
Deportation of Jews from the Kraków Ghetto, March
1943
The
Jewish '
ghetto in
Kraków' (Cracow) was one of the five main ghettos created by the
Nazis in the
General Government, during their
occupation of
Poland during
World War II. It was a staging point to begin dividing "able workers" from those who would later be deemed worthy of death. Before the war, Kraków was an influential cultural center for the 60,000-80,000 Jews that resided there.
Overview
Persecution of the Jewish population of Kraków began soon after the Nazis occupied the city in September 1939 during the
Invasion of Poland. Jews were obliged to take part in forced labour (September 1939). In November 1939, all Jews 12 years or older were required to wear identifying
armbands. Throughout Kraków, synagogues were ordered closed and all their relics and valuables turned over to the Nazi authorities.
By May 1940, the
German occupation authority announced that Kraków should become the "cleanest" city in the
General Government (occupied, but
unannexed portions of Poland) and ordered a massive deportation of Jews from the city. Of the more than 68,000 Jews in Kraków when the Germans invaded, only 15,000 workers and their families were permitted to remain in the city. All other Jews were ordered out of the city, to be resettled in surrounding areas.
The Kraków ghetto was formally established on
March 3,
1941. Because the ghetto was set up in the Podgórze district, not in the Jewish district of
Kazimierz, displaced Polish families from the area took up residence in the former Jewish dwellings away from the ghetto. Before the creation of the ghetto, 3,000 people lived in the Podgórze district. This expanded initially to 15,000 Jews, all crammed into 30 streets, 320 residential buildings, and 3,167 rooms. As a result, one apartment was allocated to every four families, and many less fortunate lived on the street.
The ghetto was surrounded by walls that kept it isolated from the surrounding city. All windows and doors that gave onto the "
Aryan" side were ordered bricked up, although four guarded entrances allowed traffic to pass through. In a grim foreshadowing of the near future, these walls contained panels in the shape of tombstones. Small sections of the wall remain today.
Young leftists of the Akiva
youth movement, who had undertaken the publication of an underground newsletter, HeHaluc HaLohem ("The Fighting Pioneer"), joined forces with other
Zionists to form a local branch of the
Jewish Fighting Organization (ŻOB,
Polish: Żydowska Organizacja Bojowa), and organize resistance in the ghetto, supported by the Polish underground
Armia Krajowa. The group carried out a variety of resistance activities including the bombing of the Cyganeria cafe, a gathering place of Nazi officers. Unlike in
Warsaw, their efforts did not lead to a
general uprising before the ghetto was liquidated.

Arched entrance to Kraków Ghetto, about
1941.

Bundles abandoned by Jewish deportees from the Kraków Ghetto, March
1943
From
May 30,
1942 onward, the Nazis implemented systematic deportations from the ghetto to surrounding concentration camps. Thousands of Jews were transported over the succeeding months.
On
March 13-
March 14,
1943 the Nazis carried out the final 'liquidation' of the ghetto under the command of
SS-
Sturmbannführer Amon Goth. Eight thousand Jews deemed able to work were transported to the
Plaszow labor camp. Those deemed unfit for work -- some 2,000 Jews -- were killed in the streets of the ghetto on those days. Any remaining were sent to die in
Auschwitz.
Notable persons
Movie director
Roman Polanski, a survivor of the ghetto, recalls his experience there as a young child in his memoir, ''Roman''. As Polanski described it, the early months resembled normalcy; although the peacefulness was sometimes punctuated by fear. Town residents dined out, listened to town bands, and children, such as Polanski, socialized in the snow.
Roma Ligocka, Polish artist, author, and first cousin to Roman Polanski who, as a small girl, was rescued and survived the ghetto. Many years later, after seeing herself portrayed in the movie ''
Schindler's List,'' Ligocka wrote a novel, ''The Girl in the Red Coat: A Memoir,'' based on her experiences.
Tadeusz Pankiewicz, a Polish pharmacist who owned the Eagle Pharmacy in Krakow. When it was enclosed within the ghetto, he was permitted by the German authorities to continue the business. In recognition of his heroic deeds in rescuing Jews from the Kraków Ghetto he was awarded recognition as a ''
Righteous Among the Nations''. He published a book about his time in the ghetto, ''The Cracow Ghetto Pharmacy'' ISBN 0896041158.
German war profiteer
Oskar Schindler came to
Kraków because of the labor available from the ghetto. He selected employees to work in his
enamelware plant, and came to view them sympathetically. In
1942, Schindler watched ghetto inhabitants brutally rounded up for transportation to Płaszów, and subsequently worked furiously to save Jews interned there, events portrayed in the film ''
Schindler's List''. In an especially dramatic event, 300 of Schindler's workers were deported to the Auschwitz death camp despite his efforts, and he personally intervened to save them.
Mordechai Gebirtig was a one of the most influential and popular writers of Yiddish songs and poems. He died here in 1942.
Miriam Akavia survived the ghetto and concentration camps. She is an Israeli writer now.
See also
★
History of the Jews in Poland
References
★ Graf, Malvina (1989). ''The Kraków Ghetto and the Plaszów Camp Remembered''. Tallahassee: The Florida State University Press. ISBN 0813009057
★ Polanski, Roman. (1984). ''Roman''. New York: William Morrow and Company. ISBN 0688026214
★ Katz, Alfred. (1970). ''Poland's Ghettos at War''. New York: Twayne Publishers. ISBN 0829001956
★ Weiner, Rebecca.
Virtual Jewish History Tour
External links
★
About Kraków Ghetto in Polish with valuable historical photos
★
Schindler's List - reproduction of the original list of people protected by Oskar Schindler
★
Schindler's Krakow - modern-day photographs
★
JewishKrakow.net - A page on the Krakow Ghetto complete with contemporary picture gallery