Given name: Gustaw Family name: Wielikowski (25)

  • (1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24, 25) YES
  • (1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24, 25) Male
  • (1) Gustaw , (2) Gustaw , (3) Gustaw , (4) G , (5) Gustaw , (6) Gustaw , (7) Gustaw , (8) Gustaw , (9) Gustaw , (10) Gustaw (Gamzaj) , (11) Gustaw , (12) Gustaw , (13) Gustaw , (14) Gustaw , (15) Gustaw , (24) dr
  • (1) Wielikowski , (2) Wielikowski , (3) Wielikowski , (4) Wielikowski , (5) Wielikowski , (6) Wielikowski , (7) Wielikowski , (8) Wielikowski , (9) Wielikowski , (10) Wielikowski , (11) Wielikowski , (12) Wielikowski , (13) Wielikowski , (14) Wielikowski , (15) Wielikowski , (16) Wielikowski , (17) Wielikowski , (18) Wielikowski , (19) Wielikowski , (20) Wielikowski , (21) Wielikowski , (22) Wielikowski , (23) Wielikowski , (24) Wielikowski , (25) Wielikowski
  • (7) Gamzel Wielikowski, (8) Gamzaj, (14) Gecel
  • (2) 1943-04-23, (12) 1943-04-23, (21) 1943-04-18
  • (7, 15) 1889
  • (7) ca. 19 April 1943
  • (15) Wołkowysk
  • (2, 7, 12, 21) Warszawa
  • (1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24, 25) No information
  • (1)

    In 1940 he was 53. Attorney, specialised in last resort cases before the Supreme Court. In youth the participant of Zionist-socialist movement (Verinigte) - delivered papers. In that period he also wrote poetry in Yiddish. Since the end of I World War, had withdrawn from social life and committed himself to his profession The member of Jewish Social Self-Help Presidium. Advisor of the Chief of the District on behalf of the JSS (Jewish Social Self-Help). Vice-president of Warsaw Judenrat since 1942.

    (2)

    member of the Judenrat. In August 1942 he lived with his wife and daughter at Lubelskiego Street No. 6. He was shot during the Warsaw Uprising.

    (3)

    Adwokat, wiceprezes Rady Żydowskiej, mianowany na to stanowisko przez Marka Lichtenbauma, następcę dotychczasowego prezesa Adama Czerniakowa, w 1944 roku.

    (4)

    A councillor.

    (5)

    A famous attorney

    (6)

    a councillor, the Head of the Department of Aid to Deportees in June 1941 he joined the Judenrat; on behalf of the Department of Social Welfare he became a member of the commission for 100,000 dinners - the Disposition Centre; the Head of Department of Social Welfare; in August 1941 he was in the presidium of the celebration of the Month of a Child, he made a speech at the conference ending the Month of a Child; he divided money within the Commission of Aid to Deportees; in May 1942 the president of the Department of Social Welfare and at the same time of Jewish Help Committee; deputy chairman of the Judenrat since 23 July 1942

    (7)

    A barrister, the author of the book 'Filozofia Kanta' ('Kant's Philosophy'), a social activist. In the ghetto he was a Judenrat member and a member of the ZSS (Jewish Social Self-Help) presidium, since May 1941 the chairman of the Department of Social Welfare of the Judenrat, after Czerniakow's death (23 July 1942) the vice-chairman of the Judenrat. Killed on one of the first days of the Warsaw Uprising.

    (8)

    A renowned Jewish attorney. In his youth he was a socialist, the activist of Socialist-Zionist party; later a territorialist. He spoke Yiddish fluently; a good speaker. Later he departed from socialism and Jewish social and political life in general. He studied in Germany; spoke German; he was a brilliant energetic and very ambitious man. He maneuvered between the Judenrat and 'Self-help'. After the death of Czerniakow he was one of the deputy chairman of the Judenrat.

    (9)

    A barrister. The chairman of the Legal Department of the Judenrat.

    (10)

    A barrister, ZSS (Jewish Social Self-Help) presidium member, a Judenrat member.

