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The Judenrat in the Ghetto
The offices of the
Judenrat
were moved into the ghetto as well, to a building (known as Samorin House) on
Albrekhtovska Street, where the Tarbuth School had once been. The main entrance
was on Albrekhtovska Street, and this entrance was used by the Germans, as well
as by some of the Jewish laborers who were sent to work outside the ghetto.
The
Judenrat
was a kind of government in miniature. Its responsibilities grew and its
departments had a heavy workload. The Jewish police force too was increased to
a total of fifty. In place of Asher Feldlait who died of a stomach operation,
Goldberg was appointed to the post of Chief of Police. Jewish police had to
keep order inside the ghetto, while Polish police guarded the gates from the
outside.
The
Judenrat
opened a number of shops in the ghetto, where people could get their daily
bread ration on cards, 300 grams for adults, 150 grams for children at two to
three rubles per kilogram. The flour was allotted by the District Commissioner,
who also assigned a certain area for vegetable growing in the Kaplan
Gardens beyond the railway tracks, opposite the Albrekhtowa property. Workers
on the payroll of the
Judenrat
grew potatoes, cucumbers, beets, mangolds and other vegetables.
The District Commissioner gave the
Judenrat
a number of horse-drawn wagons to carry the produce to the shops inside the
ghetto, where it was sold on ration cards. The flour was sold to the
Judenrat
according to the number of inhabitants and the fixed ration: only, the price
was exorbitant. The Supply Department had to keep the accounts, with the
shopkeepers on the one hand, and the Germans on the other.
Once a week, the Jewish bakers were allowed a special permit to leave the
ghetto in order to receive their flour ration. This provided an opportunity for
them to buy some extra flour from the peasants, which they would add to the
regular supply and bring into the ghetto on the same license. The bakers were
able to sell bread over and above the ration, but it was so expensive that only
a very few could afford it.
The flour supply was anything but regular and sometimes no bread would be baked
for several days. The flour was of poor quality, made from scorched rye or
wheat from the silos that had been set on fire by the retreating Russians. In
addition, the Germans added sawdust to the flour, which made itself felt in
chewing and digestion.
The
Judenrat
issued special money, valid only within the confines of the ghetto. A hospital
was opened in a wooden structure, in front of the little church near the Karlin
cemetery. Its expenses were paid for by the
Judenrat. The hospital was always full of people stricken with hunger, edemas, typhoid
and other diseases. The doctors were Jacobson, Praeger, Mayles, Lemishov, Yooz,
Lev, the municipal doctor Greenberg, the gynecologist Glauberson, Prof. Rubin,
a specialist for stomach diseases, and Dr. Weinberg. Nearby was a clinic
managed by Dr. Lev, assisted by a pediatrician, Dr. Elstein; and doctors
Einbinder, Mayles, Cogan, Kaplan, and the nurses Masha Busel, Fliskin, Riva
Greenblat and Milya Ratnovsky, who worked for minimal salaries. Most important
were additional food rations, sometimes allotted to the personnel, including a
few fish heads or horse bones. There was only one pharmacy in the ghetto, run
by Bertha Shwartzman's husband.
The orphanage, expelled from its spacious home at the corner of Zavalna and
Dominikanska streets, moved into a small house inside the ghetto, allotted to
it by the
Judenrat. The poor orphans had to suffer hunger, cold, squalor and overcrowding, just
like all inmates of the ghetto. Their devoted youth leader, Liov, continued to
serve them under the horrid new conditions. His assistant, Feivel Eizenstat,
had been killed in the first action.
The
Judenrat
set up a soup kitchen for the needy, sick and old. It had to serve an enormous
public, and the chaos around it was nearly unbearable, although the food
distributed was only a bare minimum.
The ghetto area had its own court of justice and a jail. The judge was attorney
Elstein, and he was aided by Mr. Gorinowski, who also headed the Orphanage
Committee.
