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receive 120,000 Poles from the Reich and

35,000 Gypsies immediately and after 1 August 1940 about 450,000 Jews . . . and in

addition there will be another 60,000 Poles from Soviet Russia’.

105. Diensttagebuch, ed. Präg and Jakobmeyer, 12 July 1940, p. 252.

106. Note on a meeting at IV D 4, 9 July 1940 (Biuletyn, XII (1960), doc. 38). On 12 July Heydrich and Frank came to an agreement whereby the mass resettlement campaigns

planned in December 1939 would no longer be carried out, with the ‘ongoing Volhy-

nian campaign’ and the ‘Jewish evacuation campaign that will probably start this

August’ (i.e. the deportation of the Jews from the integrated eastern territories) going

ahead. Telex from Günther (RSHA) to Höppner (UWZ Poznan), 1 July 1940 (Biuletyn,

XII, doc. 37).

107. Madajczkyk, Okkupationspolitik, 186 ff.

108. Diensttagebuch, ed. Präg and Jakobmeyer, 30 May 1940, 209 ff.

109. Report by the Director of the Resettlement Department to the Governor of the District of Warsaw, Waldemar Schön on the Warsaw Ghetto, 20 Jan. 1941; published in

Faschismus, ed. Berenstein et al., 110 ff.; cf. Pohl, ‘Lublin’, 67.

110. By order of the District Governor, Ludwig Fischer, on 2 October, after Frank had sent a reminder Faschismus, ed. Berenstein et al., 102 ff.; and Diensttagebuch, ed. Präg and

Jakobmeyer, 12 Sept. 1940, p. 281.

111. In October 1940 a ghetto was established in Minsk Marzowiecki near Warsaw, and

another in Chelm in the district of Lublin; at the beginning of 1941 an order for

resettlement was given within Otwock (in the district of Warsaw; cf. Golczewski,

‘Polen’, 436–7). On the (often fruitless) attempts at forming ghettos in the district of

Lublin, see Pohl, ‘Lublin’, 67.

112. Order of 13 Sept. 1940; Faschismus, ed. Berenstein et al., 98 ff.

113. In Czestochowa (District of Radom) in April 1941 a closed Ghetto was set up; the same happened in the city of Lublin in March and April 1941: Golczewski, ‘Polen’, 433 ff.;

Pohl, ‘Lublin’, 85 ff.; Faschismus, ed. Berenstein et al., 124 ff. (Order for the Establishment of a Ghetto in Kielce, 31 Mar. 1941).

114. Musial, Zivilverwaltung, 133 ff.; Pohl, ‘Lublin’, 87 (for the city of Lublin).

115. Musial, Zivilverwaltung, 159 ff.

116. See Christopher Browning, ‘Nazi Ghettoization: Policy in Poland 1939–1941’, in

Browning, The Path to Genocide: Essays on Launching the Final Solution (Cambridge,

1992), 28–56.

117. Musial, Zivilverwaltung, 164 ff.

118. Steinbacher, Auschwitz, 147 ff.

119. Schön report (see n. 109). For further examples from other ghettos, see Corni, Hitler’s Ghettos, 119 ff.

120. For general studies of the ghettos and the role of the Jewish councils see later footnotes and the following: Corni, Hitler’s Ghettos; L. Trunk, Judenrat: The Jewish Councils in

Eastern Europe under Nazi Occupation (New York, 1972); Doron Kiesel et al., eds, ‘Wer

Notes to pages 167–168

489

zum Leben,wer zum Tod’: Strategien jüdischen Überlebens im Ghetto (Frankfurt a. M.

and New York, 1962). Of importance for the continuation of scholarly dialogue on the

Jewish councils are above all the published proceedings of two conferences: the YIVO

Colloquium of 1967 (Improvised Jewish Governing Bodies under Nazi Rule (New York,

1972)) and the International Historical Conference in Yad Vashem of 1977 (Yisrael

Gutman and Cynthia Haft, eds, Patterns of Jewish Leadership in Nazi Europe, 1933–1945

