Holocaust Education & Archive Research Team

 

Ghettos


 

Introduction to the Ghettos of the Holocaust

 

  Jewish Ghettos

  The Judenrat

  Judenrat Leaders

  Prominent Jews

 

 

 

 

 

            

      

 

 

              

 

Rzeszow
 



 

The city of Rzeszow (pre-war) rendering

The city of Rzeszow, known to its Jewish population as "Reishe", lies in the southeast of Poland, about 150 km east of Krakow. Jewish settlement in the city had begun in the 15th century and had steadily grown, until on the outbreak of WW2 the Jews of Rzeszow numbered 15,000, more than one-third of the total population.

The first German bombs fell on the city on 6 September 1939, and Rzeszow was occupied by the German Army four days later. Jews attempted to flee eastwards to escape the invaders; according to different sources 1,200–7,000 people fled the city (the latter number may have included some refugees from neighbouring villages). Many were caught and turned back.

German persecution of the Jews began almost immediately. Upon entering the city, German troops were friendly towards the inhabitants, handing out cigarettes and sweets. Five days later, at the time of the Jewish high holidays of Rosh Hashanah (New Year) and Yom Kippur (Day of Atonement), Jewish men still wearing their prayer shawls were driven from the city's synagogues towards the River Wislok, where many were either drowned or beaten to death.
 

In late September most synagogues were destroyed. Jews were forced to clean the streets*. Then the old Jewish cemetery*, located near the centre of the city, was demolished. Jews had to pull down the cemetery walls, break up all tombstones and pave the roads with the rubble. The emptied area served later as the Sammelplatz for the deportees.

The city was incorporated in the Generalgouvernement, and was later called Reichshof. In October a Judenrat was appointed, headed by Dr Kleinmann. The Ordnungdienst, the Jewish police, was formed, initially numbering 25 functionaries and headed by a former Polish officer from Lodz, Gorelik.

On 26 October, an edict, issued by Hans Frank, required all Jewish males between the ages of 14 and 60 to register for work. Soon Jews were summoned for forced labour*. With effect from 1 December 1939, all Jews in the Generalgouvernement were ordered by Frank to wear on their right arm a white band at least 10 cm wide, bearing a Star of David. Jewish shops had to be marked* with the Jewish star.
 

A Jew with armband in Rzeszow

By the end of 1939, there were 10 forced labour camps in the Rzeszow region. The military airport to the north of the city became the main workplace for Jewish slave labourers in the region.

In May 1940 Jewish apartments were confiscated, and Jews were prohibited from using the city's main thoroughfares, Trzeciego Maja and Zamkowa Streets. Later the all night curfew was introduced. All Jewish men had to report at the Arbeitsamt.

In 1940, several hundred Jews from Rzeszow were sent to camps which had been established in Pustkow (near Debica), Jaroslaw and Lipie (near Nowy Sacz).

In the first days of January 1940, a new Kreishauptmann (District Leader) was appointed, SS-Sturmbannführer Dr Heinz Ehaus, who was known as a persecutor of both Jews and Poles in Nisko, where he served as a Landkommissar from 30 September 1939. The Kommissar of the town was Dr Hueller and the Gestapo chief was Hans Mack.


The Judenreferat (Jewish section) of the Gestapo was headed by Adolf Schuster; his deputies were Clemenz Burmester and Kurt Dannenberg.


The Gestapo appointed succeeding commandants of the Rzeszow ghetto – SS-Hauptscharführer Bacher, SS-Oberscharführer Kurt Schupke, (who had earlier served at KZ Buchenwald and who was later, in September 1944, appointed commandant of KZ Plaszow), and SS-Unterscharführer Georg Oester.
 

In January 1940, Kleinmann and other members of the Judenrat were executed at the marketplace for failing to provide a sufficient number of forced labourers (according to the Ringelblum archive);  Benno (Bernard) Kahana, Kleinmann’s deputy, was appointed head of the new Judenrat. Between December 1939 and January 1940, 6,000–7,000 Jews were deported to Rzeszow from the Warthegau and Upper Silesia, among them 1,800 Jews from Lodz and 1,224 from Kalisz.

 

There were also 630 émigrés from Germany who had arrived in 1938 - 1939. In turn, several thousand Jews, both residents of the city and refugees, left Rzeszow and made their way to Warsaw, to Soviet-occupied Poland or to other places in the Generalgouvernement. Later, only a handful managed to cross the border legally. The deadline for the exchange of refugees between Germany and the Soviet Union was set for 15 May 1940.

