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In 1940 nearly
500,000 Polish Jews were herded into a sealed off part of Warsaw
by the real rulers of occupied Poland - the German Police and
SS. The inhabitants of the Ghetto existed under conditions of
indescribable squalor, with hunger and disease taking their
daily toll.
In 1942 the SS
commenced their programme of "Resettlement of the Warsaw
Jews to the work camps in the East". By the end of 1942
there were only about 70,000 left in the Ghetto.
On obtaining
convincing evidence from the Polish Underground that
deportations were in fact to the death camps, the Jewish Combat
Organisation (ZOB - Zydowska Organizacja Bojowa) decided to put
up a fight against the SS and Police attempting to liquidate the
Ghetto.

Q.: Did Warsaw
Ghetto Fights have any chance of success?
A.: Not in a
military sense. It was a heroic act of defiance but in essence a
suicidal one. This was a situation frequently encountered in
Nazi occupied Poland: when facing certain death many members of
the resistance opted for dying in combat. In the words of one of
the leaders of the uprising, Marek Edelman: "The uprising
was doomed to fail. It was more a symbolic gesture to make the
world recognise us." (1)
Q.: The
Polish Nation did not rise to help the Ghetto Fighters. Why?
A.: A national
uprising is only possible when a liberating army is approaching
the site of the intended armed action (and even then not always
so, as exemplified by the fiasco of the Warsaw Uprising of
1944!). Under any other circumstances it would amount to a
futile and costly gesture. It must also be remembered that the
Poles themselves were under occupation, with major restrictions
put up on them by the enemy occupiers.
Q.: Was the Warsaw
Garrison of the Home Army, consisting at the time of several
thousand members, capable of offering help to the Ghetto
Fighters?
A.: A military
intervention was not possible for reasons stated in the answer
to the previous question, but also because at the end 1942 and
at the beginning of 1943 the Warsaw Home Army Garrison was
virtually unarmed.
Q.: How can a
resistance organization be of any use if it is not armed?
A.:The Partisan
Units of the Home Army operating in the forests of Eastern
Poland were reasonably well armed, albeit with light weapons
only. The units in large cities, such as Warsaw, were preparing
for possible future national uprising. For their weapon training
frequently the same single pistol, one rifle or one submachine
gun was used to train dozens or even hundreds of soldiers. There
were only few weapons available. One small unit used for special
armed actions was well equipped with weapons, but many thousands
remained unarmed. It was envisaged that when the time for an
uprising came, weapons would be obtained from parachute drops by
the allies.
Q.:Could the
Warsaw Home Army help the Ghetto Fighters in any other way
A.:Yes, by
supplying them with weapons. However there were severe
limitations to this course of action. To quote Marek Edelman
again: "The resistance movement of the Poles was just
beginning at the time (1942). There was nothing
unusual in the fact that our efforts to obtain arms and
ammunition ...encountered major difficulties." (2)
Q.: Did the Home
Army supply the Ghetto Fighters with weapons?
A.:There was a reluctance by GHQ Home Army to provide arms to the
Warsaw Ghetto due to the fact that there were so few arms, and
that providing the Ghetto from the meagre supplies would
diminish further the armed potential of the Home Army without
enabling the Jewish insurgents to be successful.
An accurate picture can be obtained from someone who was there
and was one of the leaders. Marek Edelman states:" At the
end of December (1942) we received our first transport of
weapons from the Home Army. It wasn’t much - there were only
ten pistols in the whole transport - but it enabled us to
prepare for our first major action". (3)
"At the end of January (1943) we received 50 larger pistols
and 55 hand grenades from the Home Army Command". (4)
"By now (March 1943) every
partisan was equipped, on average, with one pistol (and ten to
fifteen rounds for it) four or five hand grenades, four or fife
Molotov cocktails. Two or three rifles were assigned to each ‘area’.
There was just one machine gun in the entire Ghetto". (5)
Apart from help given to the Jewish Combat Organisation (ZOB)
by the Home Army, another Warsaw Ghetto resistance group, The
Jewish Military Union (ZZW), obtained supplies of arms,
ammunition and explosives from two Polish organisations linked
to the Home Army: the Security Corps (KB) and the Polish People’s
Independence Action (PLAN). Some supplies were also sent by the
communist People’s Guard (GL).
Q.: Was this help
effective?
A.: The Ghetto
Fighters certainly needed more weapons and ammunition. However
taking into account scarcity of weapons in the Home Army and the
great difficulties and danger involved in transporting them
through Warsaw and into the Ghetto (by then completely sealed
off by German Police and their Lithuanian auxiliaries) the
efforts of the Home Army to help the Jewish insurgents should be
regarded as creditable. The effectiveness of this help was
summarized by M. Edelman: "… be German casualties: more
than one thousand were killed or wounded and tremendous material
losses were suffered by the German war production enterprises
that were set on fire and destroyed by the Jewish Resistance
Organization". (6)
Although theirs was in the main a lone fight, the Ghetto
insurgents were given help, perhaps of a more symbolic nature,
through several combat actions at the Ghetto during the Uprising
initiated by the Home Army and Peoples’ Guard. Both of these
organisations eventually undertook several successful rescue
missions of the surviving Ghetto fighters.
In the past there have been conflicting reports
of the extent of help given to the Jewish insurgents by the Home
Army. Marek Edelman’s account stands out as factual and
objective and should be regarded as reliable.

Footnotes:
1. Marek Edelman, The The Ghetto Fights,
Bookmark, London 1990, p. 28
2. Ibid.
3. Ibid. p. 69
4. Ibid. p. 71
5. Ibid. pp. 73-74
6. Ibid. p. 94
Andrzej
Slawinski, London |