Kraków Pogrom
The Kraków Pogrom (Polish: Pogrom
krakowski) refers to the violent events that occurred on 11 August 1945, in the
Soviet-occupied city of Kraków, Poland, which resulted in the shooting death of
Róża Berger while standing behind closed doors by security forces, and the
wounding of five others.
Background: Around 68,000–80,000
Jews lived in Kraków before the September 1939 German invasion of Poland.
Because of the Holocaust and further migration following the arrival of the
Soviet Red Army only 2,000 prewar inhabitants of the city were still present after
January 1945. Many Jewish refugees returned to Kraków from the Soviet Union,
including those who came from the neighbouring villages and towns. By May 1945, the number of Jews in the city
reached 6,637. The return of the Jewish population was not always welcomed,
especially by the antisemitic elements in the populace. The safety of the
Jewish community in Kraków was becoming a very serious problem according to the
Soviet-installed starosta in the city, even though "no serious antisemitic
events were recorded in the rural and small-town regions.” In his report for
1–10 August, the Kraków city administrator (starosta grodzki) noted the
"insufficient supply of food." In June 1945, the new communist
voivode of Kraków described in his report alleged growing tensions to his
superiors.
Unrest: On June 27, 1945, a Jewish woman was brought
to a local Milicja Obywatelska police station falsely accused of attempting to
abduct a child. Despite the fact that the investigation revealed that the
mother had left her child in the care of the suspect, rumours started to spread
that a Jewish woman abducted a child in order to kill it. A mob shouting
anti-Jewish slogans gathered at Kleparski square, but a Milicja detachment
brought the situation under control. Blood libel rumours continued to spread.
False claims that thirteen corpses of Christian children had been discovered
were disseminated. By 11 August, the number of rumoured "victims" had
grown to eighty. Groups of hooligans who gathered at Kleparski Square had been
throwing stones at the Kupa Synagogue on a weekly basis. On 11 August an
attempt to seize a thirteen-year-old boy who was throwing stones at the
synagogue was made, but he managed to escape and rushed to the nearby
marketplace screaming "Help me, the Jews have tried to kill me".
Instantly the crowd broke in into the Kupa synagogue and started beating Jews,
who had been praying at the Saturday morning Shabbat service; and the Torah scrolls were burned. The Jewish
hostel was also attacked. Jewish men, women and children, were beaten up on the
streets; their homes were broken into and robbed. Some Jews wounded during the
pogrom were hospitalized and later were beaten in the hospitals again. One of
the pogrom victims witnessed: I was
carried to the second precinct of the militia where they called for an
ambulance. There were five more people over there, including badly wounded
Polish woman. In the ambulance I heard the comments of the escorting soldier
and the nurse who spoke about us as Jewish crust whom they have to save, and
that they shouldn't be doing this because we murdered children, that all of us
should be shot. We were taken to the hospital of St. Lazarus at Kopernika
Street. I was first taken to the operating room. After the operation a soldier
appeared who said that he will take everybody to jail after the operation. He
beat up one of the wounded Jews waiting for an operation. He held us under
cocked gun and did not allow us to take a drink of water. A moment later two
railroadmen appeared and one said, "It's a scandal that a Pole does not
have the civil courage to hit a defenceless person", and he hit a wounded
Jew. One of the hospital inmates hit me with a crutch. Women, including nurses,
stood behind the doors threatening us that they were only waiting for the
operation to be over in order to rip us apart
During the pogrom some Poles,
mistaken for Jews, were also attacked. The centre of these events was Miodowa,
Starowislna, Przemyska, and Jozefa Streets in the Kazimierz quarter. The riots
were most intense between 11am and 1pm, calming down around 2pm, only to regain
strength in the late afternoon when the Kupa synagogue was set on fire. Polish
policemen and soldiers actively participated in these events. Among twenty-five
of those accused of inciting racial hatred, robberies, and violence against
Jews, twelve were officers. According to
the report prepared for Joseph Stalin by the NKVD in Kraków, it was Polish militiamen who sanctioned the
violence.
Casualties: There is one record of a death relating to
Kraków events in the archives of the Forensic Medicine Department in Kraków.
The victim was 56-year-old Auschwitz survivor Róża Berger, shot while standing
behind closed doors.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kraków_pogrom
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