Nazi Germany invades Poland and divides the territory.

After Warsaw fell, Poland became a vast occupied land divided into two halves.

The western part was taken by Nazi Germany, while the eastern region was controlled by the Soviet Union under a secret agreement signed earlier.

For the Polish people, the war was no longer a conflict between two nations, but the destruction of their own country.

[music] In the German controlled zone, a new administrative system was established under the name general government, general government.

Hans Frank, a loyal lawyer of Hitler, was appointed governor general.

Under his rule, the German administration began introducing the first policies to restructure civilian life, controlling the population, confiscating property, forcing polls into labor, and most notably, isolating the Jewish community.

In Berlin’s view, Poland was no longer an independent nation, but a source of labor and land to serve the German war economy.

Major cities such as Krakow, Lublin, Lods, and Warsaw were turned into administrative centers of the occupation regime.

German police and SS forces controlled every corner.

Signs written in German appeared everywhere, replacing the local language.

In Warsaw, the most densely populated center with the largest Jewish community in Europe, the German authorities quickly recognized what they called a population problem that needed to be addressed.

The presence of hundreds of thousands of Jews in a single city was seen as a social threat that had to be segregated.

And from that very notion, the plan to create a closed residential area began to take shape.

an area that would become a symbol of the organized cruelty of the Third Reich.

Establishment of the Warsaw Ghetto.

In the autumn of 1,940, [music] the German occupation authorities issued an order to relocate all Jews in the city of Warsaw into a confined area.

The order was brief, but its consequences would last for generations.

Within a few weeks, more than 400,000 people were forced to leave their homes carrying only a few kilograms of luggage.

They were moved to the old central district of Warsaw, where dilapidated buildings, narrow streets, and a lack of clean water defined the area that the Germans called the Jewish residential district Udisha von Berserk.

On the 12th of October 1940, the German authorities officially signed the decree establishing the Warsaw Ghetto.

Only a month later, the entire area was surrounded by a brick wall over 3 m high, topped with barbed wire and guarded by soldiers day and night.

By November, the blockade order was enacted.

All entrances and exits were sealed, and all trade was completely forbidden.

Any Jew who stepped outside the wall without a permit was shot on site, and any Pole who assisted them faced the same punishment.

In terms of scale, [music] the ghetto occupied less than 2.

4% of the city’s area, but contained more than 30% of Warsaw’s population.

The old apartments were overcrowded with an average of 10 people living in one small room.

The sewage system failed and food supplies were cut.

Each person was allotted 184 calories a day, less than the ration of an ordinary prisoner.

Within months, the once bustling [music] streets had turned into a maze of hunger and disease.

The Germans placed signs in German on every building and forced Jews to wear the Star of David on their sleeves for identification.

Carts carrying bodies began appearing every morning.

The air in the district was thick with smoke, waste, and sickness.

Yet inside the walls, people still tried to maintain some semblance of order.

They opened secret schools, held prayer gatherings, and occasionally smuggled food through cracks in the wall.

From the perspective of the German authorities, the Warsaw ghetto was a tool of population control.

But for those imprisoned inside, it was a city of waiting where no one knew whether death would come through hunger, disease, or the morning trains departing from Omlag Plats.

The brutality and hardship inside the ghetto.

Just a few months after being sealed off, the Warsaw Ghetto turned into a place where life survived only by instinct.

Everything inside was scarce.

Clean water, medicine, shelter, even air.

Around 7 to eight people shared a single small room, sleeping on the floor or stacked on beds.

There was no heating system, and in winter, the temperature dropped below 0° C.

Children freezing to death on the streets became a common sight.

The daily ration of 84 calories, equal to a few pieces of black bread and a bowl of thin soup, left tens of thousands exhausted.

Those who could no longer bear hunger risked sneaking outside the walls to find food.

A few survived through smuggling.

Children crawled through cracks in the wall or sewer pipes, bringing back a few potatoes or scraps of dried meat.

Many of them never returned.

Disease spread quickly.

