Location via proxy:   [ UP ]  
[Report a bug]   [Manage cookies]                
Jump to content

Roza Robota

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Roza Robota
Photograph from Robota's high school years, courtesy of Rosa Robota Foundation.
Born1921
Ciechanów, Poland
Died6 January 1945(1945-01-06) (aged 23–24)
Cause of deathExecution by hanging
Known forHolocaust resistance

Roza Robota (1921 – 6 January 1945)[1] or Róża Robota in Polish,[2] referred to in other sources as Rojza, Rózia or Rosa, was the leader of a group of four women Holocaust resistors hanged in the Auschwitz concentration camp for their role in the Sonderkommando prisoner revolt of 7 October 1944.

Biography

[edit]

Born in Ciechanów, Poland, to a middle-class family, Róża had one brother and one sister. She was a member of Hashomer Hatzair Zionist-socialist youth movement, and joined that movement's underground, upon the 1939 Nazi German invasion of Poland. Róża often used her Hebrew name, Shoshanah. In the home of Izajasz (Isaiah) Robota at Żydowska 4 Street in Ciechanów was the Perec Library, the most active Jewish cultural society in the city, organizing discussions about the Polish, Jewish and world literature, as well as theatre performances, lectures, and dances.[3]

Auschwitz

[edit]

Roza was transported to Auschwitz concentration camp in a Holocaust train during the liquidation of the Ciechanów Ghetto in 1942.[2] She survived the "selection" and was assigned to Auschwitz-II Birkenau labor commando for women, where she got involved in the underground dissemination of news among the prisoners. No one else from her family in Europe is known to have survived. She worked in the clothing depot at the Birkenau Effektenlager adjacent to Crematorium III of Birkenau, where the bodies of gas chamber victims were burned. She had been recruited by men of the underground whom she knew from her hometown, to smuggle "Schwarzpulver" (Black powder, gunpowder; or perhaps dynamite according to other, possibly less reliable sources)[4] collected by daring young women who were forced to work in the Krupp "Weichsel" munitions factory. Robota then transferred the Schwarzpulver to a Sonderkommando man named Wróbel,[5] who was also active in the resistance. This Schwarzpulver was used to manufacture primitive grenades to help blow up the crematorium during the Sonderkommando revolt.

In her work, Róża was assisted by Hadassa Zlotnicka and her male counterpart, Godel Silber, both also from Ciechanów, whom Robota apparently enlisted in the resistance. Together with several other women and girls (estimated at 8–16 in total) who worked in the Nazi "Pulverraum" factory, they were able to obtain, hide, and turn over to Róża no more than one to three teaspoons of the Schwarzpulver compound per day, and not every day. She and other women, some unknowingly, hid the explosive material until Robota was able to smuggle it to the men of the Jewish underground. These men of the Sonderkommando blew up Crematorium III on 6 October 1944.[6]

Robota and three other women – Ala Gertner, Ester Wajcblum, and Regina Safirsztajn – were arrested by the Gestapo and severely tortured in the infamous Bloc 11 but they refused to reveal the names of others who participated in the smuggling operation. They were hanged on 6 January 1945 – two women at the morning roll-call assembly, two others in the evening. Robota was 23 years old. According to some eyewitness accounts, she and her comrades shouted "Nekamah" ("Vengeance!") to the assembled inmates before they died. Other witnesses state they shouted, "Chazak V'amatz" – "Be strong and have courage", the Biblical phrase that God uses to encourage Joshua after the death of Moses. This is also the motto of Hashomer Hatzair, the youth organization to which she belonged.

The Sonderkommando Revolt caused some 70 fatalities among the SS and kapos and blew the roof off one crematorium. The Nazis knew the advancing Russian Army was very close to liberating the camp. It was clear to them that all evidence of the war-time atrocities had to be concealed, so the Germans attempted to destroy the other four crematoria themselves. Their partial ruins are preserved today.

Legacy

[edit]

Roza Robota's memory lives on, in the naming of the Roza Robota Gates at Montefiore Randwick (Sydney, Australia). This initiative was made possible by Sam Spitzer, a resistance fighter during World War II and now a resident of Sydney. He named the gates in honour of his war-time hero, Robota, and his late wife, Margaret. Spitzer's sister was in Auschwitz with Robota.

At Yad Vashem in Jerusalem, a monument was built to honor Robota and the three other executed women. It stands in a prime location in the garden.

In the United States, the Rosa Robota Foundation, Inc., a not-for-profit educational organization in New York State has been active in the dissemination of information and has offered audio-visual presentations to student and civic groups since 1994. The Foundation also arranged a fiftieth-anniversary commemoration of the Sonderkommando Revolt at the site of a destroyed crematorium in the Auschwitz Museum. Another commemorative was scheduled to take place in Auschwitz in October, 2023, but permission to hold event at the Auschwitz Museum was denied by the current Director for no known valid reason.[7]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "Robota, Rosa" (PDF). Yad Vashem. Retrieved 30 March 2015.
  2. ^ a b Bukalska, Patrycja (20 January 2010). "Róża Robota postanowiła walczyć, do końca" [Róża Robota chose to fight till the end]. Tygodnik Powszechny, Pamięć Auschwitz (4/2010). Retrieved 12 October 2013.
  3. ^ Martyna Sypniewska. "Historia Żydów w Ciechanowie" [History of the Jews in Ciechanów]. Jewish Historical Institute (ŻIH), Dział Dokumentacji Zabytków; J. Szczepański, D. Piotrowicz (in Polish). Virtual Shtetl (Wirtualny Sztetl). Archived from the original on 2016-04-06.
  4. ^ Suhl, Yuri. "Genocide: Ch. 7: The Camps, Part 1". "Rosa Robota-Heroine of the Auschwitz Underground" (in) They Fought Back: The Story of the Jewish Resistance in Nazi Europe (New York: Crown, 1967), pp. 219-225. Simon Wiesenthal Center, Multimedia Learning.
  5. ^ Patterson, David (2002). "Salmen Lewental". In David Patterson, et al. (Eds.), Encyclopedia of Holocaust Literature, p. 112. Greenwood Publishing Group.
  6. ^ Yahil, Leni (1987). The Holocaust: The Fate of European Jewry, 1932–1945, p. 486. Oxford University Press.
  7. ^ Rosa Robota Foundation, Inc., PO Box 903, Plainview, NY 11803-0903

Sources

[edit]
  • Gurewitsch, Brana. Mothers, Sisters, Resisters: Oral Histories of Women Who Survived the Holocaust, The University of Alabama Press, 1998. (ISBN 0-8173-0952-7)
  • Shelley, Lore. The Union Kommando in Auschwitz: The Auschwitz Munition Factory Through the Eyes of Its Former Slave Laborers, University Press of America, 1996. (ISBN 0-7618-0194-4)
[edit]