Book Reviews
A chilling look at the Lodz ghetto
The unlikely tale of the man who tried to save the Jews of Lodz.
By Matthew Shaer | May 21, 2008 edition
Ghettostadt: Lodz and the Making of a Nazi City By Gordon J. Horwitz Belknap Press 416 pp., $29.95
Matthew Shaer interviews Gordon J. Horwitz, author of "Ghettostadt."
Matthew Shaer
In the first months of 1940, Wilhelm Hallbauer traveled from the German port town of Wilhelmshaven to the Polish industrial town of Lodz, which had recently succumbed to Nazi forces. His orders: bring to the place a semblance of social and architectural modernity. Here in Lodz the Germans saw an opportunity to reshape a backward Polish city into a Nazi showplace, a contemporary metropolis of the arts.
But above all, Gordon J. Horwitz explains in his chilling new history, Ghettostadt: Lodz and the Making of a Nazi City, Hallbauer’s role was to usher Lodz through the “grand scheme of historic population changes” – first the isolation, and finally the destruction, of the Jews.
By the 1930s, Lodz, which sits in the center of Poland, some 80 miles southwest of Warsaw, counted a population of almost 604,000. Some 32 percent were Jews, drawn to the city by a market boom in textile manufacturing and trade. Nine percent of the population was German; the rest were Poles, many recently arrived from the surrounding countryside. “Under enlightened German administration,” Horwitz notes, “all this was going to change.”
Early in 1940, citing – speciously – an outbreak of disease among the Jewish residents of Lodz, Nazi officials began transplanting all 200,000 Jews to a barbed-wire ghetto in the northern district. There, men, women, and children were crammed into tiny tenement houses, with community taps spouting murky, undrinkable water.
On March 6 of that year, the Nazis decided that the evacuation of downtown Jewish households, which were to be handed over to German settlers, was moving too slowly. That evening, soldiers dragged residents onto the main boulevard, and shot 200 immediately; 150 people were later killed in the forest at the city’s edge.
Two months later, Nazi records indicated that 163,777 Jews had been successfully herded into the ghetto. The avenues and government buildings downtown were renamed for Germanic heroes; Lodz itself was reborn as Litzmannstadt, after a prominent World War I commander. “The last Jews,” Horwitz writes, “had disappeared from the urban scene.”
“Ghettostadt” is a necessarily heavy book, front-loaded by a sense at wonderment: How quickly the atrocities piled up. But “Ghettostadt” is more than just another recounting of the horrors of the Holocaust.
Surprisingly, it is the first English-language study of the Lodz ghetto. Horwitz, an associate professor of history at Illinois Wesleyan University, relies on a rich mix of primary sources – including diaries, testimonies, and memoirs of the Lodz Jews themselves – to tell the story of the Lodz ghetto in a fashion that is as thorough and compelling as it is horrifying.
It’s also – paradoxically – a history imbued with forgiveness. Horwitz is fascinated by Mordechai Chaim Rumkowski, (also known at the time as “King of the Jews”). Before the German invasion, Rumkowski was a manager of Jewish welfare agencies whose career had been tainted by a sex scandal. After the German occupation was established, Rumkowski – under the propelling force of his own ambition – talked his way into becoming the administrator of the ghetto and the official liaison with Nazi leadership.
Rumkowski was an arrogant and dictatorial leader, and tended to favor wealthy and educated Jews. But Horwitz also portrays him as a true believer in a strategy of “rescue through labor, and delay.” He believed that if the Jewish community in Lodz could prove themselves useful they might survive. So he organized the ghetto into a production center, churning out goods needed by the Germans for the war effort.
As World War II hurtled toward its end and Nazi leadership began ramping up efforts to completely extinguish the Jewish population, Rumkowski pushed residents to slave in the factories and shops, hoping to make them indispensable and to keep them safe till the end of the war.
He did not succeed. In August 1944, Rumkowski and the remaining 70,000 Lodz Jews were sent to death camps.
“Ghettostadt” tells its story through hundreds of sources, from Rumkowski’s diary to the journals of the German commanders. At its best, the book becomes an intimate account of a tragedy driven by leadership gone mad and carried out by the citizens of a ghetto pressed daily into unrelenting misery until they finally disappeared.
Matthew Shaer is a Monitor staff writer.
Comments
2. Ellen Resnick | 05.22.08
Having been to Lodz recently, this was good to learn about as I could visualize so much. Its a wondeful City with alot to offer and I believe it will become very important to Polan and Europe in the close future, its already being called LolyWood with all the film productions there, and there is a wonderful Holocaust Museum there and lots of Jewish history to be seen and felt. I hope more people go.
3. Emma Goldmann | 05.24.08
The Jews are so selfish. All they think about is their alleged suffering. What about the palestinians behind the Jewish apartheid wall?
4. Abuelo Marcos | 05.28.08
Dear Emma:
Please explain something for me.
Less than 10 million Jews are surrounded by 300 million Muslims. Are you suggesting that those few Jews are somehow more powerful than all those Muslims.
The Palestinians are reviled more by the Arabs than they are by the Jews. The Muslim world would fix all the Palestinian problems (without harming a single Israeli) but the Muslims like using the Palestinians as tools of terror.
But then, maybe the suffering of the Palestinians is Allah’s will. Who are we to question that?
5. Abraham Cykiert | 06.14.08
I survived Litzmannstadt Ghetto as a teenager messenger> Rumkowski may have been whatever he was but in the Ghetto he was a product of the time and sincerely dedicated to the survival of at least some part of the Jewish population. I know it from many sources that I came in contact during my work at that time.
Working on that subject throughout my life (See Google Abraham Cykiert) I doubt if any outsider can reconstruct the Ghetto reality. To see Rumkowski in a true ;light one has to see the total Ghetto population. Everything I read over the many years presents Rumkowski as either the contra to the Ghetto population or as a man with a sick ambition. He was neither, he was a 19th century product of a Diaspora Jew before there was a Jewish homeland. and acted accordingly.




1. J Nirenberg | 05.21.08
Thanks for addressing a fascinating story and calling attention to the book.
Shaer and, I presume, Horwitz, leave out a significant part of the story and Lodz’s population. pre-genocide Lodz may well have been 32% Jewish and 9% German but the remainder was not all Polish. Lodz had a sizeable Romany population, most of which was moved into its own distinct area and then deported to death camps. Ignoring this part of history is especially unfortunate since Roma today still face considerable discrimination and prejudice in Lodz and elsewhere in Poland.