(Redirected from Żydowski Związek Walki)
'Żydowski Związek Wojskowy' ('ŻZW',
Polish for ''Jewish Military Union'') was an
underground resistance organization operating during
World War II in the area of the
Warsaw Ghetto and fighting during the
Warsaw Ghetto Uprising. It was formed primarily of former
officers of the
Polish Army in late
1939, soon after the start of the
German occupation of
Poland.
Due to its close ties with the all-national
Armia Krajowa (AK), after the war the
Communist authorities of Poland suppressed the publication of books and articles on ŻZW, whose role in the uprising in the ghetto was undervalued,
[1] as opposed to a leftist Jewish organization
Żydowska Organizacja Bojowa (''Jewish Fighting Organization''), whose role in the struggle is better covered in modern monographs and often overstated.
[2]
History
Formation

''Heroes of the Warsaw Ghetto'' memorial in
Warsaw
The ŻZW was formed some time in November of
1939, immediately after the
German and Soviet conquest of Poland. Among its founding members was
Dawid Mordechaj Apfelbaum[3], a pre-war
Lieutenant of the Polish Army,
[4] who proposed his former superior,
Captain Henryk Iwański, to form a Jewish
en cadre resistance group in collaboration with other Polish resistance organizations being formed at that time
. At the end of December such an organization was indeed formed and received the name of Żydowski Związek Walki. On
January 30,
1940, its existence was approved by
General Władysław Sikorski, the Polish
commander in chief and the
prime minister of the
Polish Government in Exile.
Initially consisting of only 39 men, each armed with a
Vis pistol, with time it had grown to become one of the most numerous and most notable Jewish resistance organizations in Poland. Between
1940 and
1942 additional cells were formed in most major towns of Poland, including the most notable groups in
Lublin,
Lwów and
Stanisławów. Although initially formed entirely by professional soldiers, with time it also included members of pre-war right wing Jewish-Polish parties such as
Betar (among them Perec Laskier, Lowa Swerin, Paweł Frenkel, Merediks, Langleben and Rosenfeld),
Hatzohar (Joel Białobrow, Dawid Wdowiński) and the revisionist faction of the
Polish Zionist Party (Leib "Leon" Rodal and Meir Klingbeil).
The ŻZW was formed in close ties with Iwański's organization and initially focused primarily on acquisition of arms and preparation of a large action in which all of its members could escape to
Hungary, from where they wanted to flee to
Great Britain where the Polish Army was being re-created
. With time however it was decided that the members stay in occupied Poland to help organize the struggle against the occupants. In the later period the ŻZW focused on acquisition of arms for the future struggle as well as on helping the Jews to escape the
ghettos, created in almost every town in German-held Poland. Thanks to the close ties with the
Związek Walki Zbrojnej and then the AK (mainly through
Iwański's Security Corps, the Polish underground
police force), the ŻZW received a large number of guns and armaments, as well as training of their members by professional officers. Those resistance organizations also provided help with weapons and ammunition acquisition, as well as with organizing the escapes.
Although the ŻZW was active in a number of towns in Poland, it's major
headquarters remained in
Warsaw. When most of the Jewish inhabitants were forced into the Warsaw Ghetto, the ŻZW remained in contact with the outside world through Iwański and a number of other officers on the ''aryan side''. By the summer of
1942, the Union had 320 well-armed
[5] members in Warsaw alone. During the first large
deportation from the Warsaw Ghetto, the ŻZW received the news of the German plans and managed to hide most of its members in bunkers, which resulted in only up to 20 of them being arrested by the Germans
. Although Dawid Mordechaj Apfelbaum could not convince
Adam Czerniaków to start an armed
uprising against the Germans during the deportation, the organization managed to preserve most of its members - and assets. It also started to train more members and by January of
1943 it already had roughly 500 men at arms in Warsaw alone. In addition, the ''technological department'' of the ŻZW, together with Capt.
Cezary Ketling's group of the
PLAN resistance organization managed to dig up two secret tunnels under the walls of the ghetto, providing contact with the outside and allowing smuggling of arms into the ghetto.
Structure
The commander of the ŻZW at the time of the uprising was Dr.
Paweł Frenkiel,
[6] though others have mentioned Apfelbaum
and Dawid Wdowiński (although this citation is not certain due to lack of documents and sources).
The organization was divided onto groups of five soldiers. Three groups formed a unit, four units formed a platoon and four platoons - a company, composed of roughly 240 men. In early January of
1943 the ŻZW had two entirely-manned and fully-armed companies and two additional ''
en cadre'' companies, to be manned by newly-arrived
volunteers when need arises. This indeed happened in April of
1943, though the actual number of ŻZW soldiers to take part in the Uprising is a matter of debate.
