- Kaunas Ghetto
The Kaunas Ghetto (also called the Kovno Ghetto) was a
ghetto established byNazi Germany , with approval by the Lithuanian provisional government, to hold theJew s of theLithuania n city ofKaunas during theHolocaust . At its peak, the Ghetto held 30,000 people, most of whom were later sent to concentration and extermination camps, or were shot at theNinth Fort . About 500 Jews escaped from work details and directly from the Ghetto, and joined Soviet partisan forces in the distant forests of SE Lithuania and Belarus. Of the 37,000 Jews in Kaunas, 3,000 survived the war.The Nazis established a civilian administration under SA Major General
Hans Kramer to replace military rule in place from the invasion of Lithuania on June 22, 1941. The Lithuanian provisional government was officially disbanded by the Nazis after only a few weeks, but no before approval for the establishment of a ghetto under the supervision of Lithuanian military commandant of Kaunas Jurgis Bobelis, extensive laws enacted against Jews and the provision of auxiliary police to assist the Nazis in the genocide. Between July and August 15, 1941, the Germans concentrated Jews who survived the initial pogroms, some 29,000 people, in a ghetto established inVilijampolė (Slabodka). It was an area of small primitive houses and no running water which had been cleared of its mainly Jewish population in pogroms by Lithuanian activists beginning on June 24. The ghetto had two parts, called the "small" and "large" ghetto, separated by Paneriu Street and connected by a small wooden bridge over the street. Each ghetto was enclosed by barbed wire and closely guarded. Both were overcrowded, with each person allocated less than ten square feet of living space. The Germans continually reduced the ghetto's size, forcing Jews to relocate several times. The Germans and Lithuanians destroyed the small ghetto on October 4, 1941, and killed almost all of its inhabitants at the Ninth Fort. Later that same month, on October 29, 1941, the Germans staged what became known as the "Great Action." In a single day, they shot around 10,000 Jews at the Ninth Fort.The ghetto in Kovno provided forced labor for the German military. Jews were employed primarily as forced laborers at various sites outside the ghetto, especially in the construction of a military airbase in
Aleksotas . The Jewish council (Aeltestenrat; Council of Elders), headed by Dr. Elchanan Elkes, also created workshops inside the ghetto for those women, children, and elderly who could not participate in the labor brigades. Eventually, these workshops employed almost 6,500 people. The council hoped the Germans would not kill Jews who were producing for the army.In the autumn of 1943, the
SS assumed control of the ghetto and converted it into the Kauen concentration camp. The Jewish council's role was drastically curtailed. The Nazis dispersed more than 3,500 Jews to subcamps where strict discipline governed all aspects of daily life. On October 26, 1943, the SS deported more than 2,700 people from the main camp. The SS sent those deemed fit to work to labor camps in Estonia, and deported surviving children and the elderly to Auschwitz. Few survived.On July 8, 1944, the Germans evacuated the camp, deporting most of the remaining Jews to the Dachau concentration camp in Germany or to the
Stutthof camp, nearDanzig , on the Baltic coast. Three weeks before the Soviet army arrived in Kovno, the Germans razed the ghetto to the ground with grenades and dynamite. As many as 2,000 people burned to death or were shot while trying to escape the burning ghetto.Throughout the years of hardship and horror, the Jewish community in Kovno documented its story in secret archives, diaries, drawings and photographs. Many of these artifacts lay buried in the ground when the ghetto was destroyed. Discovered after the war, these few written remnants of a once thriving community provide evidence of the Jewish community's defiance, oppression, resistance, and death. George Kadish (Hirsh Kadushin), for example, secretly photographed the trials of daily life within the ghetto with a hidden camera through the buttonhole of his overcoat.The Kovno ghetto had several Jewish resistance groups. The resistance acquired arms, developed secret training areas in the ghetto, and established contact with
Soviet partisans in the forests around Kovno. In 1943, theGeneral Jewish Fighting Organization (Yidishe Algemeyne Kamfs Organizatsye) was established, uniting the major resistance groups in the ghetto. Under this organization's direction, some 300 ghetto fighters escaped from the Kovno ghetto to join partisan groups. About 70 died in action. The Jewish council in Kovno actively supported the ghetto underground. Moreover, a number of the ghetto's Jewish police participated in resistance activities. The Germans executed 34 members of the Jewish police for refusing to reveal specially constructed hiding places used by Jews in the ghetto.The Soviet army occupied Kovno on August 1, 1944. Of Kovno's few Jewish survivors, 500 had survived in forests or in a single bunker which had escaped detection during the final liquidation; the Germans evacuated an additional 2,500 to concentration camps in Germany.
References
*"This article incorporates text from the
United States Holocaust Memorial Museum , and has been released under theGFDL ."
*Mishell, William W. "Kaddish for Kovno: Life and Death in a Lithuanian Ghetto, 1941-1945" (Chicago, Chicago Review Press: 1988) ISBN: 1556520336, an irreplaceable primary source by a Jewish native of Kovno and survivor of the Kovno ghetto.See also
*
List of Nazi-German concentration camps External links
* United States Holocaust Memorial Museum [http://www.ushmm.org/wlc/article.php?lang=en&ModuleId=10005174 Kovno]
* [http://www.gutstein.net/kaunas/kaunas-ghetto.htm Kovno Ghetto Web Page] By Jose Gutstein
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.