Adam Czerniaków
Adam Czerniaków (30 November 1880 – 23 July 1942), born in Warsaw, Poland, was a Polish-Jewish engineer and senator to the prewar Polish Sejm for Nonpartisan Bloc for Cooperation with the Government. He committed suicide in the Warsaw Ghetto on 23 July 1942 by swallowing a cyanide pill, a day after the commencement of mass extermination of Jews known as the Grossaktion Warsaw.[1][2]
Czerniaków studied engineering and taught in the Jewish community's vocational school in Warsaw. From 1927 to 1934 he served as member of the Warsaw Municipal Council, and in 1931 was elected to the Polish Senate. On 4 October 1939, a few days after the city's surrender to the Nazis, Czerniaków was made head of the 24 member Judenrat (Jewish Council), responsible for implementing Nazi orders in the new Jewish Ghetto.[3]
As the German authorities began preparing for mass deportations of Jews from the Warsaw Ghetto to the newly built Treblinka extermination camp in July 1942, the Jewish Council was ordered to provide lists of Jews and maps of their residences. On 22 July 1942, the Judenrat received instructions from the SS that all Warsaw Jews were to be "resettled" to the East. Exceptions were made for Jews working in Nazi German factories, Jewish hospital staff, members of the Judenrat with their families, members of the Jewish Ghetto Police with their families. Over the course of the day, Czerniaków was able to obtain exemptions for a handful of individuals, including sanitation workers, husbands of women working in factories, and some vocational students. He was not, however, despite all his pleading, able to obtain an exemption for orphans from the Janusz Korczak's orphanage. The orders further stated that the deportations would begin immediately at the rate of 6,000 people per day, to be supplied by the Judenrat and rounded up by the Jewish Ghetto Police. Failure to comply would result in immediate execution of some one hundred hostages, including employees of the Judenrat and Czerniaków's own wife.[3]
Realizing that deportation meant death, Czerniaków went to plead for the orphans. When he failed, he returned to his office and took one of the cyanide capsules he had been keeping for just such an occasion. He left a suicide note to his wife, reading “They demand me to kill children of my nation with my own hands. I have nothing to do but to die,” and one to his fellow members of the Judenrat, explaining: "I can no longer bear all this. My act will prove to everyone what is the right thing to do."[3]
Czerniaków kept a diary from 6 September 1939, until the day of his death. It was published in 1979 and has been translated into English. Adam Czerniaków is interred in the Okopowa street cemetery in Warsaw.[4][3]
In the 2001 Warner Bros. motion picture, Uprising, actor Donald Sutherland portrayed Adam Czerniaków. Excerpts of his diary are featured in most recent historical documentary film called A Film Unfinished.
See also
- Mordechai Chaim Rumkowski, head of Judenrat in the Łódź Ghetto
- Julian Tuwim, a nephew of Adam Czerniaków
- A Film Unfinished, documentary featuring his Ghetto diary
Notes and references
- ^ Israel Gutman, Resistance Published by Houghton Mifflin. Page 200.
- ^ Israel Gutman, Resistance Published by Houghton Mifflin. Page 203.
- ^ a b c d Czerniaków's Biography, at www.diapozytyw.pl
- ^ Okopowa street cemetery in Warsaw
- Raul Hilberg, The Warsaw Diary of Adam Czerniakow: Prelude to Doom, Ivan R. Dee, Publisher, 1999, ISBN 1-56663-230-7.
- 1880 births
- 1942 deaths
- People from Warsaw
- Polish Jews
- Nonpartisan Bloc for Cooperation with the Government politicians
- Jewish Polish history
- Polish politicians who committed suicide
- Suicides by poison
- Suicides in Poland
- People who died in the Warsaw Ghetto
- Politicians who died in the Holocaust
- Engineers who died in the Holocaust
- Personal accounts of the Holocaust