Epidemics of typhus, [music] tuberculosis, and dissentry swept through the ghetto throughout 1,941 to 1,942.

Jewish doctors and nurses tried to set up temporary hospitals using whatever medicine remained, but it was never enough to save anyone.

From 1,940 to mid 1942, more than 83,000 people died from hunger and disease, an average of 500 per day.

Carts collecting bodies moved along the streets each morning covered with thin blankets.

Even in those conditions, the ghetto developed a strange kind of existence of its own.

Some small workshops and factories were set up to supply goods for the German army.

Skilled workers were kept alive to labor.

In return, they received slightly larger rations.

An underground economy emerged.

Those with money could buy food, while the poor could only wait for their turn on the collection carts.

The cruelty did not come only from hunger.

SS units and German police regularly entered to inspect, assault residents, and ransack homes.

They took everything of value, gold, clothing, watches, sometimes even children.

The sound of knocking on doors at night became the terror of the entire ghetto.

By the end of 1,941, everyone understood that they were imprisoned not to live, but to wait for the day they would be taken away.

Yet, no one knew where away meant.

There were only sealed trains, rumors, and the silence of those who never came back.

The Warsaw Ghetto, once called a special residential district, had become a massive grave in the heart of the Polish capital.

Summer 194 two action gross.

On the morning of the 22nd of July 1942, the Warsaw ghetto awoke to the echo of loudspeakers.

Across the streets, [music] speakers mounted on the walls broadcast an announcement in German and Polish.

All Jews without labor certificates will be relocated to the east for work.

The short sentence, which sounded like an ordinary administrative order, marked the beginning of one of the largest extermination campaigns in European history.

No one understood what the east meant.

Only a few days later did people realize that it was not a place of labor, but the destination of trains that would never return Trebinka.

The operation came action war began on a massive scale.

Every day, units of the SS, Gestapo, German Order police, and auxiliary forces from Latvia and Ukraine [music] surrounded one neighborhood after another in the ghetto.

Residents were forced out of their homes and gathered at the Omlag Plat station, the freight depot on the northern edge of the ghetto, where trains waited.

They were ordered to carry no more than 15 kg of luggage, and to surrender all money, jewelry, and documents.

Women, the elderly, children, and the sick were separated first.

Some were loaded onto trucks.

Others were shot on the spot if they could not move quickly.

Survivors recalled that every morning the station courtyard was packed with people, the sounds of crying, shouting, and gunfire mixing with smoke and coal dust.

Many desperate people tried to hide in basements, sewers, or on rooftops, but were discovered when the SS began searching every room, every storage space, and dealt with them immediately.

In less than 2 months, more than 265,000 Warsaw Jews were loaded onto trains bound for the Trebinka extermination center, where they vanished without a trace.

Other records reported about 35,000 people killed inside the ghetto during the so-called cleansing operations.

Some buildings were turned into temporary collection points where those captured waited for the next transport.

Amid the tragedy, Adam Cherniaku, chairman of the Jewish Council in Warsaw, Judenraat, received orders from the German authorities to prepare daily lists of those to be deported.

He understood all too well what this order meant.

On July 23, he took poison and ended his life, leaving behind a brief note.

[music] They want me to kill my own children.

Chernyakov’s death marked the end of the last illusion of leniency.

After that, the ghetto sank into an eerie silence.

The streets that had once been crowded were now filled only with the footsteps of SS patrols and the sounds of doors being broken open.

On the walls, German signs replaced the old Polish street names, signaling that life in the ghetto had officially ended.

By midepptember 1942, the operation was complete.

From more than 450,000 original inhabitants, only about 50,000 remained alive.

They were tailor, carpenters, and mechanics kept in labor workshops serving the German army or those hiding in basement, garbage pits, and deep underground sewers.

No one believed in the east anymore.

The trains from Plats never returned.

There was no longer any faith in work for survival.

Silence enveloped the ghetto, heavier than the sound of bombs or gunfire.

And within that silence, something else began to take form.

The will to resist, quiet, scattered, but impossible to extinguish.

