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词条 Białystok Ghetto uprising
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  1. Timeline

  2. Notes and references

  3. Books

{{Infobox military conflict
| conflict = Białystok Ghetto uprising
| partof = World War II and the Holocaust
| image =
| caption = Białystok ghetto, 1941–43. The area of the Uprising marked in brown, with top left-hand arrow pointing to the breakout area
| date = 16 - 20 August 1943
| place = Białystok Ghetto, Nazi occupied Poland
| coordinates =
| result = Uprising defeated
| combatant1 = {{plainlist |
  • {{flag|Nazi Germany|name=Germany}}
  • Gestapo, Waffen-SS,

}}
| combatant2 = {{plainlist |
  • Jewish resistance
  • Anti-Fascist Military Organisation

}}
| commander1 = Odilo Globocnik
| commander2 = {{plainlist |
  • Mordechai Tenenbaum{{KIA}}
  • Daniel Moszkowicz

}}
| strength1 =
| strength2 = 300 to 500
| casualties1 = 9 Germans Wounded[1]
| casualties2 = 11,200 Deported to KZ camps
| notes = Several dozen to a few hundred reported to have escaped Ghetto to join partisans
}}

The Białystok Ghetto uprising was an insurrection in the Jewish Białystok Ghetto against the Nazi German occupation authorities during World War II. The uprising was launched on the night of August 16, 1943 and was the second-largest ghetto uprising organized in Nazi-occupied Poland after the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising of April–May 1943.[2] It was led by the Anti-Fascist Military Organisation (Antyfaszystowska Organizacja Bojowa), a branch of the Warsaw Anti-Fascist Bloc.[3]

The revolt began upon the German announcement of mass deportations from the Ghetto. The main objective was to break the German siege and allow the maximum number of Jews to escape into the neighboring Knyszyn (Knyszyński) Forest. A group of about 300 to 500 insurgents armed with 25 rifles and 100 pistols as well as home-made Molotov cocktails for grenades, attacked the overwhelming German force with a great loss of life. Leaders of the uprising committed suicide. Several dozen combatants managed to break through and run into the Knyszyn Forest where they joined other guerrilla groups.[2][3]

Timeline

The Białystok Ghetto was set up by Nazi Germany in occupied Poland soon after the German invasion of the Soviet Union. In February 1943, the first wave of mass deportations to Treblinka extermination camp took place,[6] organized during country-wide Aktion Reinhard.[4] The final liquidation of the Ghetto was attempted on August 16, 1943 by regiments of the German SS reinforced by Ukrainian, Belarusian, and Latvian auxiliaries ("Hiwis"),[6] known as the "Trawniki men" .[5] During the night of August 16, 1943, several hundred Polish Jews started an armed uprising against the troops carrying out liquidation of the Ghetto.[6] The guerillas led by Mordechaj Tenenbaum and Daniel Moszkowicz were armed with only one machine gun, rifles, several dozen pistols, Molotov cocktails and bottles filled with acid. As with the earlier Warsaw Ghetto Uprising extinguished in May 1943, the Białystok uprising had no chances for military success. However, it was seen as a way to die in combat rather than in German camps. A Betar youth commander was Yitzhak Fleischer,[7] also spelled Fleisher,[8] or Berl Fleischer according to different source.[9]

The fights in isolated pockets of resistance lasted for several days, but the defence was broken almost instantly with a tank sent into the ghetto by SS Gruppenfuhrer Odilo Globocnik.[8] German soldiers set fire to the area. The commanders of the struggle committed suicide after their bunkers ran out of ammunition. In spite of the insurgency, the planned deportations to concentration and extermination camps went ahead on August 17, 1943 without any delay.[8] Approximately 10,000 Jews were led to the Holocaust trains and sent to camps in Treblinka, Majdanek and Auschwitz.[2] A transport of 1,200 children were sent to Theresienstadt concentration camp and later to Auschwitz.

Several dozen guerillas managed to break through to the forests surrounding Białystok where they joined the partisan units of Armia Krajowa and other organisations and survived the war. It is estimated that out of almost 60,000 Jews who lived in Białystok before World War II, only several hundred survived the Holocaust.

