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  1. April 19, 1943-May 16, 1943. On April 19, 1943, the eve of the Passover holiday, the Jews of the Warsaw ghetto began their final act of armed resistance against the Germans. Lasting twenty-seven days, this act of resistance came to be known as the Warsaw ghetto uprising. The Jewish Combat Organization (ŻOB) had received advanced warning of a ...

  2. The Warsaw Ghetto Uprising [a] was the 1943 act of Jewish resistance in the Warsaw Ghetto in German-occupied Poland during World War II to oppose Nazi Germany 's final effort to transport the remaining ghetto population to the gas chambers of the Majdanek and Treblinka extermination camps .

    • 19 April-16 May 1943
    • Uprising suppressed
  3. Warsaw. Warsaw Ghetto, 840-acre (340-hectare) area of Warsaw that consisted of the city’s old Jewish quarter. During the German occupation of Poland (1939–45), the Nazis enclosed it at first with barbed wire but later with a brick wall 10 feet (3 meters) high and 11 miles (18 km) long. The Nazis forced Jews from surrounding areas into this ...

  4. The Warsaw Ghetto Uprising, not to be confused with the 1944 Warsaw Uprising, was one of the first and largest acts of armed resistance against the Nazi persecution of the Jews. In April 1943, as the Nazis came to deport the remaining 50,000 residents of the Warsaw Ghetto, they were met with mines, grenades, and bullets.

  5. The ghetto was demolished by the Germans in May 1943 after the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising had temporarily halted the deportations. The total death toll among the prisoners of the ghetto is estimated to be at least 300,000 killed by bullet or gas, [8] combined with 92,000 victims of starvation and related diseases, the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising, and ...

  6. Emanuel Ringelblum (1900-1944) was the founder of an underground archive compiled within the Warsaw Ghetto. This book was written by Ringelblum and documents life within the ghetto. In 1943, Ringelblum, his wife and their son went into hiding. A year later, they were denounced, captured and shot inside the Warsaw Pawiak prison.

  7. Aug 2, 2016 · The Nazis finally put down the uprising on May 16 by destroying the ghetto and sending any survivors to death or labor camps. Anielewicz did not survive. Rotem and Marek Edelman were among the few to escape through the sewers to the “Aryan” part of Warsaw. Others took their own lives before the Nazis could reach them.

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