From the remaining ruins, the survivors began to prepare for what no one expected.

To fight, not for life, but for dignity.

January 1,943.

After the summer deportation campaign of 1,942, the Warsaw Ghetto was no longer a place of life, but a barren land with only a few tens of thousands of people left.

These people no longer held the illusion that labor would save their lives.

They understood that every train leaving the Unlagplat station had only one destination.

Inside the bombed buildings and the deep underground shelters, [music] a new movement was quietly forming.

The remaining young people in the ghetto, mostly former students, craftsmen, and survivors of the deportation campaign, began to unite.

They dug tunnels, stockpiled ammunition, hid pistols, and learned how to make gasoline bombs from empty liquor bottles.

They knew very well they could not win, but they did not want to die in silence.

Beneath the rubble and waste, an underground resistance network was reorganized named the Jewish combat organization Jaddowska organiza Bojoua Roi led by Morai Analevich.

On the 18th of January 1943, the Germans launched a new deportation.

A column of SS vehicles entered the ghetto supported by order police and Latvian soldiers.

The goal was to [music] clean up the remaining population, but as they advanced deeper into the streets, gunfire suddenly erupted from the ruined buildings.

Job fighters hiding on the upper floors and rooftops opened fire on the SS formation.

German soldiers fell amid the chaos.

This was the first time during the entire occupation that the Jews of Warsaw resisted in an organized armed way.

In the following days, small resistance groups continuously ambushed.

They attacked and then disappeared through narrow alleys, underground tunnels, and sewer lines that connected the ghetto.

The SS, accustomed to easy repression, suddenly fell into a situation beyond control.

Many patrols were misled, prisoner transport vehicles were burned, and German units were forced to withdraw from several streets.

The battle lasted 4 days until the Germans regrouped and tightened the siege.

More than 5,000 Jews were captured, most of them civilians who did not fight.

However, what remained after the assault was not only the number of casualties, it was a change in the mindset of both sides.

For the Nazis, this resistance was a warning that the Jewish question in Warsaw was no longer simple.

They realized that the liquidation of the ghetto would have to be carried out on a truly military scale rather than merely a police operation.

For those who remained alive, fear was replaced by determination.

They knew death was certain, but at least they could choose how to face it.

In the following months, preparations intensified.

New tunnels were dug, linking the destroyed districts.

Weapons were hidden in walls, ceilings, under wooden floors, and even inside empty coffins.

Combat groups were secretly trained, each person learning how to throw grenades, use pistols, [music] and coordinate in confined spaces.

When spring 1,943 arrived, the Warsaw Ghetto was no longer a sealed residential area, but had become an underground fortress.

[music] In the rubble and darkness, thousands of people were preparing for their final battle.

A battle not meant to achieve victory, but to preserve human dignity amid the most inhuman era in history.

The Warsaw Ghetto Uprising [music] 1 1941 943 1651943.

On the morning of the 19th of April 1943, on the very day of the Jewish Passover, German forces surrounded the entire ghetto.

They brought artillery, armored vehicles, and fully equipped SS troops.

Orders were issued from Berlin, liquidate the entire Jewish district of Warsaw.

But when the steel gates opened once again, they did not find a crowd of weak people, but a wellorganized resistance force.

Gunmen hidden on the rooftops fired the first shots.

German soldiers fell in the middle of the streets they thought had already been subdued.

Fighting inside the ghetto erupted fiercely.

The Jewish combat organization Robelive and the Jewish military union Robelive divided the districts among themselves, fighting house to house.

They had about 1,000 fighters.

only a few hundred guns, Molotov cocktails, [music] and homemade grenades.

In the first days, German forces suffered unexpected losses.

Many patrol units were ambushed in narrow alleys, and tanks were set ablaze by Molotovs.

Reports sent to Berlin showed resistance far stronger than anyone had predicted.

General Ferdinand von Samarn Frankeng, the initial commander, was deemed a failure and replaced after only a few days.

