Everything Everywhere Daily: History, Science, Geography & More - The Warsaw Ghetto Uprising
Episode Date: January 3, 2026In 1943, one of the most notable acts of Jewish resistance during World War II took place. For nearly one month, residents of the Warsaw Ghetto fought against Nazi soldiers who were attempting to tra...nsport the residents to concentration camps. The Warsaw Ghetto Uprising, the largest single Jewish Revolt during the war, was well-organized, hard-fought, and a symbol of Jewish resilience. Learn about the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising and how it happened on this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily. Sponsors Quince Go to quince.com/daily for 365-day returns, plus free shipping on your order! Mint Mobile Get your 3-month Unlimited wireless plan for just 15 bucks a month at mintmobile.com/eed Chubbies Get 20% off your purchase at Chubbies with the promo code DAILY at checkout! Aura Frames Exclusive $35 off Carver Mat at https://on.auraframes.com/DAILY. Promo Code DAILY DripDrop Go to dripdrop.com and use promo code EVERYTHING for 20% off your first order. Uncommon Goods Go to uncommongoods.com/DAILY for 15% off! Subscribe to the podcast! https://everything-everywhere.com/everything-everywhere-daily-podcast/ -------------------------------- Executive Producer: Charles Daniel Associate Producers: Austin Oetken & Cameron Kieffer Become a supporter on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/everythingeverywhere Discord Server: https://discord.gg/UkRUJFh Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/everythingeverywhere/ Facebook Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/everythingeverywheredaily Twitter: https://twitter.com/everywheretrip Website: https://everything-everywhere.com/ Disce aliquid novi cotidie Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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In 1943, one of the most notable acts of Jewish resistance during World War II took place.
For nearly one month, residents of the Warsaw Ghetto fought against Nazi soldiers
who were attempting to transport the residents to concentration camps.
The Warsaw Ghetto Uprising, the largest single Jewish revolt during the war,
was well organized, hard fought, and became a symbol of Jewish resistance.
Learn more about the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising and how it happened on this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily.
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Before the start of World War II, Poland was a newly independent, diverse state known as the Second Polish Republic.
The country was reformed in 1918 during the interwar period, combining areas previously under Russian, German, and Austro-Hungarian control.
This change was required by the Treaty of Versailles after World War I.
One third of the residents of the new Polish Republic identified as Jewish, German, Ukrainian, Belarusian, or Lithuanian.
minorities in Poland were alienated. Ethnic tensions were high. Germans were considered disloyal.
Ukrainians resented Polinization and Jews faced anti-Semitism.
Poland had a population of 35 million people and a very weak industrial base. This weakness
worried many Polish leaders, because the nation was sandwiched between the Soviet Union and Nazi Germany,
both of whom were aggressive foreign powers. These fears were realized when Germany invaded Poland
on September 1st, 1939, followed by the Soviet Union on September 17th.
These combined forces quickly defeated Poland in just 35 days, splitting the country.
Germany controlled the West, including Warsaw, and the Soviets held the east until 1941
and the start of Operation Barbarossa.
As covered in a previous episode, the Nazi invasion of Poland was motivated by the policy of
Lieben's realm, meaning living space, aimed at expanding the German population.
However, acquiring new territory meant in,
inheriting its non-German population.
The Nazi takeover of Poland added three million Jews to its control, which was a problem
for an anti-Semitic regime.
When the Nazis took over, they quickly enacted anti-Semitic policies.
Jews had to wear armbands with a blue star.
Jewish schools closed, properties were confiscated, and they were forced into manual labor.
Gettos were formed by the Order of Reinhard Heinrich, a high-ranking Nazi official,
and one of the architects of the final solution.
The Nazis ordered all Jews to be rounded up and brought to cities in large towns on or near railway lines.
As there were no instructions for where the relocated Jews would live, Jewish councils were created.
These councils, led by locally influential Jews willing to cooperate with Nazis,
worked on practical solutions to these issues.
Each community addressed its problems in ways unique to its own situation.
The first ghetto was opened on October 8, 1939, in the Polish city of Pell.
Piotrachakov, but over the next two years, hundreds of ghettos were established throughout Poland.
A ghetto was simply a forcefully segregated location where the Nazis held the Jewish population.
The appalling conditions deliberately imposed in these ghettos served the Nazi propaganda machine.
By showcasing the ghetto's internal state, the Nazi propagated the faults and malicious idea that
Jews were inherently dirty in spreaders of disease.
