On this day in 1943, the largest Jewish revolt during WWII began when Jews in the Warsaw Ghetto attacked Nazis attempting to deport them to death camps. Nazis razed the entire ghetto block by block, killing more than 7,000 and deporting 42,000.

The Warsaw Ghetto was the largest Jewish ghetto in German-occupied Europe, housing approximately 400,000 Jews in 1940. In 1942, Nazi police and military carried out mass deportations, in total around 265,000 Jews, from the Warsaw Ghetto to the Treblinka killing center. By early 1943, the Warsaw Ghetto's population was down to 70,000 - 80,000.

In 1942, it was abundantly clear to the residents of the Warsaw Ghetto that deportation was a death sentence. Two armed resistance groups were formed that year - the left-wing Jewish Combat Organization (Żydowska Organizacja Bojowa; ŻOB) and the Zionist Jewish Military Union (Żydowski Związek Wojskowy; ŻZW).

On April 19th, 1943, the eve of Passover, Nazis attempted another mass deportation. ŻOB had received advance notice, however, and 700 young Jewish fighters met the Nazi police with resistance.

The rebels lacked formal military training and were poorly equipped, but had the advantage of waging a guerilla war, retreating to the safety of ghetto buildings and tunnels after attacking. Non-armed residents also resisted by refusing to cooperate with police by refusing to assemble at collection points.

In response, the Nazi forces, armed with artillery and tanks, began razing the ghetto block by block. According to Benjamin Meed, a Jew hiding in the "Aryan" part of Warsaw at the time, the entire sky was red from the ghetto's destruction.

Resistance lasted for approximately a month. On May 8th, 1943, German forces succeeded in seizing ŻOB headquarters, and many of the group's commanders are thought to have committed suicide to avoid capture.

Approximately 7,000 Jews while fighting or hiding during the uprising. Police deported approximately 42,000 survivors who were captured during the revolt, most of whom were shot to death in the Nazi "Operation Harvest Festival" (Erntefest). Many Jews (one estimate suggests 20,000) evaded capture and continued to hide in the ruins of the Warsaw Ghetto.

Resisters knew that the uprising was likely doomed, but chose to fight anyway. Marek Edelman, the only surviving ŻOB commander, stated that the inspiration to fight back was "not to allow the Germans alone to pick the time and place of our deaths".

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  • Mokey [none/use name]
    ·
    9 months ago

    Went to a jam session last night.

    It was a college kid jam, very hip place. Everyone was early 20s. I felt old.

    The wunderkid was hosting the session, he's really good but I realized his technique isn't amazing like I thought it was. The house set was pretty good, he was too loud at times but whatever. I like him, he's a nice kid and he sounds great.

    I played two songs, Alone Together and Skylark. I don't know Skylark, the pianist didn't know Skylark, the bass player was reading a lead sheet. No one knew Skylark and we played Skylark. lol

    Comparatively to the house drummer kid, he's more expressive, he has more knowledge about the music and has more vocabulary. I'm more consistent, i play more for the musicians i'm with and I have more technical control. I think he's better than me for sure but maybe one day I'll get better than him.

    I'm about to finish up my technical studies, i've been plugging away for a few years now. I can play a 32nd note grid single stroke roll at 140+ bpm. I studied rebound with some amazing classical musicians. I'm fluent in all of the grip styles. I can do whatever I want on the bass drum and my left foot is almost caught up with my right. I am solid when it comes to technique.

    I want to move on to learning songs, transcribing, studying timekeeping at different tempos/time signatures/feels and making music. I feel like I didn't want to have the problem of encountering music that was too hard to play because of technical limitations, now that that's not really an issue anymore. I think the next few years are going to be really interesting growth-wise.