Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Introduction
- 1 Historiography and Popular Understandings
- 2 Ghetto: The Source of the Term and the Phenomenon in the Early Modern Age
- 3 Ghetto and Ghettoization as Cultural Concepts in the Modern Age
- 4 The Nazis' Anti-Jewish Policy in the 1930s in Germany and the Question of Jewish Residential Districts
- 5 First References to the Term “Ghetto” in the Ideological Discourse of the Makers of Anti-Jewish Policy in the Third Reich (1933–1938)
- 6 The Semantic Turning Point in the Meaning of “Ghetto”: Peter-Heinz Seraphim and Das Judentum im osteuropäischen Raum
- 7 The Invasion of Poland and the Emergence of the “Classic” Ghettos
- 8 Methodological Interlude: The Term “Ghettoization” and Its Use During the Holocaust Itself and in Later Scholarship
- 9 Would the Idea Spread to Other Places? Amsterdam 1941, the Only Attempt to Establish a Ghetto West of Poland
- 10 Ghettos During the Final Solution, 1941–1943: The Territories Occupied in Operation Barbarossa
- 11 Ghettos During the Final Solution Outside the Occupied Soviet Union: Poland, Theresienstadt, Amsterdam, Transnistria, Salonika, and Hungary
- 12 Summary and Conclusions
- Bibliography
- Index
11 - Ghettos During the Final Solution Outside the Occupied Soviet Union: Poland, Theresienstadt, Amsterdam, Transnistria, Salonika, and Hungary
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 01 March 2011
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Introduction
- 1 Historiography and Popular Understandings
- 2 Ghetto: The Source of the Term and the Phenomenon in the Early Modern Age
- 3 Ghetto and Ghettoization as Cultural Concepts in the Modern Age
- 4 The Nazis' Anti-Jewish Policy in the 1930s in Germany and the Question of Jewish Residential Districts
- 5 First References to the Term “Ghetto” in the Ideological Discourse of the Makers of Anti-Jewish Policy in the Third Reich (1933–1938)
- 6 The Semantic Turning Point in the Meaning of “Ghetto”: Peter-Heinz Seraphim and Das Judentum im osteuropäischen Raum
- 7 The Invasion of Poland and the Emergence of the “Classic” Ghettos
- 8 Methodological Interlude: The Term “Ghettoization” and Its Use During the Holocaust Itself and in Later Scholarship
- 9 Would the Idea Spread to Other Places? Amsterdam 1941, the Only Attempt to Establish a Ghetto West of Poland
- 10 Ghettos During the Final Solution, 1941–1943: The Territories Occupied in Operation Barbarossa
- 11 Ghettos During the Final Solution Outside the Occupied Soviet Union: Poland, Theresienstadt, Amsterdam, Transnistria, Salonika, and Hungary
- 12 Summary and Conclusions
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
Par. 13. The Jews will live only in ghettos, colonies and labor camps which are designated by the authorities.
All Jews found in the territory of Transnistria who do not report to the authorities to be assigned a place to live within ten days of the posting of this order will be executed.
Jews may not leave the ghettos, colonies and camps without permission from the authorities. Violators of this order will be punished by death.
Romanian Military Order, posted throughout Transnistria in August 1941For the possible establishment of a ghetto [in the Protectorate Bohemia and Moravia] only a poor and remote suburb is feasible (a section of the center of a city is not possible, it is not appropriate), or a small village or small town with perhaps some industry.
The concentration [of the Jews living in the Protectorate] will begin in the three large cities [Prague, Brünn and Mährisch-Ostrau]. Jews who are dispersed outside the cities will be forced to move there.
From the protocol of a meeting about the establishment of ghettos in the Protectorate Bohemia and Moravia, chaired by Reinhard Heydrich, October 10, 1941The ghettization [sic] was implemented in such a way, that the Jews were forced to take up apartments in two large quarters of the city, which until now had been inhabited almost exclusively by Jews. One of these areas is situated in the western part of the city, the other in the eastern part.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- The Emergence of Jewish Ghettos during the Holocaust , pp. 122 - 144Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2011