The Warsaw ghetto was established roughly one year after the invasion of Poland in October
of 1940. Once Warsaw's Jews were brought to the ghetto, they were forcibly enclosed in the location
with 10-foot walls topped with barbed wire and heavily guarded, effectively sealing the Jewish
population off from the rest of Warsaw. The Warsaw ghetto was incredibly overcrowded,
holding 400,000 Jews in the space of 1.3 square miles. On average, 7.2 people lived in a single
room. The Jewish Council was located in the southern part of the ghetto. The council faced ongoing
challenges such as overcrowding, starvation, disease, and exposure as many people suffered under harsh
conditions. The Germans didn't provide enough food for the Jews. On average, residents received only
1,125 calories per day. Between 1940 and mid-1942, 82, 83,000 people died from these harsh conditions.
The only reason this number wasn't even higher was due to the brave efforts of smugglers who brought food and medicine into the ghetto.
However, these efforts only partially mitigated the desperate conditions inside.
The Nazis began to deport Jews from Warsaw in July of 1942.
Jews within the ghetto were vaguely aware of the atrocities being committed by the Nazis.
There were rumors regarding what happened when deportations occurred in the East, including mass killings in the woods, concentration camps,
and extermination camps.
The Jewish council denied these reports, and the Nazis covered up the facts,
but some eyewitnesses who had seen the gassing of Jews delivered credible warnings.
When deportation orders were posted, Jewish resistance members put up flyers
warning that deportation meant death.
Many people still doubted these warnings because it was hard to imagine that the Germans
would try to kill an entire category of people.
To carry out the deportations, the Nazis asked for the head of war.
Warsaw's Jewish Council, Edom Chernyakov, to compile a list of Jewish names and addresses
within the ghetto. Chernyakov, realizing the rumors of mass killings were probably true, attempted
to negotiate with the Nazis. He was found dead the following day, and the Jewish councils were
dissolved. After this, deportations were carried out brutally and efficiently. Between July and September
1942, more than half of the people in the ghetto were sent to Treblenka, which became one of the
deadliest Nazi death camps.
That is where most of the people deported from Warsaw perished.
After seeing how dire the situation was becoming in the Warsaw Ghetto,
community leaders met to discuss a course of action.
The question of which action to take was based on the leader's age.
The younger generation favored a violent plan to take direct action against the Germans.
The older generation was more cautious, preferring a safer, less bold course of action.
Eventually, the younger group composed of members of two youth movements banded together to make the
Jewish fighting organization, or as the acronym became known in Polish, Jop.
Members of Jop immediately took action targeting other political groups inside the ghetto,
including members of communist and socialist Jewish groups. Additionally, there was a second
resistance group formed by Jews on the political right, known as the Jewish Military Union,
or ZZW. Once formed, both groups began taking action, creating connections with Polish underground
resistance groups. One crucial connection was to Jan
Karski, a courier for the Polish Home Army. He was smuggled into the ghetto so that he could report
accurate information to the exiled Polish government. They sought arms and support from the
Home Army and the People's Guard. Early efforts failed. The cost of arms for Jews was about
three times the normal black market price, so they collected money from Jews inside the ghetto.
In the meantime, other acts of resistance began occurring. Members of the resistance began to light
fires in storerooms where Nazis kept their equipment, smuggled Jews outside of the ghetto, and made
assassination plans for the chief of the Jewish police. These efforts were only exacerbated by the visit
of Heinrich Himmler, the Reich Commissar, who gained complete control over the population policy in Poland.
His leadership was part of a reign of terror where he made laws forcing Poles into positions of forced
labor and making them victims of discriminatory laws. This position also placed him as the head of
enacting the final solution within Poland. So his visit to the Warsaw Ghetto on January 9th,
1943, was taken as a sign that more deportations were going to occur.
Jaup began planning a resistance effort for January 22nd, the day they expected the deportations
to take place. Unfortunately, they were incorrect in their assumption, and the Nazis began deportations
on January 18th. Despite the change in plans, acts of resistance were carried out against the Nazis.
