The Parczew partisans were fighters in irregular military groups participating in the Jewish resistance movement against Nazi Germany and its collaborators during World War II.[1] The name of the partisan force, coined by the Holocaust historians, is borrowed from the Parczew forest located a short distance away from Lublin, halfway to the town of Sobibór, the location of the Sobibór extermination camp during the Holocaust in occupied Poland. The Jews who managed to escape from the camp hid in there along with the considerable number of Jewish families of the Lublin Ghetto.[2]

The area including Parczew and Włodawa counties near Lublin in the General Government became one of the primary battlefields of the Jewish partisan movement. An area of forests and lakes with few passable roads, the Parczew forests were an ideal location for partisan activity. Notable partisan leaders included Ephraim (Frank) Bleichman, Harold Werner, and Shmuel (Mieczysław) Gruber. Werner and Gruber were second-in-command to Yechiel Grynszpan, who led Jewish forces in the Parczew forest, and Bleichman was one of Grynszpan's two platoon commanders.

The same forest constituted the main base of the non-Jewish Polish partisan movement as well. Such high concentration of resistance including Gwardia Ludowa (GL), Bataliony Chłopskie (BCh), and Armia Krajowa (AK) was possible only due to strong material support from the surrounding counties.[3]

History

The group fought along with the People's Guard (Polish: Gwardia Ludowa) in a number of intense engagements against German forces, making use of machine guns, explosives for mining railways, and other supplies air-dropped by Soviet forces, with food stuffs requisitioned from local farmers. They participated in the takeover of the city of Parczew on April 16, 1944.[1]

After Operation Barbarossa, the German military and Orpo aided by the Ukrainian Auxiliary Police battalions,[4] began mass deportations of Polish inhabitants of Zamojszczyzna south of Chełm in preparation for the Generalplan Ost resettlement ordered by Reichsführer-SS Heinrich Himmler.[5] Some Polish villages were simply razed and their inhabitants massacred.[6][7] During Heim ins Reich Ukraineraktion (pl),[8] pro-Nazi Ukrainians and German-Ukrainian Volksdeutsche were being resettled there along with ethnic Germans from the east.[8] They were given new latifundia built by Jewish prisoners of the Lublin Reservation who were sent to nearby Sobibór extermination camp afterwards.[9] The Polish underground retaliated by launching the Zamość uprising, considered to be among the largest actions of the Polish resistance during World War II.[10][11] Some Ukrainian sources refer to this operation as a massacre of Ukrainian villagers near Chelm and in the Podlasie area, and attribute thousands of those killed to the Polish underground.[12][13] Such claims are rejected by the Institute of National Remembrance,[14] and debunked by Ukrainian authors of the Historical Dictionary of Ukraine who point out that recent studies confirm a much lower figure.[15] According to Jewish sources, the Jewish partisans themselves used to execute Ukrainian villagers "who had gone to the woods to round up the Jews who had escaped" from the ghettos.[16] The killings in villages near the Parczew forest were motivated by revenge for the "anti-Jewish activities" of the Ukrainian peasants.[16][17]

See also

Notes and references

  1. 1 2 Holocaust Encyclopedia. "Partisan Groups in the Parczew Forests". U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum. Retrieved 2007-08-15. Text from the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum webpage has been released under the GFDL license (OTRS ticket no. 2007071910012533 confirmed). The Museum can offer no guarantee that the information is correct in each circumstance.
  2. Browning, Christopher R. (1998) [1992]. Arrival in Poland (PDF). Penguin Books. pp. 88–93, 104–106. Retrieved October 18, 2015 via direct download 7.91 MB complete. Also: PDF cache archived by WebCite. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help); External link in |quote= (help)
  3. Agnieszka Smreczyńska-Gąbka. "Historia Parczewa. Bitwa w Lasach Parczewskich, 6–7 grudnia 1942 roku" [History of Parczew. Battle in the Parczew forest, 6–7 December 1942] (PDF). Gmina Parczew. PDF excerpt. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help); External link in |quote= (help)
  4. Agnieszka Jaczyńska (2012). Aktion Zamosc (PDF). OBEP IPN, Lublin: Institute of National Remembrance. 30-35 (1-5 in PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2015-05-28. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)
  5. Dzieci Zamojszczyzny (Children of Zamojszczyzna) on YouTube produced by Telewizja Polska S.A., Lublin, Dział Form Dokumentalnych, for Program 2, TVP S.A., 1999 (42 min. in colour and black-and-white).
  6. "Zamosc Ghetto" at DeathCamps.org. Last retrieved on March 16, 2008
  7. Joseph Poprzeczny, Odilo Globocnik, Hitler's Man in the East, McFarland, 2004, ISBN 0-7864-1625-4, pp. 110–111.
  8. 1 2 Tadeusz Piotrowski (1998). Poland's Holocaust. McFarland. pp. 299–. ISBN 0-7864-0371-3. Zamojszczyzna 116,000.
  9. Sławomir Sobolewski. "Obozy pracy na terenie Gminy Hańsk" [World War II forced labour camps in Gmina Hańsk]. Hansk.info, the official webpage of Gmina Hańsk. Archived from the original on 27 February 2021. Retrieved 29 September 2014.
  10. Joseph Poprzeczny (2004). Odilo Globocnik, Hitler's Man in the East. McFarland. ISBN 0-7864-8146-3.
  11. Armia Krajowa Archived 2014-05-12 at the Wayback Machine at Encyklopedia PWN
  12. Motyl, Alexander J. "Trivializing Genocide: A Dangerous Distraction". World Affairs Journal. Archived from the original on August 19, 2016. Retrieved 18 August 2016.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  13. Subtelny, Orest (10 November 2009). Ukraine: A History (4th ed.). University of Toronto Press. ISBN 978-1-4426-9728-7. Retrieved 22 August 2016. Ukrainians claim that massacres of their people began earlier, in 1942, when Poles wiped out thousands of Ukrainian villagers in the predominantly Polish areas of Khom
  14. Grzegorz Motyka. "The Genocide on Poles Conducted by the OUN-B and UPA". Volhynia Massacre. Institute of National Remembrance. ...the "masses of Ukrainian refugees" from the Chełm region who had fled across the Bug River eastward as early as 1942/1943... inflamed the anti-Polish sentiments among Ukrainian peasants by telling them about the atrocities Poles had purportedly committed against Ukrainians in the Chełm region. All this is in line with the pro-Bandera propaganda put forward during the last stages of World War II and successfully promoted after the war by émigré Ukrainian nationalist historians associated with OUN-B.
  15. Ivan Katchanovski; Zenon E. Kohut; Bohdan Y. Nebesio; Myroslav Yurkevich (2013). Historical Dictionary of Ukraine. Scarecrow Press. p. 698. ISBN 978-0-8108-7847-1.
  16. 1 2 Werner, Harold (1992). Fighting Back: A Memoir of Jewish Resistance in World War II. New York: Columbia University Press. ASIN 0231078838. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)
  17. Chodakiewicz, Marek Jan (2012). Intermarium: The Land Between the Black and Baltic Seas. Transaction Publishers. p. 159. ISBN 978-1-4128-4774-2 via Google Books. However, the former villages, according to Jewish sources, were attacked by Jewish partisans in revenge for the villagers' anti-Jewish activities.
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