 

An order of the RSHA dated 25 October 1940, banned all Jewish emigration from the Generalgouvernement,

By June 1940, the number of Jews in Rzeszow had decreased to 11,800, of whom 7,800 were pre-war residents of the city. At the same time, the number of Jews in the towns and villages of the Rzeszow region were (with the number of refugees in brackets):


Blazowa – 931 (139), Czudec 428 (33), Glogow M. – 806 (87), Kolbuszowa – 1,427 (700), Lancut – 900 (502), Niebylec – 570 (20), Ranizow – 620 (63), Sedziszow – 110 (81), Sokolow M. – 1,700 (186), Strzyzow – 1,238 (174), Tyczyn – 500 (140), Zolynia – 700 (103), Lezajsk – (500).

 

On 17 February 1941, the city was renamed Reichshof. Rzeszow became home to an important factory complex for the production of aircraft engines. Resettlement of Jews to the future ghetto began from June 1941. The ghetto area was surrounded by 3 m high wooden fences and walls. Entrances and gates remained open. A new Stadtkommissar was appointed, a Nazi fanatic, Albert Pavlu, who personally killed a number of Jews even before the deportations started. In December 1941, Jews had to hand over all furs* and fur collars.

The witness Samuel Isak Wilf, testified:

"The ghetto was not established until 10 January 1942. Posters appeared, stating that within 3 to 5 days all Jews had to move into the houses reserved for the ghetto. At that time only the Jews from Rzeszow lived in the ghetto, plus about 2,000 refugees from Lodz etc. The Jews from the surrounding area were left in peace for the time being.


Originally the ghetto was big, containing about 20% of the town. Nevertheless, some houses were really crowded, with up to 20 persons in one room. Within the wooden fence around the ghetto 3 gateways were set, guarded by Jewish and Polish police. Only those with a job outside the ghetto were entitled to leave. However ... could bring in some food, so that at first we did not starve."
 

Market in Rzeszow "Reichshof"

On 17 December 1941 a decree was issued, establishing a ghetto in Rzeszow, and on 10 January 1942 the ghetto area was closed off, imprisoning approximately 12,200 Jews, more than 3,000 of them refugees and people deported from western Poland. Overcrowding, starvation and lack of hygienic facilities resulted in the inevitable epidemics, in which hundreds died. In March 1942, the Gestapo murdered residents of two houses in the ghetto.


On 30 April 1942, the Gestapo murdered another 35 people in the ghetto. They were taken from their homes and shot. On 12 May, 250 Jews from the Rzeszow prison were taken to the Nowa Wies forest, shot, and buried.


The process of concentrating the Jewish population of the region started as early as March 1941. All the Jews from small villages were ordered to move to ghettos in the nearest towns. They had to leave behind almost all their property.


Jews moving to the Tyczyn ghetto were brutally beaten; all were robbed, a number killed. On 25-27 June, all Tyczyn Jews were resettled to the Rzeszow ghetto. Again, the march was accompanied by brutality and murders. A number of Tyczyn Jews were executed at the local Jewish cemetery. Jews living near Kolbuszowa were forced into the ghetto there in autumn 1941.

This ghetto was closed in February 1942. In Sokolow Malopolski the ghetto was formed in April 1942. At the time of the ghetto's liquidation in June 1942, 3,000 lived there. During the resettlement to Rzeszow 28 persons were killed. Most of the Jews from the ghetto in Glogow Malopolski were moved to Rzeszow in early July 1942. A number were executed at the Glogow forest (Rudna Forest), situated between Rzeszow and Glogow. Jews, concentrated in the Strzyzow ghetto, were resettled to Rzeszow on 26 April and 9 June, those from Blazowa on 26 June.

By the end of June 1942, all Jews from the smaller towns of Majdan Kolbuszowski, Czudec, Niebylec, and Staniszewska, together with some from Lancut, Sedziszow Malopolski, and from small villages near Rzeszow were forced into the Rzeszow ghetto. As a result, the population of the ghetto rose to almost 23,000.
 

In June 1942, the responsibility for the entire Jewish population was transferred from the administrative authorities to the Police and SD. At the beginning of July, the Germans imposed a penalty on the Rzeszow ghetto of 1,000,000 zlotys, to be paid by its inhabitants.