When some of the resistance fighters were brought to the deportation holding areas, they jumped out
of line and began to fire at the guards. Simultaneously, other armed resistance fighters fired at Germans
from homes and shops. Others fled the deportation area and hid. Ultimately, this resistance lasted
until January 22nd and resulted in 1,000 Jews killed and 4,500 deported. Yet this operation was
still considered to be a major success. SS officers were now fearful of entering Jewish apartment,
and relied on scouting parties. Additionally, the resistance was only beaten after the Germans
drove into the ghetto with small tanks, machine guns, and field artillery. This only encouraged resistance
groups outside of the ghetto to send yet more supplies. With rumors of more deportations, the resistance
groups began taking further steps to prepare. They tightened ranks, carried out public executions
for those who collaborated with the Nazis, and threatened to anyone who could have informed on their
plans. Although Jop and ZZW numbered only a thousand of the 50,000 people remaining,
the groups were feared and respected, with the overwhelming majority of the population in the ghetto
favoring an uprising despite not even being official members. Their preparations proved not to be in
vain, as the new SS and police leader, Jürgen Stoup, planned to liquidate the entire ghetto
on April 19, 1943. The Warsaw ghetto was chosen because of its unruly reputation and because
it was the largest Jewish ghetto in Europe. The date was significant for two reasons. It fell on the
day before the Jewish holiday of Passover, and it was the day before Hitler's birthday. Having been prepared
for months, the resistance fighters went to their posts, ready to defend the ghetto's residence.
When the Nazis entered, they were accompanied by cannons, tanks, armored vehicles, and hundreds of
SS units. In comparison, the resistance held far less, with each person being equipped with only a pistol,
five Molotov cocktails and five grenades. Anyone without a weapon was forced to barricade themselves
in basements or attics for safety. The first battles took place in the northern part of the
ghetto early in the morning of April 19th. The resistance struck the Nazis by surprise as they
expected the reception to be more subdued and were forced to retreat. The Germans then returned
around 2 p.m. on April 20th. When they re-entered, they passed by a brushmaker's shop. The shop's
entrance was rigged with a mine placed just below the entrance gate. When the Nazis went towards
the shop, it exploded, and once again the Germans left. The Germans regrouped outside the ghetto and
made a plan to approach more carefully. This time, they fired artillery shells at shops, which also
hit some resistance fighters. Simultaneously, the Germans were searching houses in other parts of the ghetto.
This was a tedious and dangerous task, as it forced the Nazis to separate, allowing the resistance
fighters to pick off some of the troops. Additionally, after a building was cleared and its occupants
forcibly removed, a guard then had to be left at the door. In another part of the ghetto, SS fighters
attempted to negotiate a ceasefire to collect their dead and wounded, but this was refused by the
resistance. Instead, the fighters fired at them as they tried to retreat. The Nazis responded that
night by setting buildings on fire where they expected Jews to be hiding. Over the next few weeks,
fighting between the Nazis and resistance fighters continued.
The Nazis continued their tactics of attempting to smoke Jews out of buildings and added new
tactics, including using gas against people hiding in bunkers and gassing sewer lines to block
escape routes.
When Jews were caught by Nazis, they were rounded up, strip searched and either put on
deportation trains or murdered immediately.
The members of Jopp were eventually surrounded on May 8th, 19 days after the uprising began.
At the Jop headquarters, the resistance leaders and roughly 100 others were hiding in a bunker below the building.
The resistance was quelled after the Nazis pumped gas into the bunker, causing the leadership either to die of asphyxiation or to commit suicide.
Despite the loss, they reportedly felt proud of the defense that they put up.
The uprising officially lasted for another eight days, ending on May 16, 1943.
The remaining fighting during this period was completed by small insurgent groups who were acting independently.
To celebrate their victory, the Nazis detonated the great synagogue of Warsaw, one of the few buildings that remained undistroyed.
By the end of their uprising, 13,000 Jews were killed in the chaos, roughly half of them dying from either smoke inhalation or from being burnt alive.
42,000 people were deported to concentration camps, with the majority of them either going to Treblenka or Maidenik.
As for the Germans, they claimed to have suffered only 110 casualties, including 17.
killed, although the figure is highly disputed.
The Warsaw Ghetto Uprising was the first large-scale armed resistance by Jews against Nazi
Germany.
It demonstrated that the victims of genocide were not passive, but were willing to fight,
despite overwhelming odds.
Its importance lies in its enduring symbolic power, as an assertion of human dignity
and resistance in the face of almost certain destruction.
The executive producer of Everything Everywhere Daily is Charles Daniel.
Associate producers are Austin Otkin and Cameron Kiefer. Research and writing for this episode was provided by Olivia Ash. My big thanks go to everyone who supports a show over on Patreon. Your support helps make this podcast possible. And I also want to remind everyone about the community groups on Facebook and Discord. This is where everything happens that's outside of the show. As always, if you leave a review on any major podcast app or in the above community groups, you two can have it read on the show.