The cases brought before this court were mainly quarrels between one Jew and
another, generally over trifles. The court also had to deal with people who had
failed to comply with demands of the
Judenrat. If, after investigation, it was proven that the accused had refused to pay,
although able to do so, he was sent to prison for a few days.
The members of the
Chevrah Kaddisha
[Burial Society] too were on the payroll of the
Judenrat, and there were dozens of burials every day. These took place in the Karlin
cemetery, whose fences had been pulled down. [49]
One of the witnesses recalls what Dr. Jacobson said at the funeral of Dr.
Yooz's wife: The world is upside down: they have pulled down the fences
around the dead and erected them around the living: when shall this be put
right again?
[50]
Without Cultural or Communal Life
The
Judenrat
did not organize cultural activities of any kind. Most of the teachers,
intellectuals and public servants of former days had been killed in the August
action. No one was left to teach school or give a lecture. Nothing is known of
any attempt to provide entertainment, put on a performance, a celebration or
anything of the sort. Even the popular artist, Josele Kolodny, who lived in the
ghetto too, fell silent. No mention has been found of any youth or party
organization. A number of synagogues were open, those attending being mostly
old people. The Rabbi of Karlin, Avraham Elimelekh Perlov, who lived in the
ghetto, tried to the best of his abilities to alleviate suffering writes
Menashe Unger in the New York Yiddish
Tog-Morgen Journal. He went to his death at the head of his followers in the last action.
There was also no place in the ghetto where a couple of hundred people could
have gathered. Before the exile to the ghetto, Jews had been afraid to step
outside their houses; now they felt free.
On summer evenings the inmates of the ghetto would walk about in the open. They
would meet at the corner of Perets (Bolotna) Glinishchanska and Shiroki
Streets. Somehow the Germans did not compel the Jews to work on the Sabbath and
then the Jews would usually walk in the Karlin cemetery.
What were the topics discussed, whenever people met? Bread and how long do we
still have to live; the second topic would usually end with the wishful prayer
Would that we might see the downfall of the Nazis before we die.
[51]
Work and Workers
At seven in the morning thousands of workers used to gather near the gates, in
groups, by professions and places of employment, in columns of three abreast.
Each group had a Jewish foreman (the Germans called him
Gruppenführer, and the Jews, with their bitter humor, named him
Juden-General
) appointed by the factory or workshop, who would read out, from a list,
the names of the workers, and only they would be allowed to leave the ghetto.
Next came the Polish policeman who checked the papers and frisked the men, to
prevent anything prohibited from being taken out. Only then could the workers
leave. This routine was repeated in the evening, when people returned from
work. The laborers would march in the middle of the street, three abreast, and
gate-checking by name, examination of papers and frisking would take
place.
[52]
After the war, one of the leaders of the
Bund
, Leizer Levin, was passing through the town on his way back from Russia, and
among many other documents, he found lists containing thousands of names of
people who had been allowed to leave the ghetto for work in June 1942. The
forms used had apparently belonged to one of the Christian churches in town. At
the top of the original column of names, inscribed in Latin characters, were
written in German the details to be given.
The details were as follows: serial number, date of recording, number of
persons, surname and first name, place of work, address, valid till ... The
lists in our possession include forty-two pages of twenty-nine lines each. They
begin at number 1971 and end at 5779. In between, a number of pages are
missing. The list contains the names of 3654 breadwinners, about 20 % of the
inmates of the ghetto, yet probably close to one half of those actually
employed. On each of the 1218 lines, the permit holder's name is inscribed. In
many cases, in the number-of-persons column, figures from two to fifty are
inscribed, which means that the permit was issued to a group of workers under
the name of its foreman. On the strength of these lists, the 3654 workers were
classified by places of employment. In some cases, a number of places were
lumped together. Here are the findings:
Private employment:
This refers mostly to women who worked as household help in Christian homes
outside the ghetto. Included under this heading are some who worked with
Gentile artisans.