Hinrich Himmler immediately appointed Jurgen Stroop, a veteran SS officer who had served in campaigns in Western Europe as the SS and police commander of the Warsaw district.

Stroop took the assignment with one clear goal, to completely erase the Jewish district.

Under his command were more than 2,000 SS soldiers, order police and auxiliary forces from Latvia and Ukraine.

Stroop changed tactics.

Instead of direct assaults, he ordered each block to be set on fire, every shelter demolished, and smoke and gas pumped into tunnels to force those hiding underground to surface.

One district after another disappeared in flames.

Anyone who ran out was captured or shot on the spot.

By early May, the ghetto was no longer a city.

It was a burning ruin.

On May 8th, SS forces discovered the Sob command bunker at 18 mi was street.

Morai Anovich, the leader of the uprising, along with most of the command staff, chose to end their lives rather than surrender.

The resistance gradually faded, but small groups continued fighting for many more days.

On the 16th of May 1943, Stroop ordered the great synagogue of Warsaw to be blown up as a symbolic act marking the end of the campaign.

He sent a report to Berlin containing only one sentence.

The former Jewish district of Warsaw no longer exists.

The campaign lasted nearly a month, leaving 7,000 dead in combat or suffocation, and more than 42,000 captured and deported to the forced labor camps of Ponyoa, Troniki, and Majdanek.

Most of them did not survive afterward.

The Warsaw Ghetto, which once held more than 450,000 people, was now nothing but rubble.

Yet the uprising, though a military failure, became the first and largest act of Jewish resistance against Nazi Germany.

It proved that even in despair, human beings could still choose to stand upright and face the destroyer.

Postwar trial and sentence.

When the war ended in 1945, Jurgen Stro was no longer the powerful SS general he once was.

He was captured in Bavaria by the United States Army during the operation to hunt down the remnants of Nazi Germany.

At first, Stroop was not immediately tried, but was detained in a prisoner of war camp and used as a witness at the Nuremberg trials, where he provided documents about the internal structure of the SS.

To the American investigators, Stroop appeared cooperative, cold, and completely unrepentant.

He saw himself as a soldier who was merely following orders.

However, the very file Stroop had written by his own hand, the Stroop report, soon became the primary evidence against him.

In it, [music] he described in detail the entire campaign to destroy the Warsaw Ghetto, every unit involved, every building destroyed, and the number of people eliminated.

[music] The report included dozens of photographs taken by German soldiers themselves documenting the ruins and the surrender of the survivors.

It was presented to the court as one of the most brutal and chilling war crime documents ever written.

In 1947, the United States decided to extradite Stroop to Poland for a separate trial concerning his crimes in Warsaw.

He was imprisoned in Mockatu prison, the same place where many Polish resistance fighters had been held during the occupation.

The trial began in 1951 at the Warsaw District Court [music] with two main defendants, Jurgen Strup, who commanded the campaign to destroy the ghetto, and France Conrad, the officer responsible for confiscating Jewish property.

The Polish court charged both men with crimes against humanity and war crimes, with Stroop held directly responsible for the deaths of tens of thousands of innocent civilians.

Dozens of witnesses, including survivors from the ghetto, testified in court.

Some recognized Stroop in the photographs from his own Stroop report, which bore his signature on every page.

Even when faced with irrefutable evidence, Stroop stubbornly insisted that he had only carried out his duty and that the campaign had been conducted according to military regulations.

On the 23rd of July 1951, the court sentenced both Stroop and France Conrad to death.

Both appealed, but their petitions were denied.

On the 6th of March 1952, the sentence was carried out at Mokotov prison in the very city where they had once spread terror.

Stroop was brought to the gallows together with Conrad on a cold morning in the heavy silence of the prison.

Their deaths closed a dark chapter, but also marked a moment of justice when the man who once declared that the Warsaw Ghetto no longer existed paid the ultimate price in that very city.

The Stroop Report, the document he had once written with pride as a record of his achievement, became undeniable evidence of Nazi crimes.

It is preserved today in the German Federal Archives and the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum.

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