(Jerusalem, 1979)). Further literature on the complex issue of the Jewish councils

includes: Werner Bergmann, ‘The Jewish Council as an Intermediary System: Socio-

logical Analysis of the Role of the Jewish Councils in Eastern Europe’, in Yehuda Bauer

et al., eds, Remembering for the Future: Working Papers and Addenda (Oxford and New

York, 1989), iii. 2830–50; Dan Michmann, ‘Judenräte und Judenvereinigungen unter

nationalsozialistischer Herrschaft’, ZfG 46 (1998), 293–304. The most copious literature

is on the two largest ghettos, Lodz and Warsaw, although these both represent

exceptions in many respects. Most relevant for the period 1939 to 1941 are: Israel

Gutman, The Jews of Warsaw, 1939–1943: Ghetto, Underground, Revolt, trans. Ina

Friedman (Jerusalem and Bloomington, Ind., 1982); Ruta Sakowska, Menschen im

Ghetto. Die jüdische Bevölkerung im besetzten Warschau 1939–1943 (Münster, 1999);

Hanno Loewy and Gerhard Schoenberner, eds, Unser einziger Weg ist Arbeit. Das Getto

in Lodz 1940–1944 (Frankfurt a. M. and Vienna, 1990). There is detailed documentation

available for Warsaw (see n. 129) and Lodz: Alan Adelson and Robert Lapides, Lodz

Ghetto: Inside a Community under Siege (New York, 1989); Lucjan Dobroszycki, ed.,

The Chronicle of the Lodz Ghetto 1941–1944 (New Haven and London, 1984); Peter

Klein, Die Ghettoverwaltung Litzmannstadt 1940 his 1944: eine Dienststelle im Span-

nungsfeld von Kommunalburokratie und staatlicher Verfolgungspolitik (Hamburg,

2009). On diaries and journals see n. 129. Studies of the smaller and medium-sized

ghettos are still a desideratum for research.

121. On illness, disease and death in the ghettos see Corni, Ghettos, 194 ff.; on Warsaw see Charles G. Roland, Courage under Siege: Starvation, Disease and Death in the Warsaw

Ghetto (New York, 1992).

122. Hilberg, Destruction, 269.

123. On ghetto society and everyday life, see Corni, Ghettos, pp. 168 ff.; and Trunk,

Judenrat, 368 ff.

124. See esp. Trunk, Judenrat, 115 ff. (public welfare) and 143 ff. (medical aid). On social self-help in the Warsaw ghetto, see Sakowska, Menschen im Ghetto, pp. 81 ff.; on medical

care see Roland, Courage.

125. On cultural and religious life, see Corni, Ghettos, 146 ff.; Trunk, Judenrat, 186 ff.; Sakowska, Menschen im Ghetto, 129 ff. (on Warsaw); Gila Flan, ‘Das kulturelle Leben

im Getto Lodz’, in Kiesel et. al., eds, ‘Wer zum Leben ’, 77–96.

126. On the topic of work see Corni, Ghettos, 227 ff. In Lodz the Chair of the Jewish council, Rumkowski, pursued a plan to make the ghettos productive from spring 1940 onwards,

which bore fruit during 1941 (ibid. 238–9). In Warsaw ghetto inhabitants began to work

in large numbers (both inside and in German firms outside the ghetto). Ghettos in

autumn 1941 (ibid. 242–3; Gutman, The Jews of Warsaw, 74 ff.). Trunk (Judenrat, 78)

adduces various examples from 1940 in which Jewish councils took the initiative in

founding so-called ‘shops’.

490

Notes to page 169

127. Pohl, ‘Lublin’, 88; Trunk, Judenrat, 400 ff., describes the shift to a work-survival strategy.

128. On smuggling see Corni, Ghettos, 139 ff. In Warsaw in particular smuggling included

the illegal ‘export’ of those goods produced in the ghetto that significantly exceeded the production quotas permitted by the Germans (Gutman, Jews of Warsaw, 75; see also

Carol Battick, ‘Smuggling as a Form of Resistance in the Warsaw Ghetto’, Journal of

Holocaust Education 4/2 (1995), 199–204).

129.

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