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(in Lithuanian, Vilnius; in Polish, Wilno). Capital of
Lithuania.
Prior to
World War II,
Vilna was a major center of Jewish scholarship and culture.
Under Polish rule from 1920-1939, Vilna had a population of
200,000, including 55,000 Jews. On September 19, 1939, the
Soviets entered Lithuania. About 15,000 Jewish refugees from
Poland fled to Vilna
soon after. A few weeks later, the Soviets delivered Vilna
to the Lithuanians. In July 1940 Vilna, along with the rest
of Lithuania, was annexed to the
Soviet Union.
From September 1939 to June 1941, 6,500 Jewish refugees left
Vilna for the
United States,
Palestine, the Far East, and elsewhere. On
June 24, 1941, the Germans occupied Vilna as part of their
invasion of the Soviet Union. A few days later, the German
and Lithuanian authorities began implementing anti-Jewish
measures. On July 4,
the Germans ordered that a
Judenrat be
established. During July, 5,000 Jewish men were arrested by
Einsatzgruppen and Lithuanian collaborators, and
subsequently shot in the
Ponary Forest on the outskirts of Vilna. At the
beginning of September, two ghettos were established, each with
it's own Judenrat and Jewish police. Over the next few
months, thousands of Jews were executed at Ponary, in a
series of aktionen (forced deportations). By
the end of 1941, the smaller ghetto had been liquidated and
33,500 Jews had been murdered. A further 3,500 had fled or
hidden outside the ghetto.
For most of 1942, there were no further aktionen, and
the Jews in the ghetto were able to develop a rich communal
life. They established schools, a health-care system,
cultural activities, and social-aid institutions. The
Judenrat was chaired by
Jacob Gens,
who believed that if the ghetto were to remain economically
worthwhile for the Germans, they would not destroy it. Thus,
the council provided jobs for as many Jews in the ghetto as
possible. The
United Partisan Organization (Fareynegte Partizaner
Organizatsye, FPO) was also established during the quiet
of 1942.
The situation deteriorated in the spring of 1943. Nearby
small ghettos and labor camps were liquidated, and the mass
killings commenced again. The FPO and the Judenrat
had several major clashes, because Gens believed that the
FPO's underground activities were endangering the rest of
the ghetto. In July, the Germans demanded the arrest of FPO
leader,
Yitzhak Wittenberg,
under the threat that the entire ghetto would be destroyed.
Wittenberg turned himself in, hoping to avoid further
bloodshed. However, the ghetto was destined for destruction.
Mass deportations took place in August and September 1943
thousands of men, women and children were sent to
concentration camps in
Estonia. During these deportations, the FPO called on the inhabitants
of the ghetto to revolt. However, the Jews did not heed the
call. The FPO began attacking German troops themselves.
Gens, believing that armed revolt would simply lead to the
total destruction of the ghetto, offered to hand over the
required number of Jews for deportation. This ended the
clashes. Gens himself was shot by the Gestapo on September
14.
The final liquidation of the Vilna Ghetto took place on
September 23-24, 1943. Over 4,000 children, women, and old
men were deported to
Sobibor;
3,700 Jews were sent to camps in Estonia and
Latvia; and
hundreds of women, children, and old men were again shot at
Ponary. About 2,500 Jews were left in labor camps in Vilna.
Approximately 1,000 Jews had gone into hiding inside the
ghetto but most were caught over the next few months. A few
hundred FPO members joined the Partisans.
Eighty Jews were kept in Ponary in order to open the mass
graves and burn the bodies to destroy the evidence of mass
killings. Ten days before Vilna was liberated, the Jews in
the local labor camps were killed in Ponary. 150-200
managed to escape.
Vilna was liberated on July 13, 1944. Only 2,000-3,000 of
the city's original Jewish population survived.
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