
“They did it only for one purpose, the dignity of the Jewish people.” -Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin
This year marks the 80th anniversary of the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising. On April 19, 1943 Nazi forces entered the Warsaw Ghetto with the stated objective of rounding up and deporting all Jews there to death camps, but were attacked by organized Zionist fighters. The fact that Yom HaShoah (Holocaust Remembrance Day) was created by the Israeli government to be near the anniversary of the Uprising on the Jewish calendar was the correct choice.
There were two main armed resistance organizations in the Ghetto that acted independently, the ZZW and ZOB. Today, the leader of Zionist armed resistance that is most often remembered is Mordechai Anielewicz, commander of the ZOB (Jewish Fighting Organization). The ZOB was an alliance of both Zionist and non-Zionist, youth organizations that were mostly left leaning.
By contrast, ZZW, the Jewish Military Organization, had leaders and fighters who came from Betar, a right leaning Zionist youth organization and their allies including Jewish veterans of the Polish Army. ZZW’s fighters in the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising were largely written out of history by those who opposed it for decades because of Betar's ties to Likud and because it was founded by Ze'ev Jabotinsky.
Anielewicz himself had received training in Betar as a young teenager and left the organization before the war.
Moshe Arens (1925 – 2019), a former Israeli defense minister who was a senior Betar leader in the U.S. in his younger years, wrote a book on the ZZW’s heroic battle against the Nazis in the ghetto. That book, Flags Over the Warsaw Ghetto (Gefen Publishing, November 2011). The book and the many articles Arens wrote about the ZZW that were published in Yad Vashem Studies, Haaretz, and The Jerusalem Post helped to create a far more accurate account of the ZZW’s participation in the uprising. The book and the articles also did much to recall the heroism of Pawel Frenkel, ZZW’s frontline commander.
The ZZW is now known to have been the better-equipped fighting force in the ghetto, as it had procured machine guns. Arens writes that the ZZW had more fighters.
The groups finally decided to coordinate their efforts in the very last hours before the April 19 battle began. For 28 days, Jewish warriors fought the enemy and showed Jewish bravery perhaps not seen since the days of Bar Kochba’s uprising against Rome. Sporadic attacks on Nazis continued by Ghetto fighters who hid in bunkers beneath the Ghetto's rubble until the Warsaw Uprising began in August 1944. The Ghetto fighters killed hundreds of Nazis.
It really should be impossible to speak about the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising without talking about the founder of Betar, Ze'ev Jabotinsky -- even though he was not there. Jabotinsky (1880-1940) was a Zionist leader, orator, and writer who founded the Jewish Legion during World War I, as well as the Haganah self-defense units in Jerusalem in 1920. In 1923 he founded Betar. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s father Benzion served as Jabotinsky’s personal aide just after the outbreak of World War Two and traveled with him internationally.
What Jabotinsky would advocate given today’s current events is often debated in Israel and today's pundits in Israel are even arguing about what he would have had to say about judicial reform.
Jabotinsky’s words and ideas animated a generation of young Jews to resist the Nazis, rescue fellow Jews from Hitler’s forces, and fight for the freedom of Israel as soldiers in the Irgun and Stern Group/LEHI. Later, the movement for freedom for Soviet Jewry both in the United States and inside the Soviet Union itself was led by Jabotinsky Zionists.
Before Begin became Prime Minister, official commemorations of Jabotinsky were rare, although after David ben Gurion retired from the Knesset, Jabotinsky and his wife were reburied on Mount Herzl.. Since 1977, however, things have fundamentally changed in Israel: Not only Menachem Begin’s Likud but also many parties to both its right and its left have all connected themselves directly to the legacy of Jabotinsky.
Studying Jabotinsky’s ideas about Jewish pride, activism, devotion to duty, and unapologetic Zionism, is one way to honor the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising. Perhaps the best way.
Moshe Phillipsis a commentator on Jewish affairs whose writings appear regularly in the American and Israeli press. He was a US delegate to the 38th World Zionist Congress in 2020. Phillips, former National Director of Herut North America, was a board member of the American Zionist Movement from 2018 until 2021