Offices:
Under this heading we find details about the following places of employment:
City Administration, Licensing Department, Court of Justice, sanitary service,
railway station, district offices, cinema, food administration, post office,
food stores and the offices for import and export, fish and wood-floating.
Agriculture
: The list contains details of employment on the farms at Hai, Albrekhtovo,
Zapole, Potshepowo.
The Kommandantur, Gendarmerie and German Police:
Jewish policemen inside the ghetto are included, along with Judenrat employees.
These lists give us only a partial view of the state of employment; yet this is
first-hand material enabling us to draw a more general picture. There was much
truth in the saying that the Pinsk ghetto was made up of working people. The
Germans, too, appreciated this contribution to their war effort: witness the
letter from the Supreme Commander of the S.S., Heinrich Himmler, to General
Prutzmann.
The Struggle for Food
Jewish workers made use of the stay outside the ghetto fence to obtain some
food: a few slices of bread, groats, potatoes or fat. The question was how to
bring it in. In this respect a real art of deceit developed. Groats were hidden
in socks. Potatoes were cooked, diluted with water and taken in as soup
distributed at the place or work. Women used to hide slices of bread under
their clothing. Polish policemen carried out a search at the gates. Among them
were a few who were human, such as policeman number 27, who was said to be
connected with the partisans, or policeman Biletski. These just went through
the motions of searching and confiscating something, leaving the rest with the
Jews for their hungry families. Such policemen however were rare. Most of them
were heartless and cruel, and we must mention here the worst to their
everlasting shame: number 15, named Dzevietski; and number 41, named Holibnya;
and numbers 9 and 17, whose names are forgotten. Any sequestered food was
thrown on a heap near the gate and the carriers were beaten up mercilessly.
Women fared no better then men at these searches.
Yet, even the danger of death did not restrain the ghetto dwellers; everybody
tried to outwit the enemy and to bring in some food to the starving children.
Many paid for this with their lives.
[53]
I saw, relates a witness, the Jew Glauberman murdered at the
gate by Deputy Commissioner Ebner, after they found a little butter he had
hidden.
[54]
Starvation grew even worse. Beatings and murders did not stop the struggle for
survival that was going on between the Jews of the ghetto and the Nazis and
their local helpers. In this life and death struggle, Jews of all strata and
ages took part. It went on in the free part of the town, in the surrounding
villages and at the gates. Countless deeds of heroism occurred and the struggle
engendered noble deeds and sacrifices.
Children in the Struggle
Children too, inscribed their noble chapter: every morning tens of them would
crawl under the fence each carrying a knapsack. They used to scatter over the
neighboring villages, stretch out their hands and implore the peasants' mercy.
They begged for a little bread or some potatoes. Many peasants were moved by
the sad countenance of these half-starved children and gave them some food.
Thus, during the day, the children managed to gather a little food, which at
night they carried back to their sick mothers or little brothers and sisters
fatherless orphans, left without their provider after the first action.
Yet not all returned home. Three or four would be killed at the fence or while
crawling under it. There were Polish policemen who specialized in picking off
children while their attention was focused on the barbed wire, so that they did
not become aware of the rifle or pistol pointed at them until a shot was heard
and an anguished cry Mama would bring some unfortunate mother to
the spot, to find out whether the victim was her child.
[55]
Sometimes children dare not leave the ghetto, but hovered near the gate, hoping
someone would give them a crust of bread. Hence, returning from work, we would
see long rows of children near the gate, sitting on the sidewalks bloated from
hunger, listless large heads and swollen feet, marked for death. Every few days
there would be new faces the first ones having died, but the new ones
too were doomed.
[56]
Slow starvation was also the lot of the adults who could not find work. People
tried to draw out life by substitutes, like chopped weeds or potato peels, but
this would not do for any length of time. It happened that people dropped dead
from hunger at their places of work outside the ghetto.
