- A
Judenrat (German: [ˈjuːdn̩ˌʁaːt], lit. 'Jewish council') was an
administrative body
established in German-occupied
Europe during World War II
which purported...
- were
auxiliary police units organized within the ****
ghettos by
local Judenrat (Jewish councils).
Members of the
Jewish Police did not
usually have official...
- the wake of
military defeats on the
Eastern Front. As the head of the
Judenrat,
Rumkowski is
remembered for his
speech Give Me Your Children, delivered...
-
order in the ghettos. Formally, the
Jewish police were
subordinate to the
Judenrats, but in most
ghettos they
quickly became independent of them and even...
- Ordnungsdienst,
commonly abbreviated as OD). The OD were
subordinated to the
Judenrat (Jewish Council) of each ghetto. The Kraków OD,
unlike many
other Jewish...
-
National Jewish Book
Award in the
Holocaust category for his
monograph titled Judenrat: The
Jewish Councils in
Eastern Europe Under ****
Occupation published...
-
Polish Jews
should move to the new
Warsaw Ghetto. As in all the ghettos, a
Judenrat was
appointed and was
responsible for the
administration of the ghetto...
- Polish; 1905 – June 1943) was the head of the
Jewish Community Council, or
Judenrat, in the
Sosnowiec Ghetto during the ****
German occupation of
Poland in...
-
segregated by **** some
family life continued. A
Jewish community leadership (
Judenrat)
exercised some
authority and
tried to
sustain the
Jewish community while...
- the
occupied area of
central Poland. The ****-appointed
Jewish Council (
Judenrat) in Warsaw, a
committee of 24
people headed by Adam Czerniaków, was responsible...