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{{Short description|Head of Judenrat in Lodz Ghetto}}
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{{Infobox person
| name = Chaim Rumkowski
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=== Ghetto history prior to the "Final Solution" ===
The ghettoization of Łódź was decided on September 8, 1939, by an order of ''[[SS-Oberführer]]'' [[Friedrich Uebelhoer]]. His top secret document stated that the ghetto was only a temporary solution to "the Jewish question" in the city of Łódź. Uebelhoer never implied the long-term survival of its inhabitants.<ref>Documents, p. 194</ref> The ghetto was sealed on April 30, 1940, with 164,000 people inside.<ref>Unger 2004, ''Reassessment'', p. 22.</ref> On October 16, 1939, Rumkowski selected 31 public figures to form the
The Germans authorized Rumkowski as the "sole figure of authority in managing and organizing internal life in the [[ghetto]]".<ref name="Reassessment, p. 22">Unger 2004, ''Reassessment'', p. 22.</ref> Rumkowski gained power by his domineering personality as much as by his words and deeds.<ref name="Reassessment, p. 22" /> Biebow from the first gave Rumkowski full power in organizing the ghetto, as long as it did not interfere with his main objectives: absolute order, confiscation of Jewish property and assets, coerced labor, and Biebow's own personal gain.<ref name="Reassessment, p. 23">Unger 2004, ''Reassessment'', p. 23.</ref> Their relationship seemed to work effectively. Rumkowski had leeway to organize the ghetto according to his own lights, while Biebow sat back and reaped the rewards.<ref name="Reassessment, p. 23" /> In trying to keep Biebow happy, Rumkowski obeyed every order with little question, and provided him with gifts and personal favors. Rumkowski is said to have boasted of his willingness to cooperate with the German authorities: "My motto is to be always at least ten minutes ahead of every German demand."<ref name="momentmag">{{cite news|author=Hilma Wolitzer|url=http://momentmag.com/moment/issues/2011/10/book_lies.html|title=The Final Fantasy|work=Moment Magazine|date=September–October 2011|access-date=October 3, 2011|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20111011080629/http://momentmag.com/moment/issues/2011/10/book_lies.html|archive-date=October 11, 2011}}</ref> He believed that by staying ahead of the Germans' thinking, he could keep them satisfied and preserve the Jews. Łódź was the last ghetto in Central Europe to be liquidated.<ref>{{cite book|last1=Trunk|first1=Isaiah|title=Judenrat: the Jewish councils in Eastern Europe under Nazi occupation|date=1972|publisher=Macmillan|location=New York|isbn=978-0-8032-9428-8|page=413|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=D7bobfzrcCoC}}</ref> However, only 877 inhabitants survived in the city until liberation, by [[Rescue of Jews by Poles during the Holocaust|hiding with Polish rescuers]], and it is claimed that Rumkowski had nothing to do with it.{{
=== Administration ===
[[File:Rumkowski testing soup.JPG|thumb|upright|Chaim Rumkowski in the [[Łódź Ghetto]], tasting soup.]]
Because of the confiscation of cash and other belongings, Rumkowski proposed a currency to be used specifically in the ghetto – the ''[[ersatz]].'' This new currency would be used as money, and by this alone, a person could buy food rations and other necessities.<ref>Unger 2004, ''Reassessment'', p. 27.</ref> This proposal was considered arrogant and illustrated
Rumkowski did not allow public protests expressing dissent. With the help of the Jewish police, he violently broke up demonstrations. On occasion, he would request the Nazis to come and break up the commotion, which usually resulted in protesters being killed. The leaders of these groups were punished by not being allowed to earn a living, which in effect meant that they and their families were doomed to starvation. Sometimes the strikers and demonstrators were arrested, imprisoned, or shipped off to labor camps.<ref>Unger 2004, ''Reassessment'', pp. 34-35.</ref> By the spring of 1941, almost all opposition to Rumkowski had dissipated. In the beginning, the Germans were unclear of their own plans for the ghetto, as arrangements for the "[[Final Solution]]" were still being developed. They realized that the original plan of liquidating the ghetto by October 1940 could not take place, so they began to take Rumkowski's labor agenda seriously.<ref>Unger 2004, ''Reassessment'', p. 36.</ref> Forced labor became a staple of ghetto life, with Rumkowski running the effort. "In another three years – he said – the ghetto will be working like a clock."<ref name="Reassessment, p. 38">Unger 2004, ''Reassessment'', p. 38.</ref> This sort of "optimism" however, was met with a damning assessment by Max Horn from ''[[Ostindustrie]]'', who said that the ghetto was badly managed, not profitable, and had the wrong products.<ref name="LD-lxi">[[Lucjan Dobroszycki]] (1984), ''[https://books.google.com/books?id=d1-U17adWKIC&pg=PR61 The Chronicle of the Lodz Ghetto],'' page lxi. Google Books.</ref>
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=== ''Give Me Your Children'' ===
[[File:Rumkowski.JPG|thumb|260px|Chaim Rumkowski delivering a speech in the ghetto, 1941{{ndash}}42]]
On German orders Rumkowski delivered a speech on September 4, 1942, pleading with the Jews in the ghetto to give up children 10 years of age and younger, as well as the elderly over 65, so that others might survive. "Horrible, terrifying wailing among the assembled crowd" could be heard, reads the transcriber's note to his parlance often referred to as: "Give Me Your Children".<ref name="ushmm10007282">[http://www.ushmm.org/wlc/en/article.php?ModuleId=10007282 "Transcript for "Give Me Your Children""]. ''United States Holocaust Memorial Museum'', Washington, D.C., 6 January 2011. Retrieved: 1 October 2011.</ref> Some commentators see this speech as exemplifying aspects of the [[Holocaust]].<ref name="Schweber" />
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== Personality ==
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Due to Rumkowski's harsh treatment, and stern, arrogant personality, the Jews began to blame him for their predicament, and unleashed their frustration on him instead of the Germans, who were beyond their reach.<ref>Reassessment, p. 33</ref> The most significant display of this frustration and resistance was a series of strikes and demonstrations between August 1940 and spring of 1941. Led by activists and leftist parties against Rumkowski, the workers abandoned their stations and went to the streets handing out fliers:
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== Death at the hands of the ''Sonderkommando'' ==
There are conflicting accounts regarding Rumkowski's final moments. According to one contemporary source he was murdered upon his arrival at Auschwitz by the Jews of Łódź who preceded him there.<ref>{{Cite web |url=https://www.commentarymagazine.com/articles/how-rumkowski-died/ |title=Commentary Magazine May 1979 "How Rumkowski Died" by Lodz Ghetto/Auschwitz survivor Michael Cheniski |access-date=2019-12-19 |archive-date=2019-12-19 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20191219190727/https://www.commentarymagazine.com/articles/how-rumkowski-died/ |url-status=dead }}</ref> This version of events, however, has been challenged by historians. Another report, submitted by a ''[[Sonderkommando]]'' member from Hungary, {{ill|Dov Paisikovic|de}}, states that the Jews of Łódź approached the ''Sonderkommando'' Jews in secrecy, and asked them to kill Rumkowski for the crimes he committed in the Łódź Ghetto, so they beat him to death at the gate of the Crematorium No. 2 and disposed of his corpse.<ref name="Unger2004" />
== Debate over Rumkowski's role in the Holocaust ==
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