Then the
Judenrat
applied to Deputy Commissioner Ebner to request increased bread rations for the
workers. The German Commander asked to see the death certificates and checked
them carefully. Finally he remarked cynically: Not enough Jews are
dying. But in fact the number of those who died from hunger and disease
increased from week to week.
The Slaughter of the Sick
One day in July, Ebner arrived at the
Judenrat
Office, accompanied by the District Medical Officer Dilevski. The ghetto was
stunned: what next? They did not have long to wait. Ebner asked for a list of
the mentally disturbed and of the incurably ill. We want to take them all
to the hospital at Brzesc (Brest-Litovski). The
Judenrat
tried to evade the issue, saying they didn't know whom he meant.
The list has already been prepared by Dr. Dilevski, said Ebner,
and if you don't cooperate, we shall fetch the sick ourselves but,
as a punishment, together with their families. Faced with this dilemma,
the
Judenrat, together with the Jewish doctors and policemen, compiled the list of about
forty victims. Two days later, a number of German trucks arrived at the ghetto
gates for their prey. The poor sick people and their families knew what was in
store for them and they tried to resist the Jewish policemen who had come to
take them to the vehicles.
It was a heartrending sight to see the sick being dragged towards the
gates by Jewish hands. As far as I can remember, this was the only case in
Pinsk when Jews were compelled to deliver their own people into German
hands. Two trucks, full of Jews, drove off in the direction of Brzesc. A
few hours later they were seen returning empty and very soon the truth was
known. The sick had been shot near the village of Kozlakowicz. To calm the
agitation that swept through the ghetto after this operation, Ebner and Dr.
Dilevski came back to the ghetto and promised that no more sick people would be
taken away. Another witness relates: The woman psychiatrist, Dr. Yooz, a
refugee from Warsaw and member of the well-known Davidson family, who had been
tending these sick with great devotion, committed suicide the very next day. A
few days later a madman nicknamed «Nahumke Tepele Schmaltz»
reappeared. «How did you save yourself?» people asked. «I ran
away: how could a community exist without its madman?»
[57]
Partition into Two Ghettos
On the occasion of this visit, Ebner and Dilevski ordered the pulling down of
all fences within the ghetto, except those no higher than 80 cm. The reason
given was to make it easier for the guards to supervise the entire area.
[58]
About the same time, all skilled workers in the ghetto were told to inscribe
on two yellow pieces of cloth their place of employment and their
personal number.
The Gentile foremen, we were told by a printer, came to the printing shops,
where we were working, with a supply of yellow patches on which we had to print
the names of places of employment.
[59]
We were informed by this Christian that the engineer Friedman had been
summoned by the secret police, arrested, and told to compile a list of the Jews
who were working outside the ghetto. Permission was given to bring him food and
also for him to meet the members of the
Judenrat.
Rumors spread to the effect that the ghetto was to be divided into two parts: A
and B. Into the first would be transferred skilled workers in workshops and
factories, while the second would be populated with old people, children and
the sick,
i. e. those unfit to work. The intentions behind this measure were
abundantly clear to the inmates to the ghetto: the workers would be allowed to
live, while the others would be liquidated.
Those who were not working began a mad rush to be registered at any place of
work. Gentiles reaped great profit, as they were paid large sums for inscribing
a Jew on their payroll. They had to apply to the German engineer, Sieg, who was
in charge of the labor department in the District Commissioner's office, and
tell him that they needed additional workers or skilled men. As a matter of
fact, many more Jews got work outside the ghetto. Rumor had it that only 10,000
Jewish workers would be allowed to live, while the others would be sent to
camps. Jews tried to console themselves and others, saying this would not
happen in Pinsk. Pinsk was a busy town and its industries were vital to the
German war effort; there was a plywood factory, sawmills, tanneries for the
processing of hides, shoe factories etc.
