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This chapter examines Jewish responses to “Operation Reinhardt” from the spring of 1942 until the fall of 1943. Examining the attitudes of the rank-and-file members of the Jewish Councils and the underground, as well as individual Jews in the ghettos in the Generalgouvernement, it pays close attention to the dilemmas Jews who remained in the ghetto faced, as more people tried to escape to the “Aryan” side and planned armed resistance.
Jews attempted mass escapes and uprisings in many dozens of ghettos and camps during the Holocaust. This chapter discusses armed resistance in ghettos and camps, looking both at the better-known instances such as the Warsaw ghetto uprising or the Sonderkommando revolt at Auschwitz–Birkenau and also at other cases of armed resistance in ghettos such as Białystok, as well as Sobibór and Treblinka death camps, seeking to identify patterns and connections between these instances.
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