The witness Samuel Isak Wilf, testified:

“Afterwards the compulsory labour regulations were tightened up. Most Jews were forced to work. Around the same time came the "contributions". First 2, then another 3, then a further 7 million zlotys, and finally the delivery of all money.
The Jews had to pay all tax arrears. Aryans who held claims against Jews were entitled to get paid without delay. Eventually the order came that all Jews from the surrounding area had to move into the town of Rzeszow. Many fled into the forests, but some 11,000 obeyed, so that the ghetto suddenly had some 24,000 inhabitants.”


Between 7 and 19 July 1942, the first deportation “Aktion” occurred. In the early morning of the 7 July, residents of the southern section of the ghetto had to gather in the Sammelplatz (the former Jewish cemetery). Here they underwent a selection. Those chosen for work, i.e. life, were given special seals on their work cards. A large detachment of police entered the ghetto. 2,000 mainly elderly and sick Jews were taken to the nearby Glogow forest, and shot there.


A group of Jews was sent to the “Flugmotorenwerk” at Lisia Gora. 4,000 Jews were marched to Staroniwa station, packed 100–120 people in each of the cattle cars and transported to Belzec, where they were gassed on arrival.

The march to the station on that day was especially brutal. People were herded, beaten with rifle butts and shot on the way, before the eyes of the local population (including German civilians, who officially protested afterwards). 236 people were shot* in the ghetto streets, 42 on the way to the station. Jews who buried the bodies at the Czekaj Jewish cemetery were also killed. Among the executioners were Pavlu and Mack. The next transport to Belzec left Staroniwa station on 10 July. After the selection at the Sammelplatz, 500 elderly people were taken to the Glogow forest for execution. Following the protests of local Germans, this time the march to the station was much less brutal.


Afterwards the Judenrat was obliged to pay for the transports. Two other transports departed from Staroniwa on 14 and 19 July. Sources differ in estimating the total number of those deported at approximately 18,000 to 21,000.

 

Cover to a post sent from the Rzeszow Judenrat

Since some 4,000 Jews were still living in the ghetto after the July deportations, it may be assumed that a figure of around 20,000 is accurate if this is to include the victims of the mass executions in the Glogow forest and those killed in the ghetto. At the time of deportations Kreishauptmann Dr Heinz Ehaus dedicated a wooden eagle, inscribed: "This eagle, the German sign of superiority and dignity, was put up to mark the liberation of the town of Reichshof of all Jews in the month of July 1942.


It was put up during the services of Sturmbannführer Dr Heinz Ehaus of the SS, first Kreishauptmann and chief of the NSDAP for the district of Reichshof." This eagle was placed in Rzeszow Castle, which housed the offices of the Kreishauptmann, a court and a prison.

The ghetto was subsequently reduced in size. At the end of July a large group of Jews from the Debica ghetto were brought to the Rzeszow Ghetto. On 7 August, a second “Aktion” took place, in the course of which approximately 1,000 women and children were taken to the Pelkinie forced-labour and transit camp near Jaroslaw in the Lvov district (there were already 10,000 Jews from Lezajsk, Lancut, Zolynia, Radymno and other places in this transit camp).


After a brief stay, they too were transported to Belzec.
 

On 25 October 1942, a group of 120 Jews from the liquidated Glogow Malopolski ghetto were sent to the Rzeszow Ghetto. A third Aktion was carried out on 15 November 1942. All Jews were gathered at the “Appellplatz” at Baldachowka Street, where a selection took place.
A further 2,000 Jews were sent to their deaths in Belzec. During the course of this “Aktion”, a large force of Security Police under the command of Paul Lehmann searched the ghetto for children. Any found were killed on the spot.

The witness Samuel Isak Wilf, testified:

“Around this time another action was planned. The Jewish employment agency had summoned all unemployed women and children unfit for work to be registered. A complete company of German police had been hiding in the agency.


The women and children were rounded up immediately, their property was taken from them and they were deported to Belzec. There were also 4 men among these people, three of whom were elderly and one a younger man named Holoschek who subsequently sent us a note from Belzec in which he wrote that he was working in hell.


At first we did not understand the message, but afterwards we heard that his job was to assist at the burning of corpses. We also heard that some of the women had to work on farms. Later we no longer received any messages. Probably all of these people were killed."


