaczew 3,000–4,0003 Jan 19402 Feb 19412 2to Warsaw Ghetto (all 3,000)
67 2Stalowa Wola 2,5003 19402 Jul 19422 2to Belzec
68 2Stryj3 12,0003 1940 – 19412 Jun 19432 2to Belzec
69 2Szadek 5003 19402 19402 2to other ghettos
70 2Szczebrzeszyn 4,0003 1940 – Apr 19412 Oct 19402 2to Belzec, also killed locally
71 2Tomaszów Mazowiecki 16,000–20,0003 Dec 19402 Nov 19422 2to Treblinka (16,000), with 4,000 killed locally
72 2Turek 5,0003 19402 Oct 19412 2to Kowale Pańskie ghetto (all 5,000)
73 2Tyszowce 1,500–2,0003 19402 Sep 19422 2to Belzec
74 2Uchanie 2,0003 19402 Nov 19422 2to Sobibor
75 2Ulanów 5003 19402 Oct 19402 2to other ghettos
76 2Uniejów 5003 19402 Oct 19412 2to Kowale Pańskie ghetto (all 500)
77 2Warka 2,8003 19402 Feb 19412 2to Warsaw Ghetto (all 2,800)
78 2Warta 1,000–2,4003 Feb 19402 Aug 19422 2to Chełmno extermination camp
79 2Warsaw Ghetto 450,0003 Oct – 15 Nov 19402 Sep 19422 2to Treblinka (300,000), and Majdanek
80 2Włocławek 4,000–13,5003 Oct 19402 Apr 19422 2to Chełmno extermination camp
81 2Włodawa 6,0003 1940 – 19422 Apr 19432 2to Sobibor
82 2Włoszczowa 4,000–6,0003 Jul 19402 Sep 19422 2to Treblinka
83 2Wodzisław 4,0003 Jun 19402 Nov 19422 2to Treblinka
84 2Wołomin 3,000–5,5003 1940 – 19422 Apr 19432 2to Treblinka
85 2Wyszogród 2,700–3,0003 Dec 19402 Nov 19422 2to Treblinka
86 2Zagórów 2,000–2,5003 Jul 19402 Oct 19412 2all killed locally
87 2Zduńska Wola 8,300–10,0003 19402 Aug 19422 2to Chełmno extermination camp
88 2Żychlin 2,800–4,0003 Jul 19402 Mar 19422 2to Chełmno extermination camp
89 2Żyrardów 3,000–5,0003 Dec 19402 Feb 19412 2to Warsaw Ghetto (all 5,000)
Year 1941: on June 22 Germany entered the Soviet occupation zone under the codename Operation Barbarossa.
The creation of new Jewish ghettos and the mass executions on-site by mobile killing squads intensified.
90 2Augustów 4,0003 Oct 19412 Jun 19422 2to Treblinka and Auschwitz, many killed locally
91 2Bełchatów 5,500–6,0003 Mar 19412 Aug 19422 2to Chełmno extermination camp
92 2Biała Podlaska 7,000–8,4003 Jul 19412 Sep 19422 2to Majdanek, Sobibor, Treblinka
93 2Biała Rawska 4,0003 Sep 19412 Oct 19402 2to Treblinka
94 2Białystok Ghetto 40,000–50,0003 26 Jul 19412 Nov 19432 2to Majdanek, Treblinka
95 2Biłgoraj 2,500–3,0003 1941–19422 Nov 19422 2to Belzec
96 2Bobowa 658?{{{1}}} Oct 19412 Aug 19422 2to Gorlice and Biecz ghettos
97 2Bochnia 14,000–15,0003 Mar 19412 Sep 19432 2to Belzec and Auschwitz
98 2Brześć Litewski Ghetto 2,000–20,0003 16 Dec 19412 Oct 19402 2all executed locally
99 2Busko Zdrój 2,0003 19412 Oct 19402 2to Treblinka
100 2Chełm 8,000–12,0003 Jun 19412 Nov 19422 2to Sobibor
101 2Chmielnik 10,000–14,0003 Apr 19412 Nov 19422 2to Treblinka
102 2Chodel 1,4003 Jun 19412 19422 2to other ghettos
103 2Chrzanów 8,0003 Nov 19412 Feb 19432 2to Auschwitz
104 2Ciechanowiec 4,0003 19412 Nov 19412 2to Treblinka
