Ottawa Citizen

Doubts linger still for Warsaw Ghetto vet

‘No one had right’ to hasten certain death of Jews at Nazi hands

- VANESSA GERA

WARSAW Sirens wailed and church bells tolled in Warsaw as largely Roman Catholic Poland paid homage Friday to the Jewish fighters who rose up 70 years ago against German Nazi forces in the Warsaw ghetto uprising.

The mournful sounds marked the start of state ceremonies that were led by President Bronislaw Komorowski at the iconic Monument to the Ghetto Heroes. The president was joined by officials from Poland, Israel and elsewhere as well as a survivor of the fighting, Simha Rotem, to honour the first large-scale rebellion against the Germans during the Second World War.

About 750 Jews with few arms and no military training made their opening attack on April 19, 1943, on a much larger and well-equipped German force. The attack came after most of the nearly half a million inhabitant­s of the ghetto had already been sent to die at Treblinka.

The insurgency came when it was clear the Nazis were about to send the remaining residents of the ghetto to die too. The revolt was crushed the following month, and the ghetto was razed to the ground, most of its residents killed.

“We knew that the end would be the same for everyone. The thought of waging an uprising was dictated by our determinat­ion. We wanted to choose the kind of death we would die,” said Rotem, an 88-year-old who is among a tiny number of surviving fighters and was the key figure at the ceremony. “But to this day I have doubts as to whether we had the right to carry out the uprising and shorten the lives of people by a day, a week, or two weeks. No one gave us that right and I have to live with my doubts.”

Rotem’s uncertaint­y is in stark contrast to how the world remembers the revolt. Though a clear military defeat, it is hailed as a moral victory for the Jewish fighters, who refused to go without a fight to the gas chambers. It is prominentl­y commemorat­ed in Israel, part of a never-again ethos that stresses the importance of self-defence.

“The Nazi Germans made a hell on Earth of the ghetto,” Komorowski said in a speech. “Persecutin­g the Jews appealed to the lowest of human instincts.”

Officials had announced that a second surviving fighter, Havka Folman Raban, would also participat­e, but it was unclear if she was there.

It’s not clear how many of the fighters are still living, but the number is tiny, with Polish authoritie­s saying they believe there are perhaps four. One, Boruch Spiegel, is 93 and living in a home for the elderly in Montreal. He was presented with a state honour in Warsaw on the 60th anniversar­y of the uprising but was unable to attend this year.

 ?? JANEK SKARZYNSKI/AFP/GETTY IMAGES ?? Simha ‘Kazik’ Rotem, one of few living Warsaw Ghetto insurgents, was at the 70th anniversar­y ceremony Friday.
JANEK SKARZYNSKI/AFP/GETTY IMAGES Simha ‘Kazik’ Rotem, one of few living Warsaw Ghetto insurgents, was at the 70th anniversar­y ceremony Friday.

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