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The
Jews resorted to legal and “illegal” methods in their attempts
to cope with the severe conditions imposed on them in the ghettos.
Jewish councils arranged housing, distributed food, and provided
social welfare, child care, refugee assistance, and other services
– stretching their very scanty resources beyond the limits of
their capabilities. In some ghettos, autonomous social-welfare
organizations were created to deal with the same types of needs.
Political parties and youth movements organized clandestinely to
provide their members with supplementary aid and moral support.
Additionally, families and friends tried to help their own.
Many
Jews in many ghettos, singly and collectively, came to realize that
the Nazis had placed them in a trap: If they obeyed the Nazis'
rules, they stood to die prematurely of starvation or disease. If
they were caught breaking the rules by smuggling food, supplies, and
information, they faced certain death. In many instances, Jews chose
to become "outlaws" in their struggle to survive. |