105 2Ciepielów 6003 Dec 19412 Oct 19402 2to Treblinka
106 2Czeladź 8003 Nov 19412 Feb 19432 2to Auschwitz
107 2Częstochowa Ghetto 48,0003 9 Apr 19412 22 Sep – 9 Oct 19422 2to Treblinka extermination camp
108 2Ćmielów 1,500–2,000?{{{1}}} 19412 Oct 19402 2to Treblinka
109 2Dąbie 9003 19412 Dec 19412 2to Chełmno extermination camp
110 2Dobre 500–1,0003 19412 Sep 19422 2to Treblinka
111 2Drohiczyn 7003 Jun 19412 Nov 19422 2to Bransk and Bielsk ghettos
112 2Drzewica 2,0003 19412 Oct 19402 2to Treblinka
113 2Dubienka 2,500–3,0003 Jun 19412 Oct 19402 2to other ghettos
114 2Głogów Małopolski 120?3 19412 19422 2to Rzeszow ghetto, 5,000 executed in local forest
115 2Goniądz 1,000–1,3003 Jun 19412 Nov 19422 2to Bogusze ghetto
116 2Gorlice 4,5003 Oct 19412 Aug 19422 2to Belzec
117 2Gostynin 3,5003 19412 Aug 19422 2to Chełmno extermination camp
118 2Grajewo 3,0003 Jun 19412 Nov 19422 2to Bogusze ghetto
119 2Hrubieszów (open type) 6,800–10,0003 Jun 1941 – May 19422 May – Nov 19432 2to Sobibor and Budzyn, killed locally, 2,000 fled.
120 2Iłża 1,900–2,0003 19412 Oct 19402 2to Treblinka
121 2Inowłódz 500–6003 19412 Aug 19422 2to Tomaszow Mazowiecki ghetto
122 2Jasło 2,000–3,0003 19412 Aug 19422 2to other ghettos
123 2Jedwabne 100–1303 Jul 19412 Nov 19412 2to Łomża GhettoTreblinka, with 340 killed locally.
124 2Kalisz 4003 19412 19422 2to other ghettos
125 2Kałusz 6,0003 Jun 19412 Nov 19422 2to Belzec, several hundred executed locally
126 2Karczew 7003 Mar 19412 Oct 19412 2to Warsaw Ghetto
127 2Kielce 27,0003 19412 Aug 19422 2to Treblinka, with 6,000 killed locally
128 2Kłobuck 2,0003 19412 Jun 19422 2to Auschwitz
129 2Knyszyn 2,0003 Jun 19412 Nov 19422 2to Bialystok Ghetto
130 2Kobryn 8,0003 Jun 19412 Oct 19402 2all killed locally
131 2Kock 2,500–3,0003 Jun 19412 Dec 19422 2to Treblinka
132 2Kodeń ?3 Jun 19412 Sep 19422 2to Miedzyrzec Podlaski ghetto
133 2Kolbuszowa 2,5003 19412 Sep 19422 2to Belzec
134 2Koluszki 2,0003 19412 Oct 19402 2to Treblinka
135 2Końskie 10,0003 19412 Jan 19432 2to Treblinka
136 2Korczyn 2,0003 19412 Aug 19422 2to Belzec
137 2Kraków Ghetto 28,000–68,5003 Mar 19412 Mar 19432 2to Belzec, and Płaszów concentration camp
138 2Kraśnik 5,000–6,0003 1940–19412 Nov 19422 2to Belzec
139 2Krynki 3,500–6,0003 Jun – Nov 19412 Nov 19422 2all killed locally
140 2Książ Wielki 200?{{{1}}} 19412 Nov 19422 2to Miechow ghetto
141 2Kunów 5003 19412 Oct 19402 2to Treblinka
142 2Limanowa 2,0003 19412 Aug 19422 2to Belzec
143 2Lipsk 3,0003 Dec 19412 Oct 19402 2to Treblinka
144 2Lubartów Ghetto 3,269–4,5003 Jun 19412 Oct 19402 2to Bełżec extermination camp
145 2Lublin Ghetto 30,000–40,0003 24 Mar 19412 Nov 19422 2to Belzec (30,000) and Majdanek (4,000)
146 2Lwów Ghetto 115,000–160,0003 Jun – Nov 19412 Jun 19432 2to Belzec and Janowska concentration camp
147 2Łapy 6003 Jun – Jul 19412 Nov 19422 2to Białystok Ghetto
148 2Łaskarzew 1,3003 19412 Sep 19422 2to Treblinka
