Przejdź do menu głównego
Przejdź do treści
Visit us
Donate
Contact
A-
A+
EN
PL
>
News
Events
Oneg Shabbat
Oneg Shabbat biographies
Stories from the Ringelblum Archive
About the Oneg Szabat program
Projects of the Oneg Szabat program
Ambassadors
English translations of the Ringelblum Archive
Education
Publications
DELET portal
Commemoration
Exhibitions
Book series Ringelblum Archive
Collection of the Ringelblum Archive online
Collections
Access to collections
Online collections
Central Jewish Library
Delet Portal
Digital collection
Digitization
Archives
FAQ
Art department
Heritage Documentation Department
Library
Collection
Online catalogue
Conservation
Inventories
"Save as..." project
Research
The Ringelblum Archive and the Oneg Shabbat group
About the Ringelblum Archive
About the Oneg Shabbat group
Book series Ringelblum Archive
Collection of the Ringelblum Archive online
The EHRI Project
Seminars
Research groups
Exhibitions
„What we’ve been unable to shout out to the world”
Little Synagogue on Tłomackie Street
The Heart of the City That Once Was
About the exhibition
Map of the exhibition
Buy a ticket
Opening hours
Education
Educational offer
Walks
Lectures and classes
Workshops
Guided tours
School students
University students
Academies for teachers
Seniors
Publishing Department
About the JHI Press
Promotion and reviews
Publish with us
Genealogy
Searching for roots
History of family names
Confirmation of Polish citizenship
Stories
Support us
Contact us
About the Institute
Mission
History
The Programme Board
Directorship
Jewish Cultural Heritage – Norway and EEA Grants
Cooperation
Donate
Contact
Bookstore
About our Bookstore
Homepage
News
Ringelblum Archive and the Oneg Shabbat group
News
More Important Than Life: The Underground Archive of the Warsaw Ghetto | exhibition
From June 29, 2023, to January 7, 2024, the National Socialism Documentation Center in Munich will host the exhibition "More Important Than Life: The Underground Archive of the Warsaw Ghetto", organized in cooperation with the Jewish Historical Institute.
September 1939: ‘Something broke in the entire world’
‘I could not grasp the immensity of our misery’. The beginning of the great deportation from the Warsaw ghetto
June 26, 1942. BBC informs about the extermination of Polish Jews
Browse:
All categories
Jewish Warsaw
Warsaw Ghetto
Ringelblum Archive and the Oneg Shabbat group
Shoah
People
Jewish Historical Institute
Culture
Judaism
Jewish history
Lodz Ghetto
Genealogy
Reports
JHI publications
Posthumous Award for Ethical Leadership for Emanuel Ringelblum and the Oneg Shabbat Group!
The 2018 Awards for Ethical Leadership was announced by the Fellowships at Auschwitz for the Study of Professional Ethics (FASPE) – a New York non-profit corporation. The creators of the Underground Archive of the Warsaw Ghetto were honored for their „courage and prescience. They were the true ethical documentarians of their time, risking their lives to obtain contemporaneous reports as accurate and irrefutable proof of catastrophic historical events”.
Official opening of the permanent exhibition „What we’ve been unable to shout out to the world”
On 14 November, President of the Republic of Poland Andrzej Duda and his Wife took part in the official opening of the permanent exhibition „What we’ve been unable to shout out to the world”, presenting original documents from the Underground Archive of the Warsaw Ghetto.
74th anniversary of Emanuel Ringelblum’s arrest
He created the memory of the nation. Emanuel Ringelblum
Emanuel Ringelblum the founder of unique in occupied Europe the Underground Archive of the Warsaw Ghetto was born on 21st of November, 1900.
Ringelblum Archive
The Underground Archive of the Warsaw Ghetto, the so-called Ringelblum Archive is a unique collection of documents that are one of the world’s most significant testimonies about the extermination of Polish Jewry.
Remarkable journey of priceless documents
Last days of Emanuel Ringelblum
On 7th March, 1944, Gestapo officers arrived at 81 Grójecka Street, accompanied by the Polish "blue" policemen from the 23rd post.
A bit stubborn: Rachela Auerbach part 2
In the first part of the Ringelblum Archive, we can also find partly pre-war works of the author and her life partner, an excellent Jewish poet, Icyk Manger. Already while ordering the material and making a protocol, the writer signalled that she wanted to take her documents back. She files an official application, which the Presidium of CKŻP considers on 4th October 1946. The final decision is dependant on the opinion of the Culture and Propaganda Department of CKŻP. In November, Auerbach receives permission to take back her documents created before January 1940 (according to other data before September 1939) and personal belongings. She can copy the rest of the documents. Before the second part of the archive is found in 1950, Auerbach will have already left Poland. She leaves, through London, to Israel.
A bit stubborn: Rachela Auerbach part 1
She is a bit stubborn, but what a talent! — wrote Basia Temkin-Berman in her diary on 7th May 1944, commenting one of works of Rachela Auerbach written for the Jewish National Committee just after leaving the ghetto. Yes, without a doubt this, still not known well enough, writer, critic and journalist, writing in Polish and Yiddish, was stubborn and talented, extremely determined, often rather brusque and because of her uncompromising nature, she did not always gain people’s favour. However, she had a sense of mission and responsibility towards the murdered.
Discovering second part of Archive
1st December, 1950 marks the discovery of the second part of the Ringelblum Archive, which was put into two metal milk-cans.
Press in the ghettos
With the beginning of the German occupation in Poland, all editorial offices operating till the outbreak of the war were shut down.
{{ item.title }}
{{ item.description }}
LOAD MORE
This website uses cookies to collect statistical data. If you do not accept it, please disable cookies in your web browser.
Close