Ghetto: Vilna

Genia Greener
Selma Rich
“The Germans established two ghettos - ghetto # 1 and ghetto # 2 - in Vilna in early September 1941. Jews considered incapable of work were concentrated in ghetto # 2. In October 1941, German Einsatzgruppe detachments and Lithuanian auxiliaries destroyed ghetto # 2, killing the ghetto population in Ponary. Lukiszki Prison served as a collection center for Jews who were to be taken to Ponary and shot. By the end of 1941, the Einsatzgruppen had killed about 40,000 Jews in Ponary. 
 
“The Jews in ghetto # 1 were forced to work in factories or in construction projects outside the ghetto. Some Jews were sent to labor camps in the Vilna region. In periodic killing operations, most of the ghetto's inhabitants were massacred at Ponary. From the spring of 1942 until the spring of 1943, there were no mass killing operations in Vilna. The Germans renewed the killings during the final liquidation of ghetto # 1 in late September 1943. Children, the elderly, and the sick were sent to the Sobibor extermination camp or were shot at Ponary. The surviving men were sent to labor camps in Estonia, while the women were sent to labor camps in Latvia.” 
 
“The Vilna ghetto had a significant Jewish resistance movement. A group of Jewish partisans known as the United Partisan Organization (Fareynegte Partizaner Organizatsye; FPO) was formed in 1942 and operated within the ghetto. The resistance created hiding places for weapons and prepared to fight the Germans. In early September 1943, realizing that the Germans intended the final destruction of the ghetto, resistance members skirmished with the Germans, who had entered the ghetto to begin the deportations. The Jewish council, however, agreed to cooperate in the deportations of Jews from the ghetto, hoping to minimize bloodshed. Consequently, the FPO decided to flee to the nearby forests to fight the Germans. Some ghetto fighters escaped the final destruction of the ghetto, leaving through the sewers to join partisans in the Rudninkai and Naroch forests outside the city. 
 
“In September 1943, in an attempt to destroy the evidence of the killing of Jews at Ponary, the Germans forced detachments of Jewish laborers to open the mass graves and burn the corpses. Jews from nearby labor camps continued to be killed at Ponary. 
During the German occupation, tens of thousands of Jews from Vilna and the surrounding area, as well as Soviet prisoners of war and others suspected of opposing the Germans, were massacred at Ponary. Soviet forces liberated Vilna in July 1944. “

United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. “Vilna.” Holocaust Encyclopedia. http://www.ushmm.org/wlc/en/article.php?ModuleId=10005173
Accessed on 6/12/11.”

A group of Jewish partisans in the Rudniki forest, near Vilna, between 1942 and 1944.
 
United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. Photo Archives.
http://www.ushmm.org/wlc/en/media_ph.php?ModuleId=10005173&MediaId=541
Accessed on 6/12/11.


Located on Ulica Stara (Old Street), outside the Vilna ghetto, this building was used as a safe house by the ghetto resistance. Vilna, after July 1944.
 
United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. Photo Archives.
http://www.ushmm.org/wlc/en/media_ph.php?ModuleId=10005173&MediaId=503
Accessed on 6/12/11.
 
 
Abba Kovner, commander of Vilna ghetto's United Partisan Organization (FPO), poses shortly after liberation. After July 13, 1944
 
United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. Photo Archives.
http://www.ushmm.org/wlc/en/media_ph.php?ModuleId=10005173&MediaId=893
Accessed on 6/12/11.
 
 
Vilna, Poland, People walking in a ghetto street.
 
Yad Vashem. Photo Archives. 
Accessed on 6/12/11.
 
Vilna, A photograph of the sewage opening through which the partisans and the undergroun​d fighters from the Vilna Ghetto went out to the Aryan side.
 
Yad Vashem. Photo Archives. 
Accessed on 6/12/11.

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