149 2Łęczyca 3,000–4,3003 19412 Jun 19422 2to Chełmno extermination camp, many killed locally
150 2Łomża Ghetto 9,000–11,0003 Jun 19412 Nov 19422 2to Auschwitz, many killed locally
151 2Łosice 5,500–6,0003 19412 Aug 19422 2to Treblinka
152 2Łuków 10,000{{{1}}} 19412 Oct – Nov 19422 2to Treblinka (7,000 on 5 Oct 1942 and 3,000 on 7 Nov)
153 2Maków Mazowiecki 3,500–5,0003 19412 Dec 19422 2to Treblinka
154 2Michałowo 1,5003 19412 Nov 19422 2to Bialystok Ghetto
155 2Miechów 4,0003 19412 19422 2to Belzec (1,000 killed locally)
156 2Nowe Miasto 3,7003 19412 22 Oct 19422 2to Treblinka (3,000), killed locally
157 2Nowogródek 6,000?{{{1}}} Jun 19412 Oct 19402 2all killed locally
158 2Nowy Sącz 20,0003 Aug 19412 Aug 19422 2to Belzec extermination camp
159 2Nowy Targ 2,5003 19412 Aug 19422 2to Belzec
160 2Nowy Żmigród 1,3003 19412 Jul 19422 2all killed locally
161 2Olkusz 3,000–4,0003 19412 Jun 19422 2to Auschwitz
162 2Opatów 10,0003 19412 Oct 19402 2to Treblinka
163 2Opole Lubelskie 8,000–10,0003 19412 Oct 19402 2to Sobibor and Poniatowa ghetto
164 2Osiek 5003 19412 Jun 19422 2to Treblinka
165 2Ostrowiec Świętokrzyski 16,0003 Apr 19412 Oct 19402 2to Treblinka
166 2Ozorków 3,000–5,0003 19412 Aug 19422 2to Lodz GhettoChełmno extermination camp
167 2Pajęczno 3,0003 19412 19422 2to Lodz Ghetto
168 2Parczew 7,0003 19412 Oct 19402 2to Treblinka
169 2Piątek ?3 19412 Jul 19422 2to Chełmno extermination camp
170 2Pilzno 788?{{{1}}} 19412 Jun 19422 2to Belzec
171 2Pińczów 3,000–3,5003 19412 Oct 19402 2to Treblinka
172 2Połaniec 2,0003 19412 19422 2to Chełmno extermination camp
173 2Praszka ?3 19412 Aug 19422 2to Chełmno extermination camp
174 2Rabka 3003 19412 Aug 19422 2to Belzec
175 2Radom Ghetto 30,000–32,0003 Mar 19412 Aug 19422 2to Treblinka extermination camp
176 2Radomyśl Wielki 1,300?{{{1}}} 19412 19422 2to Bełżec
177 2Radoszyce 3,200?{{{1}}} 19412 Nov 19422 2to Treblinka
178 2Radzyn Podlaski 2,000–3,0003 19412 Dec 19422 2to Treblinka
179 2Rajgród 1,2003 19412 Nov 19422 2to Bogusze
180 2Rawa Mazowiecka 4,0003 19412 Oct 19402 2to Treblinka
181 2Rejowiec 3,0003 19412 19432 2to Auschwitz, Sobibor and Majdanek
182 2Ropczyce 8003 19412 Jul 19422 2to Belzec
183 2Ryki 1,800–3,5003 19412 Oct 19402 2to Treblinka and Sobibor
184 2Rymanów 1,600?{{{1}}} 19412 Aug 19422 2to Krakow Ghetto, Belzec, killed locally
185 2Sędziszów Małopolski 2,0003 19412 Jan 19422 2to Belzec
186 2Siedlce 12,000–18,0003 Jun – Aug 19412 Nov 19422 2to Treblinka
187 2Siemiatycze 7,0003 19412 Nov 19422 2to Sobibor
188 2Sieniawa 3,0003 19412 19422 2all killed locally
189 2Siennica 700?3 19412 15 Sep 19422 2to Treblinka (700)
190 2Skarżysko-Kamienna 3,0003 19412 19422 2to Treblinka (2,500), the rest killed locally
191 2Skrzynno ?3 19412 Oct 19402 2to Opoczno ghetto
192 2Słonim 5,000–22,0003 Jul 19412 Jul 19422 2all killed locally