Following this last “Aktion” there were no more than 3,000 Jews left in the ghetto, which was then reduced still further in size and divided into two separate camps.

 

Jewish forced laborers from Rzeszo)

The section east of Baldachowka Street, called "Camp A", became a Jüdisches Zwangsarbeitslager (Forced-Labour Camp for Jews). "Camp B", west of Baldachowka Street, housed the families of the forced labourers. Ghetto A was subordinated to the Krakow office of SSPF Scherner, not the Rzeszow police office.


The first commandant of the camp was SS-Hauptscharführer Bacher, a sadist. Men and women were separated and the camp was organized as a concentration camp. Some of the 2,000 prisoners (those with a "W" badge) worked outside of the camp for different German Army workshops.


There was also an “Ostbahn” Group, working under a certain Bremmer (or Brehmer). Some Jews laboured in the ghetto workshops under the command of Eintracht. Bacher served as the commandant until March 1943, when, after a conflict with the local Gestapo, he was transferred to the Szebnie camp. He was replaced by SS-Hauptscharführer Kurt Schupke.


The ghetto B, or "West Ghetto" (called “Schmelzghetto” / "Melting Ghetto"), was subordinated to the Rzeszow Gestapo and the Judenrat still functioned there. Family members of Ghetto A workers lived there as well as deported newcomers. On 15 December a group of 600 Jews from the liquidated Krosno Ghetto were transported to Rzeszow and on 14 December, a group of 170 prisoners from the Dukla work camp.

A witness, Hilde Huppert, who had been deported to Rzeszow, described what she had seen in February 1943:

"I stood at the window and saw 20 miserable figures wrapped in rags crouching in the lorry. I did not understand what it meant and asked a native of Rzeszow to explain it to me. That, he said was an incident which repeated itself every six weeks. A few weeks ago these people had left Rzeszow hale and hearty. They were sent to the equipment workshop at Stalowa Wola, not far from Rzeszow, from which they returned as living corpses.


They had to work 18 hours a day under violent ill treatment on a diet on which no one could live. When I asked why they brought such sick people here, he explained that the factory only acquired healthy bodies in exchange for the expended human material."

 

The 20 people were put to bed in a room in the ghetto, but two days later:

"Towards seven o'clock 6 Gestapo men arrived and asked to see the sick workers... In the sick room they ordered the people to get up and run into the square. Whoever could not run would be killed.


They chased the poor victims out of bed with blows of the whip and forced the ones who could hardly stand on their feet to run to and fro. The executioners found it so funny that they had to stop their mouths from laughing. Then they began to shoot at the runners… As we reached the West Ghetto we stumbled into puddles of blood… We saw corpses lying in front of our houses."


On 23 March 1943, more than 20 prisoners of the Ostbahn Group were executed. Soon the whole group was dissolved. At the same time a small group of prisoners from Biesiadka camp (a lumber works) returned to the ghetto. In subsequent months most prisoners of the ZAL (Ghetto A) in Rzeszow were transferred to other camps, mostly to Szebnie near Jaslo, and to Stalowa Wola.


On 23 July 1943, when the latter camp was evacuated to KL Plaszow, there were 416 prisoners, including 50 Jews from Rzeszow. An unknown number of Jews were sent to Debie sub-camp, where most probably all were killed. 110 Rzeszow prisoners were transported to Pustkow camp and, upon its liquidation, to Auschwitz and still further to KL Mauthausen and KL Gusen.


A group of Jews from the Flugmotorenwerk at Lisia Gora, among them 30 originating from the Rzeszow Ghetto, were evacuated to Plaszow. Some 60 Jews from Huta Komorowska sub camp (a lumber works) were brought to Rzeszow and executed there. The rest of the Huta Komorowska workers were executed in the Glogow forest in the summer of 1943.
 

A line of Jews being deported from Rzeszow

On 4 September 1943, most inmates of Camp A were moved to the Szebnie forced-labour camp near Jaslo, 129 km southeast of Auschwitz. In early November, some 700 of these prisoners were taken to a forest near the village of Dobrucowa and shot.  The last major group (circa 2,800 Jews) was transferred to Auschwitz on 3 November 1943, where most of them perished. On 6 November, 500 Jews were killed in Szebnie and upon the liquidation of the camp, on 30 December 1943, the last 84 Jews were transported to Plaszow along with 1,000 Poles. Those incarcerated in Camp B in Rzeszow were transported in November to Auschwitz-Birkenau and gassed.

