The Jewish ghetto in Dąbrowa Gornicza and Będzin part one of two
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Film shot in the ghettos of
Dąbrowa Górnicza and
Będzin, probably at the beginning of the ghettos.
Dabrowa Górnicza is part of the
Katowice conurbation.
Jews settled in
Dabrowa Gornicza in the middle of the
19th century. There were 4,304 Jews living in Dabrowa Gornicza according to the
1921 census (11% of the total population).
The German army captured Dabrowa Gornicza on
3 September 1939. In the fall of
1940 several hundred young
Jewish men were deported to slave labor camps in
Germany. Several hundred more were deported in the course of
1941.
At the end of that year a ghetto was established. On 5 May
1942, the first deportation took place in which 630 Jews were taken to
Auschwitz and exterminated. In the second deportation, conducted on 12
August 1942, another few hundred Jews were sent to their death in Auschwitz. On 26 June 1943, the ghetto in Dabrowa Gornicza was liquidated and all its inmates were transferred to the ghetto in
Srodula (a suburb of
Sosnowiec), the only ghetto still existing in
Upper Silesia. It too was liquidated and all its inhabitants, including the Jews from Dabrowa Gornicza, deported to Auschwitz and killed.
According to the 1921 census, there were 17,298 Jews in
Bedzin or 62.
1 percent of its total population.[By
1938, the number of Jews had increased to about 22,
500.
Situated close to the border, Bedzin was quickly captured by the
Wehrmacht. On
7 September, persecution of the Jews began, with the instituting of economic sanctions. On
8 September, the Będzin synagogue was burned, and the first massacre of local Jews took place.
The ghetto was founded in May 1942 but deportations had started as early as
October 1940.
Despite cooperation with the occupiers as is shown in this film, several large deportations took place in 1942. The last major deportations took place in 1943: 5,
000 were deported on 22 June 1943 and 8,000 around 13
August 1943. About 1,000 remaining Jews were deported in the subsequent months. A rising took place in August 1943 which was put down and the ghetto was eliminated.
This film is held in the
Polish film archive in ul. Chelmska,
Warsaw.
My channel is one of the most prolific from
Poland. With almost one film per day, one may be forgiven for thinking I do nothing else but I do have a day job as well. I have produced around 1,600 original films, most in
English but also in
Polish,
French,
Italian,
Spanish and the occasional hint of
German and
Hebrew. My big interest in life is travel and history but I have also placed films on other subjects
Please feel free to ask questions in the public area or to comment on things you disagree with.
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There are a number of films here on the packaging industry. This is because
I am the publisher of
Central and
Eastern European Packaging --
http://www.ceepackaging.com - the international platform for the packaging industry in this region focusing on the latest innovations, trends, design, branding, legislation and environmental issues with in-depth profiles of major industry achievers.
Most people may think packaging pretty boring but it possibly effects your life more than you really imagine!
Central and Eastern European Packaging examines the packaging industry throughout this region, but in particular in the largest regional economies which are
Russia, Germany,
Poland,
Czech Republic,
Ukraine and
Austria. That is not to say that the other countries are forgotten, they are not, but obviously there is less going on. However the fact that there are so many travel related films here is not from holidays but from business trips attending trade fairs around the region. Every packaging trade fair is a new excuse to make another film!