The Warsaw Ghetto was created by the Nazis as part of their plan to isolate and persecute the Jewish population in occupied Poland. The ghetto was established in November 1940 in the heart of Warsaw, with the intention of confining all Jews in the city to a small, walled-off area. According to the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum, the ghetto was sealed off from the rest of Warsaw with a wall that was over 10 feet high and topped with barbed wire. The living conditions within the ghetto were deplorable, with tens of thousands of people crammed into squalid, overcrowded apartments. Food and supplies were scarce, leading to widespread hunger and disease among the residents of the ghetto. …show more content…
The Nazis imposed strict regulations on the Jewish population, including forced labor, curfews, and limited access to basic necessities. Many residents of the ghetto were forced to work in factories or other forced labor camps, where they were subjected to brutal conditions and abuse. The lack of food, medicine, and sanitation in the ghetto led to widespread illness and death, with thousands of people dying from starvation, disease, or