Notes and references

1. ^[Sara Bender "The Jews of Bialystok During World War II...pp.262-263]
2. ^{{cite web | url=http://www.sztetl.org.pl/en/cms/news/711,the-anniversary-of-the-uprising-in-bialystok-ghetto/ | title=The anniversary of the uprising in Bialystok ghetto | publisher=Museum of the History of Polish Jews | work=Virtual Shtetl | accessdate=April 8, 2012}}
3. ^{{cite web | url=http://www.sztetl.org.pl/en/article/bialystok/5,history/?action=view&page=8 | title=Białystok ghetto resistance. Part of: History of Jewish community in Białystok | publisher=Museum of the History of Polish Jews | work=Virtual Shtetl | accessdate=April 8, 2012}}
4. ^The Black Book of Russian Jewry .p.202 reports 1 German killed 4 February 1943
5. ^{{cite web | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=NBbnrEMswbUC&lpg=PA217&dq=Trawniki&pg=PA217#v=onepage&q=Trawniki&f=false | title=Ukrainian Collaboration | publisher=McFarland | work=Poland's Holocaust | year=2006 | accessdate=2013-04-30 | author=Tadeusz Piotrowski | page=217 | isbn=0786429135}}
6. ^{{cite web | url=http://www.zchor.org/bialystok/testimony.htm | title=Testimony of Dr. Szymon Datner | work=Walka i Zaglada Bialostockiego Ghetta | date=December 1945 | accessdate=July 20, 2011 | author=Translated from Polish to Hebrew by Tzipora Eker-Survitz. Translated from Hebrew to English by Bella Bryks-Klein and edited by Ada Holtzman, Tel Aviv – September 2010}}
7. ^{{cite web | url=http://iis.infocenters.co.il/gfh/notebook.asp?lang=ENG&dlang=ENG&module=search&page=list&rsvr=1¶m=%3Cuppernav%3Ecomplex%3C/%3E%3Cnob%3E1%3C/%3E%3Crsvr_ser%3E@@15@@1%3C/%3E%3Cdlang%3EENG%3C/%3E%3Csearch_type%3Ecomplex%3C/%3E%3Ctimeline%3E2%3C/%3E%3Cnrsvr%3EY%3C/%3E%3Csort%3E!35;COMPNO%3C/%3E%3Cdispq%3Ez1zBrief%20Description:%20z3zBetar,%20Word%20stem%20%20z1zData%20Banks:%20z3z%20Albums%20Section,%20Photo%20Archive%3C/%3E%3Cquery_name%3Eidh-appl1_1164_166515%3C/%3E%3Cquantity%3E20%3C/%3E%3Cstart_entry%3E1%3C/%3E%3Cnum_of_items%3E133%3C/%3E%3Cquery_index%3E@INVENTDES%3C/%3E%3Cthumb%3E0%3C/%3E%3Csmode%3Edts%3C/%3E%3Cbook_id%3E33841%3C/%3E%3Cview%3Erecords%3C/%3E%3Cmainimage%3Emultimedia/GFH/0000035078/0000035078_1_web.jpg%3C/%3E%3Cwords%3Ebetar@@n%3C/%3E¶m2=%3Csearch_type%3Ecomplex%3C/%3E%3Cnum_fields%3E9%3C/%3E%3Cnvf%3E9%3C/%3E%3Cnor%3E17%3C/%3E%3Cnvr%3E10%3C/%3E%3Cnob%3E0%3C/%3E&site=gfh | title=Yitzhak Fleischer, commander of Betar fighters in the Bialystok ghetto uprising | work=Ghetto Fighters House Archives | accessdate=April 8, 2012}}
8. ^{{cite book | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=DSkendQVMbcC&printsec=frontcover#v=onepage&q=Fleisher&f=false | title=The Jews of Bialystok During World War II and the Holocaust | publisher=UPNE | work=The End of the Ghetto | date=2008 | accessdate=19 March 2015 | author=Sara Bender | pages=253–263 | format=Google Books preview | ISBN=1584657294}}
9. ^{{cite book | url=https://books.google.ca/books?id=m-q2qdBzfowC&printsec=frontcover#v=onepage&q=Berl%20Fleischer&f=false | title=Poland's Ghettos at War | publisher=Twayne Publishers | work=Google Book preview | date=1970 | accessdate=19 March 2015 | author=Alfred Katz | pages=90 | format=Library of Congress: 78-120535 | quote=In the Bialystok Ghetto}}
10. ^{{cite web |title=Pamięć najlepszym świadectwem |trans-title=Memory is the best proof |publisher=Fakty Białystok |date=1 October 2013 |author=Radek Puśko |url=http://fakty.bialystok.pl/artykul/pamiec-najlepszym-swiadectwem/66675 |id=Sources: Andrzej Lechowski, Ewa Rogalewska, Jerzy Antoniewicz, Adam Dobroński}}

Books

  • B. Mark, „Ruch oporu w getcie białostockim. Samoobrona-zagłada-powstanie”, Warszawa 1952.
  • „Obozy hitlerowskie na ziemiach polskich 1939 – 1945. Informator encyklopedyczny.”, Warszawa 1979 r.
{{Holocaust Poland}}{{Polish uprisings}}{{Polish wars and conflicts}}{{DEFAULTSORT:Bialystok Ghetto Uprising}}

7 : Białystok Ghetto|Conflicts in 1943|Ghetto uprisings|Military history of Poland during World War II|Uprisings of Poland|1943 in Poland|The Holocaust in Poland

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