Warsaw In Your Pocket Guide Spring 2022

Page 56

Art, History & Culture | Jewish Warsaw

Jewish Warsaw The spectacular wooden synagogue installation at POLIN.

When Nazi Germany invaded Poland in September 1939, Warsaw’s thriving Jewish population numbered approximately 350,000 - only New York City could boast a larger community. Although anti-Semitism was by no means rare, Poland had been seen as a relative safe haven, and it attracted Jewish settlers forced into flight by more discriminatory regimes elsewhere. By the inter-war years the Jewish population had made significant contributions to the social, political and cultural fabric of Poland. As we know, Nazi occupation meant the complete dehumanisation and systematic destruction of Poland’s Jews, who were first forced into ghettos, where they faced violence, starvation and disease, and then deported to Nazi death camps where they were executed. The Warsaw Ghetto was the largest of WWII and occupied much of the City Centre, as you can see by its outline on the maps in this guide (p.8, p.19). At its height it imprisoned 460,000 Jews in an area of 3.4km2. After more than 254,000 Varsovian Jews were sent to their deaths at Treblinka in the summer of 1942, those remaining began building bunkers and smuggling weapons into the Ghetto in preparation for what would be the war’s largest act of Jewish resistance. Beginning on April 19, 1943, 56

Jewish fighting units engaged German troops in guerilla warfare within the walls of the Ghetto in a final, doomed act of bravery, defiance and protest against the world’s silence and inaction. When the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising ended 27 days later with the German command’s symbolic detonation of the Great Synagogue, 13,000 Jews had been killed, almost half of them perishing from the fire and smoke as the Nazis burned the Ghetto to the ground, building by building. Of the remaining 50,000 Jews, almost all of them were captured and perished at the Majdanek or Treblinka Nazi death camps. Following WWII, much of Warsaw’s surviving Jewish population chose to emigrate to the U.S., the British mandate of Palestine (taking an active part in the creation of Israel) and elsewhere. Today Warsaw’s Jewish community is estimated at only about 2,000, but the city’s Jewish heritage remains an essential part of its identity, honoured today by innumerable monuments, memorials, museums and events. For a full list of Jewish tourism sites in Warsaw, visit our website.


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Shopping

7min
pages 90-96

Clubs

6min
pages 86-88

Adult Entertainment

2min
page 89

Bars

1min
page 85

New & Featured

9min
pages 81-84

Food Markets

4min
pages 78-80

Casual Dining

8min
pages 74-77

Fine Dining

10min
pages 70-73

New & Featured

1min
page 69

Traditional Polish Dishes

3min
pages 66-68

Breakfast & Brunch

3min
pages 64-65

Kids & Families

4min
pages 62-63

Activities & Experiences

3min
pages 60-61

Warsaw Uprising

5min
pages 58-59

Jewish Warsaw

5min
pages 56-57

Museums

10min
pages 52-55

Art Tourism

2min
page 49

Current Exhibitions

3min
page 51

Jewish Culinary Culture at POLIN

2min
page 50

Wilanów

1min
page 44

Powiśle

2min
page 36

The Royal Route

2min
page 30

Transport

6min
pages 14-16

Urban Greens & Gastro Parks

8min
pages 10-13

Introducing Warsaw

1min
page 6

City Centre

2min
page 18

How to Use This Guide

2min
page 7

Old Town Map

13min
pages 25-29

Essential Warsaw

2min
page 17

Old Town Walking Tour

1min
page 24
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