The Tauber Institute for the Study of European Jewry

The People's Uprising and the Fall of the Warsaw Ghetto, April 1942-June 1943

The bookcover of The People's Uprising and the Fall of the Warsaw Ghetto, April 1942-June 1943, Havi Ben-Sasson Dreifuss - Burning buildings in the ghetto during the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising

Havi Ben-Sasson Dreifuss

Examines the final year of the Warsaw ghetto, the uprising, and the resistance to the Holocaust.

This riveting and dramatic account sheds light on the lives, choices, and experiences of the tens of thousands of Jews who were not part of the underground armed resistance but nonetheless supported the famed Warsaw Ghetto Uprising. Havi Ben-Sasson Dreifuss focuses on the final year of the Warsaw ghetto, from the Great Deportation in the summer of 1942 through the suppression of the uprising in mid-1943. Drawing on contemporary testimonies, diaries, and documents, she reveals how the broader Jewish population struggled to survive, maintain family and community life, and make impossible moral decisions in the face of fear, hunger, and violence. Looking beyond the fighters themselves, the book offers a story of devastation, but also of resilience and human dignity.  

Published in association with Yad Vashem. 

“A brilliantly researched book that draws on recorded statements of the combatants and, for the first time, gives full weight to personal testimonies of Warsaw ghetto inhabitants.  A very important contribution to scholarly literature.” - Jan T. Gross, Professor of History Emeritus, Princeton University
"A deeply-researched, clearly-written, and important exploration that brings to light a little-known story of Jewish resistance and bravery." – Judy Batalion, author of The Light of Days
“A meticulously documented examination of the meaning of the Warsaw ghetto uprising, and of the ways in which the very category of Jewish resistance has been constructed.” – Avinoam Patt, Professor of Holocaust Studies, NYU
"This powerful work turns our attention to the Warsaw Ghetto's population as a whole, showing how the uprising sought not just to combat the Nazis with arms but to strike against Nazi ideology as such." - Dan Stone, Professor of Modern History, Royal Holloway, University of London

About the Authors

Havi Ben-Sasson Dreifuss is professor of Jewish history and heads the Institute for the History of Polish Jewry and Israel-Poland Relations at Tel Aviv University. She also serves as the director of the Center for Research on the Holocaust in Poland at Yad Vashem. She is the author of Relations Between Jews and Poles: The Jewish Perspective.