When it became known that Jews in the neighboring townships had been
liquidated, there was pressure on the
Judenrat, and its members urgently applied to the Commissioner, told him what they had
heard and asked for explanations. The Commissioner brazenly admitted the facts:
We do not intend to kill them, he said, we shall pick out the
young and ship them to Germany to work there, while the old will go to a labor
camp. However, what is that to you? Nothing will happen to you. Nearly all the
people of Pinsk are skilled workers and they are doing their jobs diligently.
This is an industrial town and we shall bring in even more Jews from the
countryside, as we need more hands. You have nothing to fear.
[60]
Yet his answer did not allay the forebodings.
Liquidation of Jews in the Neighboring Towns
Although the Germans did not allow Gentiles from outside to enter the town, so
that they would not reveal what they knew about the slaughter of Jews, they
could not prevent news about what had happened to the little towns of Polesia
and Volhynia from filtering through. Some Jews at first refused to believe that
these horrors could be true, but even they had to admit that they had erred.
That was the day when survivors from the slaughter of Sarny arrived in
the ghetto, among them two natives of Pinsk. Bankowski the ironmonger and a
young man whose name I have forgotten. They told us that the Jews of Sarny had
been brought to an area outside the town, fenced in with barbed wire, where
they were kept several days until all the Jews of the vicinity had arrived.
They had been told that from there they would be sent to labor camps. Neither
food nor drink was given them during those summer days. Jews were offering gold
for a cup of water for children and babies who were fainting from thirst.
Finally German trucks arrived; onto each of them dozens of Jews were shoved,
driven away a short distance and shot. At this point, some of the young men cut
the barbed wire and started to run. A host of people burst through the breach
and in the uproar women and children were trampled to death. The
fortunate, who had managed to break out, were shot by the Germans.
Only a few, among them those who made it to Pinsk, survived. Here, they had
heard, a Jewish community still existed.
[61]
From Brzesc, too, came news that the inhabitants of the ghetto had been
exterminated, except for a few skilled craftsmen. On July 25th, the Jews of
Drohiczyn were slaughtered, and we learned to our horror of the terrible end of
the Jews of Janov, only twenty-five kilometers west of Pinsk. Forewarned, Jews
had dug trenches behind their houses and in the gardens, bunkers and
subterranean passages from one street to the next, in order to hide; but the
murderers had set the houses on fire and the smoke forced the victims out into
the open, where most of them were shot. Only a handful reached the forests; out
of the eighty Jewish craftsmen, whom the Germans had spared, a few managed to
run away; the rest were shot. Before Yom Kippur, refugees arrived in Pinsk from
the nearby township of Pohost-Zagorodski. In the large wooden hut of the soup
kitchen, where prayers were being held, the refugees from Pohost told sobbingly
of the bitter end of their community. The annihilation of these two
communities, so close to Pinsk, was a heavy blow to the people in the ghetto,
which was now the very last one left in all of Polesia.
Sketchy but unmistakable news reached Pinsk about the Jewish uprising at
Lakhva, where they had even succeeded in causing a number of German casualties
(this happened on the 2nd or 3rd of September). An echo of the armed resistance
at Lakhva resounded in the words of Deputy Commissioner Ebner, who boasted in
the presence of the
Judenrat
that, because of this rebellion, he had exterminated all the Jews in the
vicinity.
[62]
There was a growing feeling that the noose was tightening around the necks of
the Jews of Pinsk, too. The last glimmer of hope seemed extinguished. The
struggle for survival had exhausted their energies. Yet, there were some who
never gave up, even though they were beyond despair. It was said that the
expected action would last a couple of days and those whom the murderers did
not apprehend might survive. Therefore, many began to dig shelters under the
houses and stables, in courtyards and gardens, and even to construct double
walls, ceilings and floors. Each person made himself a hiding place as best as
he could. Digging went on by day and by night unflaggingly. People believed
that was the way to be saved.
The Commissioner, from whom nothing remained hidden, demanded delivery of all
spades, hoes and axes, in order to save himself the trouble caused
to the Germans by the Jews of Yanov.
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