193 2Słuck 3,000–8,5003 Jun 19412 Nov 19422 2all killed locally
194 2Sokołów Małopolski 3,0003 19412 Jul 19422 2to Belzec
195 2Sokołów Podlaski 4,000–7,0003 Jun 19412 Sep 19422 2to Treblinka
196 2Sokółka 8,000–9,0003 Jun 19412 Nov 19422 2to KiełbasinTreblinka
197 2Solec 8003 19412 Dec 19422 2to Tarlow ghetto
198 2Starachowice 6,0003 Apr 19412 Oct 19402 2to Treblinka
199 2Stary Sącz 1,0003 19412 Aug 19422 2to Belzec
200 2Staszów 7,0003 19412 Dec 19422 2to Treblinka
201 2Stopnica 5,0003 19412 Nov 19422 2to Treblinka, many killed locally
202 2Strzemieszyce Wielkie 1,800{{{1}}} 1940 – 19412 May – 15 Jun 19422 2to Bendzin ghetto (500), Auschwitz (1,400)
203 2Strzyżów 1,300{{{1}}} 19412 26/28 Jun 19422 2to Rzeszow ghetto, killed locally → Belzec
204 2Suchedniów 5,0003 19412 Aug 19422 2to Treblinka
205 2Sulejów 1,5003 19412 Oct 19402 2to Treblinka
206 2Szczuczyn 2,0003 19412 Jul – Nov 19422 2to Bogusze transit camp, killed locally
207 2Śniadowo 6503 19412 Nov 19422 2to Zambrow ghetto
208 2Tarczyn 1,6003 19412 Feb 19422 2to Treblinka
209 2Tarnobrzeg (ghetto & camp) 500{{{1}}} Jun 19412 Jul 19422 2to Dębica ghetto → Belzec
210 2Tarnogród 2,600–5,0003 19412 Nov 19422 2to Belzec (from ghetto & camp), many killed locally
211 2Tarnopol 25,0003 Jul – Aug 19412 Jun 19432 2to Belzec extermination camp
212 2Tarnów 40,0003 Mar 19412 Sep 19432 210,000 killed locally, Belzec (10,000), Auschwitz
213 2Tomaszów Lubelski 1,400–1,5003 19412 Oct 19402 2to Belzec
214 2Tyczyn ?3 19412 Jul 19422 2to Belzec
215 2Wadowice 1,400{{{1}}} 19412 Aug 19432 2to Auschwitz
216 2Wąwolnica 2,5003 19412 May 19422 2to Belzec
217 2Węgrów 6,000–8,3003 19412 Sep 19422 2to Treblinka
218 2Wieliczka 7,0003 19412 Aug 19422 2to Belzec
219 2Wielun 4,200–7,0003 19412 Aug 19422 2to Chełmno extermination camp, killed locally
220 2Wieruszów 1,4003 19412 Aug 19422 2to Chełmno extermination camp
221 2Wilno Ghetto 30,000–80,000{{{1}}} Sep 19412 Sep 19432 2all killed locally (21,000 before ghetto was set up)
222 2Wiślica 2,0003 19412 Oct 19402 2to Jedrzejow ghetto
223 2Wolbrom 3,000–5,0003 19412 Sep 19422 2to Belzec, many killed locally
224 2Wysokie Mazowieckie 5,0003 19412 Nov 19422 2to Zambrow ghetto
225 2Zabłudów 1,800{{{1}}} Jul 19412 2 Nov 19422 210th Calvary camp near BiałystokTreblinka (1,400)
226 2Zambrów 3,200–4,0003 19412 Jan 19432 2to Auschwitz, mass killings locally
227 2Zawiercie 5,000–7,0003 19412 Oct 19432 2to Auschwitz (5,000)
228 2Zelów ?3 19412 Sep 19422 2to Chełmno extermination camp
229 2Żarki 3,2003 19412 Oct 19402 2to Treblinka
230 2Żelechów 5,500–13,0003 19412 Sep 19422 2to Treblinka
Year 1942: on January 20 the Nazis, at the Wannsee conference in Berlin, decided that the "the final solution of the Jewish question"
is deportation and subsequent mass extermination. Six death factories were built by German firms in occupied Poland within two-to-six months.