One of the survivors of the 6 November Massacre in Szebnie was Lotka Goldberg, who managed to reach the Rzeszow Ghetto. She was greeted by the "liquidation party", headed by the chief of the Jüdischer Ordnungsdienst (Jewish police) Gorelik and camp commandant Schupke, who said that she deserved the Iron Cross First Class for her escape.


Gorelik tried to organise escapes, but he was caught by the Gestapo, tortured and killed. Lotka Goldberg was among a group of 36 Jews, who hid in a bunker dug within the ancient tunnels of Rzeszow Old Town. Only 6 of these fugitives survived when the bunker was destroyed. Lotka Goldberg was captured in another hiding place and transported to Plaszow.

 

On 14 January 1945, she marched from Plaszow to Auschwitz, finally arriving at the KL Bergen-Belsen, where she was liberated by the British Army. By July 1944, there were only about 600 prisoners left in Camp A. A few managed to escape and hide in nearby forests until the area was liberated by the Red Army the following month. The remaining prisoners in Camp A were transferred to Auschwitz, where most of them died.
 

The last commandant of the camp Flugmotorenwerk at Lisia Gora was Georg Oester, a man noted for his previous brutal behaviour in the ghetto. As the Red Army approached in the summer of 1944, the factory was dismantled and the machinery sent to Germany. However, before the prisoners could be liberated, they were transferred to Plaszow, where they once again encountered Schupke, this time as the commandant of the camp.

After about a week they were sent to KL Flossenbürg and from there to a factory at Orbis, near the French city of Mulhouse. Because the Allies were advancing from the West, the prisoners were taken to KL Sachsenhausen, where the group was broken up and sent to various camps in Germany.


By the war's end, of the original contingent of about 600 Rzeszow Jews, only a few dozen of them had survived. Schupke escorted the last group of 500 Plaszow Jews to Auschwitz, on 17 January 1945.

The 1944 edition of Baedeker's "Generalgouvernement Guidebook" describes Rzeszow, known in the mid-19th century as "Little Jerusalem", as a city "formerly dominated by numerous Jews."


Of 15,000 Rzeszow Jews, merely 100 survived the war; in Rzeszow itself, in hiding all over Poland, and in various camps. After the war an additional 600 Rzeszow Jews returned from the Soviet Union. Almost all of them subsequently left the city and the country. Schupke, commandant of the eastern ghetto (A), later Jüdisches Zwangsarbeitslager (ZAL) and the last commandant of the Plaszow camp, was sentenced to death by the Krakow District Court, and hanged on 27 November 1948.


Most of the other defendants accused of crimes in the Rzeszow area either received modest sentences or were acquitted.

 




Photos:
Holocaust Historical Society

USHMM

Chris Webb Collection

Private Collections

Sources:

Encyclopedia of the Holocaust, Macmillan Publishing Company, New York, 1990.
The Destruction of the European Jews, by Raul Hilberg, published by Yale University Press, New Haven, 2003.

The Holocaust – The Jewish Tragedy, Sir Martin Gilbert, published by William Collins Sons & Co. Limited, London, 1986.

Holocaust Journey, by Sir Martin Gilbert, published by Weidenfeld & Nicolson, London,1997.
Documents On The Holocaust, by Yitzhak Arad, Israel Gutman and Abraham Margaliot, published by University of Nebraska Press, Lincoln and London, 1999.
The Final Solution – The Attempt to Exterminate the Jews of Europe 1939-1945, by Gerald Reitlinger, published by Jason Aronson Inc, Northvale, New Jersey and London, 1987.
Zaglada Zydow rzeszowskich – Extinction of Rzeszow Jewry, by Stanislaw Poradowski, published by Biuletyn ZIH, 1984-93.
Losy Zydów rzeszowskich 1939-1944. Kronika tamtych dni (The Fates of the Rzeszów Jews. A Chronicle of those Days), by Stanislaw Kotula, published Rzeszów 1999.
A Holocaust Memoir, by George Lucius Salton, published by The University of Wisconsin Press, Madison, 2002.
 

 

 

Copyright:  Lukasz Biedka  H.E.A.R.T 2007

 

 

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