The Tikvah Podcast

Samuel Kassow on the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising

13 snips
Oct 31, 2025
Samuel Kassow, a historian and professor at Trinity College, delves into the poignant narrative of the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising. He vividly recounts the vibrant prewar Jewish community and the brutal transition into ghetto life. Kassow highlights survival strategies, including smuggling and civilian support, which culminated in the brave resistance of April 1943. He emphasizes the importance of cultural preservation through the Ringelblum Archive and the moral complexities of resistance. His insights urge listeners to remember the dignity and resilience exhibited during such dark times.
Ask episode
AI Snips
Chapters
Transcript
Episode notes
INSIGHT

Vibrant Prewar Jewish Warsaw

  • Warsaw's Jewish community was large, diverse, and culturally vibrant before WWII.
  • Jews participated in newspapers, theater, sports, and politics, making up 40% of the city.
INSIGHT

Brutal Conditions Inside The Ghetto

  • The ghetto confined 400,000 Jews into two square miles with catastrophic food and heating shortages.
  • Official rations were 184 calories per day, causing mass death but also extraordinary survival tactics.
INSIGHT

Smuggling Was Central To Survival

  • Smuggling supplied 85–90% of calories in the Warsaw Ghetto and kept many alive.
  • Smuggling depended on cooperation with Poles and often relied on former criminals as couriers.
Get the Snipd Podcast app to discover more snips from this episode
Get the app