231 2Andrychów 7003 Sep 19422 Nov 19432 2to Auschwitz concentration camp
232 2Annopol ?3 Jun 19422 Oct 19402 2to Kraśnik ghetto
233 2Baranów Sandomierski 2,0003 Jun 19422 Jul 19422 2to Dębica ghetto, (all)
234 2Biecz 700–8003 Apr 19422 Aug 19422 2to Belzec
235 2Czortków 4,0003 Apr 19422 Sep 19432 2to Belzec
236 2Dąbrowa Tarnowska 2,400–3,0003 Oct 19402 Sep 19432 2to Belzec and Auschwitz
237 2Dębica 1,500–4,0003 19422 Mar 19432 2to Belzec
238 2Drohobycz 10,0003 Mar 19422 1943–06 2to Belzec
239 2Dubno 9,000?3 Apr 19422 Oct 19402 2all killed locally
240 2Frysztak 1,600{{{1}}} 19422 18 Aug 19422 2to Jasło ghetto → killed in Warzyce forest
241 2Hrubieszów (labor camp) 200{{{1}}} May 19422 May 19432 2to Budzyn, killed locally, see Hrubieszów (6,800)
242 2Jasienica Rosielna 1,5003 19422 Aug 19422 2to Belzec
243 2Kołomyja (ghetto & camp) 18,0003 19422 Feb 19432 2to Belzec, many killed locally
244 2Koprzywnica 1,8003 19402 Oct 19402 2to Treblinka
245 2Kowale Pańskie 3,000–5,0003 1939 – 19422 19422 2to Chełmno extermination camp
246 2Kowel 17,0003 May 19422 Oct 19422 2all killed locally
247 2Kraśnik (ghetto & camp) 5,0003 1940 – 19422 Nov 19422 2to Belzec
248 2Krosno 600–2,5003 Aug 19422 Dec 19422 2to Belzec
249 2Lesko 2,0003 19422 Sep 19422 2to Belzec
250 2Lubaczów 4200–7,0003 Oct 19402 1943–01 2to Sobibor, many killed locally
251 2Łachwa Ghetto 2,3503 4 Apr 19422 Sep 19422 2killed locally, 1,500 in an uprising.
252 2Łęczna 3,0003 Jun 19422 Nov 19422 2to Sobibor, many killed locally
253 2Ożarów 4,5003 Jan 19422 Oct 19402 2to Treblinka
254 2Przemyśl 22,000–24,0003 Jul 19422 Sep 19432 2to Belzec, Auschwitz, Janowska
255 2Przeworsk 1,400?{{{1}}} Jul 19422 Oct 19402 2to Belzec
256 2Przysucha 2,500–5,0003 Jul 19422 Oct 19402 2to Treblinka
257 2Sambor 8,000–9,0003 Mar 19422 Jul 19432 2to Belzec, many killed locally
258 2Sosnowiec Ghetto 12,0003 Oct 19402 Aug 19432 2to Auschwitz
259 2Starachowice (labor camp) 13,0003 19422 19422 2to Treblinka, see also Starachowice ghetto
260 2Stryj 4,000–12,0003 19422 Jun 19432 2all killed locally
261 2Sucha Beskidzka 400{{{1}}} 19422 19432 2to Auschwitz
262 2Szydłów 1,0003 Jan 19422 Oct 19402 2to Chmielnik ghetto
263 2Tarnogród (labor camp) 1,0003 19422 19422 2see Tarnogród ghetto → Belzec
264 2Tomaszów M. (labor camp) 1,0003 19422 May 19432 2to Starachowice, see also Tomaszów M. ghetto
265 2Tuchów 3,0003 Jun 19422 Sep 19422 2to Belzec
266 2Międzyrzec Podlaski Ghetto 20,0003 28 Aug 19422 18 Jul 1943{{{1}}} 2to Treblinka (17,000), hundreds killed locally.

Aftermath

The ghetto inhabitants – most of whom were killed during Operation Reinhard – possessed Polish citizenship before the Nazi–Soviet invasion of Poland, which in turn enabled over 150,000 Holocaust survivors registered at CKŻP to take advantage of the later repatriation agreements between the governments of Poland and the Soviet Union, and legally emigrate to the West to help form the ascent State of Israel. Poland was the only Eastern Bloc country to allow free Jewish aliyah without visas or exit permits upon the conclusion of World War II. By contrast, Stalin forcibly brought Soviet Jews back to USSR along with all Soviet citizens, as agreed to in the Yalta Conference.

