Leaving The Ghetto Essay

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The residents of Lodz Ghetto struggled to survive because they were cut off from the rest of the world. They to solely depend on the Germans for all of their necessities which included food and water, housing, sewage, and heat (D 406). However, the Germans did not provide enough of these life essentials, if any. Communication to anyone outside the ghetto was also almost nonexistent in the ghetto. Radios were prohibited, resulting to no news of the war or the outside world (D 408). The residents had to trust what the Germans were telling them were fact. This caused the residents to build false hope when being deported. Many new residents of the ghetto assumed they were going somewhere better than the ghetto, but instead, were taken to Chelmno Killing Center (F 2-3). Being cut off from the world was one of the catalysts to the acute suffering the residents had to endure.

The Jews were not only cut off from the rest of the city by the means of communication, but they were also physically locked in. A barbed wire fence went up in April 1940 (F 1). Leaving the ghetto now became a much harder task. Jews would be arrested if …show more content…

About 40,000 of the residents of Lodz Ghetto died of starvation (B 2). That amount of people dying was a sure sign that the ghetto had sparse amount of food, but no one heeded any change. Starvation killed the ones either too old or ill to work (E 2). If the Nazis didn’t feel that you were fit to work, you ultimately died. Because of the lack of food, “people dropped like poised flies” (C 236). Starvation took far too many people in Lodz Ghetto during the horrible Holocaust. The Nazis didn’t feel the need to change their ways to give the ghetto more food, because their goal, was to kill all the Jews. Death came in other ways, too, and over 20 percent of the inhabitants of Lodz Ghetto died because of the inhumane living conditions (A 1). Concluding

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