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One may regard as active resistance anything that
Jews did during the Holocaust to prolong their lives for another moment, since
it disrupted the murderers’ main goal of exterminating the Jews. From the value
standpoint, there is no difference between an action taken by a mother who after
great effort obtained a few potatoes and made soup for her family and a girl who
fled to the partisans. The mother, too, may have had an opportunity to escape to
the partisans but passed it by because she had to look out for her family, her
parents, and the children.
Almost anyone who engaged in actual warfare against the Nazis and their
accomplices during the Holocaust was expressing a choice—accepting active death,
in resistance against the oppressor, rather than passive death, e.g., in a gas
chamber. Jews could neither ensure their survival nor win the war by fighting
back. It was an act of pride, of the feeling that they had done something
nevertheless, but not something of military significance. The threatening thing
about these actions was that many people who were totally uninvolved in the
decision to undertake them would pay for them with their lives, i.e., would be
executed by the Nazis in revenge.
One may state that women avoided this option altogether as long as they remained
in the family setting. They chose family responsibilities ab initio. The only
women who could indulge in the extra privilege of fighting, attempting to fight,
or going underground were young girls who had already grown up, relatively
speaking, but were not yet responsible for others. Most such girls belonged to
youth movements. Even there, they were not among the leaders except in a few
unusual cases. Instead, they were ordinary soldiers—liaisons, smugglers, and the
like. Often it was more a matter of companionship and planning, rather than real
operations. Just the same, a few women did participate actively in warfare, as
in the Warsaw ghetto or in a sabotage operation in Krakow. Women also fought
actively in several partisan groups. As a rule, women were totally unwanted in
non-Jewish partisan groups, which regarded them not as fighting forces but as
nuisances. Insofar as women were admitted to such units, they served as cooks,
cleaners, givers of medical care, and men’s partners. For the most part, they
were treated very badly.
In the resistance, women had an important role to play mainly in rescue. They
served as smugglers and caregivers for people who had gone into hiding,
especially children whose parents had been taken away or murdered or had placed
their children in hiding. Most such activities on the part of Jewish resistance
groups, or groups in which Jews had been co-opted, took place in Western Europe.
In the camps, women’s active role in resistance was usually limited to
sabotaging the armaments that they manufactured. Women did participate in
various resistance groups in the camps and, on the few occasions where attempts
to attack Nazis were made, they were co-opted as smugglers of explosives. When
they were caught, they did not reveal the names of their comrades despite severe
torture. Occasionally a woman attacked a guard and was immediately murdered.
Escape attempts ended similarly. As stated, these actions were threatening in
that the price for them would be paid not only by their instigators but also by
many hostages who would be executed.
Deliberate active resistance was a feat of ascendancy over the Jews’ grim and
hopeless reality in the Holocaust. This may be seen as the main uniqueness of
these women fighters. |