Informazioni sulla fonte

United States Holocaust Memorial Museum
Ancestry.com. Polonia, Elenchi degli abitanti del ghetto di Łódź, 1939-1944 (USHMM) [database online]. Lehi, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2015.

This collection was indexed by World Memory Project contributors from the digitized holdings of the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum, RG-15.083M. Przełożony Starszeństwa Żydow w Getcie Łódzkim. For more information about this collection, click on the collection title above to access the USHMM’s catalog record, or email [email protected].

The World Memory Project is part of the Ancestry World Archives Project. Click here to see additional World Memory Project collections.

Dati originali:

Przełożony Starszeństwa Żydow w Getcie Łódzkim [German: Der Aelteste der Juden vom Litzmannstadt-Getto; English: The Eldest of the Jews in the Łódź Ghetto, 1939–1944]. Series RG-15.083M, Reels 1-696. Record Group 15: Poland. The United States Holocaust Memorial Museum, Washington D.C.

 Polonia, Elenchi degli abitanti del ghetto di Łódź, 1939-1944 (USHMM)

Questo database fornisce il nome, la data di nascita, la religione, il gruppo etnico e gli indirizzi delle persone che vivevano nel ghetto di Lódz durante l’occupazione nazista.

This collection features an index to lists of people who lived in the Lódz ghetto. The records are in German. The original records are held by the Polish State Archives in Lódz.

Historical Background

Prior to the German invasion of Poland, Lódz had a large Jewish population, estimated at around 223,000 of the 665,000 residents of the city. The Lódz ghetto was established in February of 1940, and by May it was sealed, with residents not allowed out and outsiders not allowed in.

Leadership of the ghetto was put into the hands of Mordechai Chaim Rumkowski, who believed that the ghetto’s productivity provided its best chance at salvation. Workers labored for food rations that were based on their occupation.

Details that can be found in the index include:

  • name
  • birth date
  • religion
  • ethnicity
  • estimated age
  • residence
  • current and former addresses

When the Russians liberated the Lódz ghetto, there were only 877 survivors left. The vast majority had died from the harsh conditions or were sent to the killing center at Chelmno or, in the ghetto’s final days, to the extermination camp at Auschwitz.

Ordering Records

Additional details about these victims may be included in the original records. While the index is freely accessible from Ancestry.com, the images of these records are not available in this database. Copies of the images can be ordered at no cost from the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. Click here for ordering information.

Updates:
30 Jan 2019: Changes were made to improve the performance of this collection.  No new records were added.