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  1. German troops occupied Lodz in September 1939. In 1940, the Germans established a ghetto there, confining 160,000 Jews into a small area and later deporting Jews and Roma (Gypsies) there as well. Many people died in Lodz as a direct result of the ghetto's harsh living conditions.

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      Lodz had the second largest Jewish population in prewar...

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      View an animated map of key events in the history of the...

  2. Lodz had the second largest Jewish population in prewar Poland, after Warsaw. German troops occupied Lodz in September 1939. In early February 1940, the Germans established a ghetto in Lodz and crowded more than 150,000 Jews into an area of about one and a half square miles.

  3. Oct 16, 2021 · Inside the Nazi-controlled ghetto of Lodz, 1940-1944. A man walking in winter in the ruins of the synagogue on Wolborska street (destroyed by Germans in 1939). 1940. The Lodz ghetto became the second largest ghetto created by the Nazis after their invasion of Poland – the largest was the Warsaw Ghetto. The ghetto was only originally intended ...

  4. View an animated map of key events in the history of the Lodz ghetto in occupied Poland, from establishment by the Germans in 1940 until destruction in 1944.

  5. Learn about Lodz Map and Timeline. Lodz, Poland, was a flourishing industrial city in the mid-1800s with a successful textile sector and a mixture of Polish, German, Czech and Jewish inhabitants. Before World War II, a third of the population of 672,000 was Jewish.

  6. The Łódź Ghetto or Litzmannstadt Ghetto (after the Nazi German name for Łódź) was a Nazi ghetto established by the German authorities for Polish Jews and Roma following the Invasion of Poland. It was the second-largest ghetto in all of German-occupied Europe after the Warsaw Ghetto.

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  8. Jul 16, 2017 · A new exhibition spotlights images captured by Henryk Ross, a Polish Jew who had arrived at the Lodz Ghetto with a camera, secretly using it to document the suffering within Latest U.S.

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