Sunday, January 14, 2024

former Warsaw Ghetto and Trail of the Jewish Monuments: Day 12

 

Standing on a remnant of the former wall of the Warsaw Ghetto

Honor to the heroes of the Warsaw Ghetto

The 1940s valiant residents of Warsaw were with us in spirit today. As we trudged across the soggy city I could feel their resolve to try to survive, to try to prevail, to know that "whoever fights for his life has a chance of surviving."

We learned that the Warsaw Ghetto was actually a Large ghetto and a Small ghetto. The area of the ghetto was irregular in shape and sometimes a building wall was utilized as part of the ghetto wall. We walked through the Small Ghetto for about an hour and then took transit up to the Large Ghetto; it was a massive space and our cold and damp feet were nothing in comparison to what inconveniences and discomforts the ghetto denizens faced. Truly, the juxtaposition was powerful.


The Nozyk Synagogue (yellow building) is the only pre-WWII surviving Jewish house of prayer in Warsaw. It was built at the end of the 1800s and restored after the war. 

Abandoned bombed out buildings from World War II

Some facades of bombed buildings have been rebuilt to replicate the original designs.


This dilapidated building (center) is the former Bersohn and Bauman Children's Hospital. The physician known as Janusz Korczak (Henryk Goldszmidt) worked here; view yesterday's post for more on his bravery. Since it was reported as a medical property, it was not destroyed during World War II. Starting next year it will house the Warsaw Ghetto Museum.  To learn more about that, visit https://1943.pl/

Through this yard you can see another portion of the former ghetto wall.



More photos of the ghetto wall fragments:




Map of small and large ghetto and commemoration plaque.

We continued to the point of deportation of the ghetto Jews. As our guide pointed out, from where the Children's Hospital was to here was a very long walk and after a time people knew that "deportation" meant death at Treblinka. 

This is the Umschlagplatz, the place of deportation.



Only first names are engraved on this wall of memory. Any one might be caught and taken to Treblinka, the hatred was that thick. Yet, any person and all persons are valuable humans. And so we can see ourselves, see our relatives, neighbors, all in this memorial. 


Outside the POLIN Museum, the Museum of the History of Polish Jews, this monument stands. It is called the Monument to the Ghetto Heroes.  We understand after our intense two weeks that so many became victims of the Nazi hatred, and living and dying were decisions made by others. Humans eradicating humanity. And so whether one was killed in a death camp, imprisoned in a concentration camp, or shot on a street, they are all heroes. The ghetto heroes who were gathered, given too few rations, stripped of their possessions, and exterminated will forever walk with the people who come here to learn about them and give them respect.



Inside this hands-on museum we spent a few hours making our final lesson, an exploration of a thousand years of Jews in Poland. We realize there are many moments and many opportunities that can make or break a people and a nation. We leave here considering our brothers and sisters around the world with new respect and new hopes for peace.




This is a photo image of the rubble that remained after the Warsaw Ghetto was destroyed. Barren. Empty. Hurting. With great respect for the memories of the devastating times, Warsaw has been rebuilt. The bricks, the buildings, the parks contain the breath of the heroes. May we carry it forward.

"Nothing. Absolutely nothing remains..."

🥀


former Warsaw Ghetto and Trail of the Jewish Monuments: Day 12

  Standing on a remnant of the former wall of the Warsaw Ghetto Honor to the heroes of the Warsaw Ghetto The 1940s valiant residents of Wars...