Further information: Percentages agreement

Notes and references

  1. Yitzhak Arad, Belzec, Sobibor, Treblinka. Indiana University Press, Bloomington and Indianapolis, 1987.
  2. Biuletyn Głównej Komisji Badania Zbrodni Hitlerowskich w Polsce, Wydawnictwo Prawnicze, 1960.  Template:Pl icon
  3. ^ The statistical data compiled on the basis of "Glossary of 2,077 Jewish towns in Poland" by Virtual Shtetl Museum of the History of the Polish Jews  Template:En icon, as well as "Getta Żydowskie," by Gedeon,  Template:Pl icon and "Ghetto List" by Michael Peters at www.deathcamps.org/occupation/ghettolist.htm  Template:En icon. Some figures might require further confirmation due to their comparative range. Accessed June 21, 2011.
  4. ^ Michael Berenbaum, The World Must Know, United States Holocaust Memorial Museum, 2006, p. 114.
  5. "The War Against The Jews." The Holocaust Chronicle, 2009. Chicago, Il. Accessed June 21, 2011.
  6. ^ Dwork, Deborah and Robert Jan Van Pelt,The Construction of Crematoria at Auschwitz, W.W. Norton & Co., 1996.
  7. Cecil Adams, "Did Krups, Braun, and Mercedes-Benz make Nazi concentration camp ovens?"
  8. Jewish Virtual Library, Łódź. Overview of the Litzmannstadt Ghetto's history. Accessed June 27, 2011.
  9. United States Holocaust Memorial Museum - Online Exhibition: Give Me Your Children: Voices from the Lodz Ghetto
  10. University of Minnesota, Majdanek Death Camp
  11. Kraków Ghetto including photographs, at www.krakow-poland.com.
  12. About Kraków Ghetto with valuable historical photographs. Template:Pl icon
  13. "Schindler's Krakow," with modern-day photographs of the WWII relics.
  14. The Kraków Ghetto complete with contemporary picture gallery, at JewishKrakow.net
  15. ^ Edward Victor, "Ghettos and Other Jewish Communities." Judaica Philatelic. Accessed June 20, 2011. Cite error: The named reference "ushmm-7445" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).
  16. Richard C. Lukas, Out of the Inferno: Poles Remember the Holocaust, University Press of Kentucky 1989 - 201 pages. Page 13; also in Richard C. Lukas, The Forgotten Holocaust: The Poles Under German Occupation, 1939-1944, University Press of Kentucky, 1986, Google Print, p.13.
  17. Gunnar S. Paulsson, "The Rescue of Jews by Non-Jews in Nazi-Occupied Poland," Journal of Holocaust Education, Vol.7, Nos.1&2, 1998, pp.19-44. Published by Frank Cass, London.
  18. ^ Peter Vogelsang & Brian B. M. Larsen, "The Ghettos of Poland." The Danish Center for Holocaust and Genocide Studies. 2002.
  19. Warsaw Ghetto, United States Holocaust Memorial Museum (USHMM), Washington, D.C.
  20. ^ Ghettos, United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Cite error: The named reference "ushmm.org" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).
  21. François Furet, Unanswered Questions: Nazi Germany and the Genocide of the Jews. Schocken Books (1989), p. 182; ISBN 0805240519
  22. ^ First Jewish ghetto established in Piotrkow Trybunalski: October 8, 1939. Yad Vashem The Holocaust Martyrs' and Heroes' Remembrance Authority.
  23. Maciej i Ewa Szaniawscy, "Zagłada Żydów w Będzinie w świetle relacji" (Extermination of Jews in the light of testimony).  Template:Pl icon According to 1946 research by Wojewódzka Żydowska Komisja Historyczna in Katowice, wrote Maciej i Ewa Szaniawscy, there were around 30,000 Jews in Będzin following the invasion, including those who came in from neighbouring settlements. Between October 1940 and May 1942, the first 4,000 Jews were deported. In May 1942 additional 2,000 and in August, 5,000 more. Deportations between August 1942 and mid June 1943 amounted to additional 5,000. On 22 June 1943 the next transport of 5,000 Jews departed to Auschwitz, and finally, between 1-3 August 1943, the remaining 8,000 were sent away. The dispersed Jews who stayed, amounting to 1,000 persons, were deported between early October 1943 and July 1944. In total, about 28,000 Jews are believed to have been deported from the Będzin Ghetto. This information however, is not confirmed by the two main sources of the remaining data nor the Jewish Historical Institute, listing only 7,000 victims.