Apart from the fighting groups, the ŻZW was organized into several departments:
★ Information Department, directed by Leon Rodal;
★ Organization Department, directed by Paweł Frenkel;
★ Supply Department ("Kwatermistrzowski"), directed by Leon Wajnsztok;
★ Finances Department, without a director;
★ Communication Department (contacts with
Armia Krajowa mainly), directed by Dawid Apfelbaum;
★ Medical Department led by dr Józef Celmajster (under pseudonym ''Niemirski'');
★ Juridicial Department under Dawid Szulman;
★ Saving (''Ratowanie'') Department (transporting Jewish children and others outside the ghetto), under Kalma Mendelson;
★ Department of Technology, Transport and Supplies (which, among other things, built two tunnels under the Ghetto walls) led by Hanoch Federbusz;
★ Military Department under Paweł Frenkel and Dawid Apfelbaum.
Warsaw Ghetto Uprising
During the
Warsaw Ghetto Uprising ŻZW is said to have about 400 well-armed fighters grouped in 11 units. ŻZW fought together with AK fighters in Muranowska street (4 units under Frenkel). Dawid M. Apfelbaum took position in Miła street. Heniek Federbusz group organized a strong pocket of resistance in a house near Zamenhoff street. Jan Pika unit took position in Miła street, while unit of Leizer Staniewicz fought in the
Nalewki,
Gęsia street and
Franciszkańska street. Dawid Berliński's group took position in second part of Nalewki. Roman Winsztok commanded group near Muranowska, where also the
headquarters of the Union was located (Muranowska 7/9 street). Photograph of ZZW headquarters at 2 Muranow Street Warsaw {reference only-see
[1]}
After the war
Already during the war the influence and the importance of the Żydowski Związek Wojskowy was being downgraded. The surviving commanders of the leftist
ŻOB either did not mention the ŻZW's fight in the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising in their writings at all,
or belittled its importance.
[7] Also the war-time
Soviet propaganda did only briefly mention the fighters as they collided with its aims of presenting the Soviet Union as the only defender of the European Jewry.
[8] In addition, except for
Dawid Wdowiński none of the high-ranking commanders of the ŻZW survived the war to tell their part of the story and it was not until
1963 that Wdowiński's memoirs
[9] were published.
This led to a number of myths concerning both the ŻZW and the Uprising being commonly repeated in many modern publications.
[10] This was even strengthened by the post-war propaganda of the Polish communists, who openly underlined the value of the leftist
Żydowska Organizacja Bojowa, while suppressed all publications on the
Armia Krajowa-backed ŻZW.
See also
★
Warsaw Ghetto Uprising
★
Żegota
Notes and references
::'In-line:'
1. ŻZW; Appelbaum w cieniu Anielewicza, Maciej Kledzik, , , Rzeczpospolita, 2002
2. Karły krzyczą, gdy śpią herosi, Waldemar Moszkowski, , , Nasz Dziennik, 2006
3. Some sources render his surname as Appelbaum; in fact most surnames mentioned in this article are often misspelt in the sources, cf. Frenkel - Frenkiel, Wajnsztok - Weinsztok; see also Kledzik, op.cit.
4. The Changing Face of Memory: Who Defended The Warsaw Ghetto?, Moshe Arens, , , Jerusalem Post, 2003
5. By Polish resistance standards obviously; see also Moshe Arens, op.cit.
6.
7. A surplus of memory: chronicle of the Warsaw Ghetto uprising, Icchak Cukierman, , , University of California Press, 1993, ISBN 0520078411
8. КРЕПОСТЬ МАСАДА В ВАРШАВЕ (Masada fortress in Warsaw), Pyotr Gorelik, , , Zametki po Evreiskoy Istorii, 2003
9. And we are not saved, Dawid Wdowiński, , , Philosophical Library, 1963, ISBN 0802224865
10. Восстание в Варшавском гетто. Мифы и действительность (Warsaw Ghetto Uprising: myths and facts, Aleksandr Svishchev, , , Еврейские новости (Jewish News), 2003
::'General:'
#
Muranowska 7: the Warsaw Ghetto rising, Chaim Lazar, , , Massada P.E.C. Press, 1966, ISBN
#
Zapomniani żołnierze (Forgotten Soldiers), Maciej Kledzik, , , Rzeczpospolita, 2004
Further reading
★ Apfelbaum, Marian 2007, "Two Flags; Return to the Warsaw Ghetto", Gefen Publishing House. ISBN 9789652293565
External links
★
The battle of the ghettos
★
Jews Under Occupation