Announcement suspending postal service in the Łódź ghetto
Extent and Medium
overall: Height: 9.750 inches (24.765 cm) | Width: 13.500 inches (34.29 cm)
Creator(s)
- Mordechai C. Rumkowski (Issuer)
Biographical History
Mordechai Chaim Rumkowski was born on February 27, 1877, in Ilino, Russia, to Reuven Rumkowski. His brother, Josef, was born on August 8, 1884. He relocated to Łódź, Poland, in the early 1900s, and worked as a merchant and velvet manufacturer before beginning a career as an insurance salesman. In the early 1920s, with funding from the Joint Distribution Committee and other business entities, he opened an orphanage in Helenowek, a Łódź district. He was heavily involved in local Jewish affairs, served on the board of the local Zionist party, and was a member of the Jewish Council. On September 1, 1939, Germany invaded Poland and by September 8, they occupied Łódź. They appointed an Ältestenrat [Council of Elders] and made 62-year-old Mordechai the Älteste der Juden [Elder of the Jews], a position which gave him a wide range of powers over the Jewish community. He was ordered to choose 31 prominent Jews. On November 11, the Germans arrested the 31 members and they were taken to Radogoszcz prison; eight were released and the rest were murdered. Mordechai formed a second Ältestenrat, which had little influence on Jewish affairs. The Germans established the Łódź ghetto on February 8, 1940. It was a sealed ghetto, surrounded by barbed wire fencing. Inhabitants were not permitted to leave, except for a small number of forced laborers. This led to overcrowding, starvation, illness, and unsanitary living conditions. Mordechai was appointed the sole administer and answered to Hans Biebow, the head of the ghetto administration. Biebow controlled all activity in the ghetto; he made a profit on slave labor, confiscated property, organized transports to Chelmno killing center, and was active in the destruction of the ghetto. Mordechai was responsible for providing heat, housing, work, food, clothing, and health care. He instituted social programs, issued postage stamps and “Rumkies”, ghetto money printed with his name and signature, performed marriages, and made numerous public speeches. The Germans required the Jews to pay for their food, housing, and maintenance of the ghetto. Having had their valuables seized and with no way to earn an income, Jews had no money and food was scarce. Mordechai believed that by creating an economically viable and productive workforce, he could spare Jews from deportation and the ghetto from destruction. On April 5, 1940, he requested permission to establish factories using forced Jewish labor. The Germans would supply the raw materials and the workers would make the products and be paid in money and food. The proposal was approved on April 30, 1945, with one change; the workers would be paid in food only. On May 17, 1940, Biebow ordered Arbeitsressorte [work sections] to be set up. By January 1943, there were 96 Arbeitsressorte employing 78,946 workers. The Nazis delivered food that was rationed and inequitably distributed by Mordechai. The amount and quality of food inhabitants received depended on their work status. On November 17, 1940, Mordechai authorized the founding of the Łódź Ghetto Archives. It became the repository for information regarding the overall history and daily activities of the ghetto. The Chronicle of the Łódź Ghetto bulletin, which detailed life and events in the ghetto and its eventual destruction, was included and censored by Mordechai. Deportations to the concentration camps began in December 1940. Mordechai cooperated and fulfilled the German set quotas and concentrated on saving the ghetto as a whole. The following year, on December 10, 1941, the Germans ordered 20,000 ghetto inhabitants deported to Chelmno killing center. They ordered Mordechai to select who would be deported. He created the Committee of Five to draw up the list and to hear appeals. On December 27, while working on the list, Mordechai married Regina Weinberger, his legal advisor. They adopted a son, Stanislaw Stein. This was his third marriage; he was twice widowed and his previous marriages were childless. On January 26, 1942, those selected were deported to Chelmno. On September 1942, another mass deportation included the young, old, and ill. In a speech on September 4, 1942, Mordechai told mothers to give up their children. The women refused and the Gestapo stormed the ghetto and brutally removed the children and other deportees. Deportations then ceased for nearly 2 years as the German army was low on munitions and used the forced labor in Łódź to produce the needed goods. On June 10, 1944, Heinrich Himmler ordered the destruction of the ghetto. Mordechai lied and told the remaining Jews that they were being deported to repair damage caused by air raids. Two deportations to Chelmno followed. On August 4, 1944, the remaining inhabitants were sent to Auschwitz death camp. Mordechai, his family, Jozef and his wife Helene, were on that transport and were murdered. On January 19, 1945, the Soviet army liberated the Łódź ghetto. At its most populated, Łódź had 245,000 internees; there were 877 upon liberation.
Archival History
The announcement was donated to the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum in 1989 by Gila Flam.
Acquisition
United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Collection, Gift of Marek Budziarek
Funding Note: The cataloging of this artifact has been supported by a grant from the Conference on Jewish Material Claims Against Germany.
Scope and Content
Notification of a postal ban issued in the Łódź ghetto in German occupied Poland by Mordecai Rumkowski, head of the Jewish Council that administered the Ghetto for the Germans. Nazi Germany invaded Poland on September 1, 1939, and occupied Łódź one week later. Łódź was renamed Litzmannstadt and, by February 1940, the Germans forcibly relocated the large Jewish population of 160,000 into a small, sealed ghetto. All residents had to work and many were forced laborers in ghetto factories. Residents. Living conditions were horrendous; the overcrowding and lack of food caused widespread disease and starvation. In January 1942, mass deportations to Chelmno killing center began; half the residents were murdered by the end of the year. In summer 1944, Łódź, the last ghetto in Poland, was destroyed and the remaining Jews were sent to Chelmno and Auschwitz-Birkenau killing centers.
Conditions Governing Access
No restrictions on access
Conditions Governing Reproduction
No restrictions on use
Physical Characteristics and Technical Requirements
Announcement on light brown paper with text printed in black ink. The left half of the page has 18 lines of German text in a mix of font sizes and types, with several underlined phrases. The right half of the page repeats the announcement with similar typographic effects in Yiddish. A vertical bold line between the text blocks visually separates the 2 sections.
Corporate Bodies
- Litzmannstadt-Getto (Lodz, Poland)
Subjects
- Poland--History--Occupation, 1939-1945--Posters.
- World War, 1939-1945--Poland--Postal service.
- Postage stamps--Poland--History--1933-1945.
- Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945)--Poland--Łódź--Posters.
- Łódź (Poland)--Politics and government--Posters.
- Jewish ghettos--Poland--Łódź.
- Łódź (Poland)
- Postal service--Poland--History.
Genre
- Object
- Posters