  24. Będzin in the Jewish Historical Institute community database. Warsaw.
  25. Iwona Pogorzelska, Bodzentyn od 1869 roku do niepodległości. Polska.pl. Accessed June 16, 2011.
  26. "Getto w Łowiczu," at Miejsca martyrologii, Wirtualny Sztetl. Instytut Adama Mickiewicza.  Template:Pl icon
  27. "Cmentarz żydowski w Mogielnicy (Jewish cemetery in Mogielnica)," at Kirkuty.xip.pl.
  28. Angelika Lasiewicz-Sych, "An Essay of Traces of the Past," published in Kultura Współczesna nr 4 (38) 2003
  29. ^ Piotrków Trybunalski – Getto w Piotrkowie Trybunalskim. Virtual Shtetl. Museum of the History of the Polish Jews. Accessed July 1, 2011.
  30. ^ Holocaust: "The Jews in the County of Cracau (sic)." The JewishGen ShtetLinks. Accessed June 28, 2011.
  31. Ćmielów – Historia, Muzeum Historii Żydów Polskich Wirtualny Sztetl.
  32. ^ The Hrubieszow Genealogy Group. ShtetLinks Project. Accessed June 30,2011.
  33. The 90th session of the Senate of the Republic of Poland. Stenograph, part 2.2. A Report by Leon Kieres, president of the Institute of National Remembrance, for the period from July 1, 2,000 to June 30, 2001. Donald Tusk presiding. See statement by Senator Jadwiga Stokarska.  Template:Pl icon
  34. ^ Jack Kugelmass, Jonathan Boyarin, Zachary M. Baker, From a ruined garden: the memorial books of Polish Jewry, United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. Accessed June 27, 2011.
  35. Jack Fischel, The Holocaust, Greenwood Publishing Group, 1998, pg. 58; in Google Books.
  36. ^ "Treblinka Death Camp Day-by-Day," at Holocaust Education & Archive Research Team (www.HolocaustResearchProject.org). Accessed June 30, 2011.
  37. Piotr Berghof, "Radoszyce, wspomnienie o żydowskich mieszkańcach miasteczka."  Template:Pl icon. Accessed June 27, 2011.
  38. ^ Shmuel Spector, Geoffrey Wigoder (2001). "The Encyclopedia of Jewish Life Before and During the Holocaust". NYU Press. p. 1255. ISBN 0814793568. Retrieved June 29, 2011.
  39. "Tarnobrzeg. Warto zobaczyć" (Tarnobrzeg worth seeing), Wydawnictwo Bezdroża. Accessed June 27, 2011.
  40. Wadowice – Historia. Wirtualny Sztetl.  Template:Pl icon. Accessed June 27, 2011.
  41. "Chronology of Vilna Ghetto," at Vilnaghetto.com without additional confirmation of quantitative data. Accessed June 24, 2011.
  42. "The Deportation of the Zabludow Jews to Treblinka Death Camp." 2003 Tilford Bartman, Jerusalem, Israel.
  43. Gmina Sucha Beskidzka, powiat suski. Targeo.  Template:Pl icon. Accessed June 27, 2011.
  44. Stefan Krakowski, Tomaszow Mazowiecki, Jewish Virtual Library. Accessed June24, 2001.
  45. "The History of Miedzyrzec Podlaski." Association of Immigrants of Mezritch Depodalsia Area in Israel. Accessed July 5, 2011.
  46. "Mezritch (Międzyrzec) Podlaski in the Jewish sources." Association of Immigrants of Mezritch Depodalsia. Accessed June 16, 2011.
  47. Philipp Ther, Ana Siljak (2001). "Redrawing nations: ethnic cleansing in East-Central Europe, 1944-1948". Rowman & Littlefield. p. 138. ISBN 0742510948. Retrieved May 11, 2011.
  48. Devorah Hakohen, Immigrants in turmoil: mass immigration to Israel and its repercussions... Syracuse University Press, 2003 - 325 pages. Page 70. ISBN 0-8156-2969-9
  49. Arieh J. Kochavi, Post-Holocaust politics: Britain, the United States & Jewish refugees, 1945-1948. Page 15. The University of North Carolina Press. ISBN 0-8078-2620-0 Accessed June 20, 2011.
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