    (11)

    A barrister, a doctor, a Judenrat member, social protection, the last to manage the self-help (Jewish Help Committee), the manager of the Inspection Division.

    (12)

    An attorney, the member of the Judenrat Presidium, the member of ZSS (Jewish Social Self-Help) Presidium. Shot on Friday, 23 April 1943 in the yard of the Umschlag.

    (13)

    An attorney, the member of the Judenrat Presidium created in July 1942 after Adam Czerniakow's death.

    (14)

    The only Jewish member of the the Central Welfare Council (RGO), the head of the Jewish Help Committee, joined the Judenrat just before the Action; after the death of Rozen he was the chair of the Labour Department Commission; the member of the Judenrat Presidium; bright, popular, with fluent German, he studied in Munich, a Germanophile, he pretended to have influential acquaintances; traveled to Krakow and Frank; energetic, active, disapproved of by the society

    (15)

    A PhD, an attorney, the author of the book 'Kant's philosophy, a councillor in the Judenrat; a member of the Presidium of the Jewish Social Self-Help (ZSS); he managed the central supplementary feeding action (summer 1941) as the Chairman of the Judenrat Department of Social Welfare;

    (16)

    radca Gminy

    (17)

    A barrister. One of the leading activist of Jewish Social Self-Hel. He went everyday to the 'Aryan side' to the Transferstelle to receive instructions (B.T.-B.).

    (18)

    One of the wealthy and authorities in the ghetto. He was arrested at the end of July 1942.

    (19)

    A member of the delegation sent at the end of October 1940 to the meeting with the governor Frank.

    (20)

    A barrister, the chairman of the disciplinary committee of the ZTOS (Jewish Social Welfare Association), a Judenrat councillor, the chairman of the Department of Social Welfare.

    (21)

    An attorney, the chairman of the Judenrat, shot in the Judenrat building on 18 April 1943

    (22)

    Appointed deputy chairman after Lichtenbaum took the post.

    (23)

    A doctor, member of the Disposing Commission of the Supply Section - December 1941.

    (24)

    An attorney, he was one of the leading activists of the Jewish Social Self-Help (ZSS)

    (25)

    An attorney who had connections in Cracow, dating back to his student's years in Germany.

    • (1, 7, 8, 10, 19, 24) activists
    • (2, 3, 4, 6, 9, 11, 13, 14, 16, 17, 21, 22, 25) Judenrat
    • (5) Intelligentsia
    • (12, 18) the rich
    • (15) Intelligentsia, civil servants
    • (20) Judenrat, care / social welfare
    • (23) civil servants
  • (7)

    Janusz Korczak wanted Gustaw to give him a piece of advise and help him solve problems of the 'dying place' (umieralnia) - the Central Home for Jewish Old People and Orphans in Dzielna.

    (9)

    July 1941

    (12)

    The same person is mentioned among others in testimony 301-400

    (23)

    Probably Gustaw is mentioned.

  • (1)

    Michal Weichert 1890-1967 no title; Part I. Polish-German War of 1939. Establishment of the Coordinating Commission of the Jewish Social Self-Help. The beginning of the German occupation in Warsaw, establishment of the Judenrat, round-ups for slave labour, departures of the Jewish activists abroad, regulations banning Jewish business activity. Author's talks with the German authorities, establishment and activity of the ZSS (Jewish Social Self-Help). Functioning of the Judenrats and the Jewish Police (OD, Ordnungsdienst). Establishment of the Head Welfare Council, election of the ZSS authorities. Reminiscences of J. Korczak. Deportation of Jews from Cracow to the provinces. Election of the author as president of the ZSS, organisation of ZSS local cells, help for the prisoners in labour camps. Liquidation of the Warsaw ghetto. Legal status of Jewish welfare institutions. Organisation of nurture, hygiene institutions, people’s kitchens, refugee shelters. ZSS's mediations with foreign institutions, medicines distribution. Living conditions in the Warsaw ghetto, food smuggling, destiny of the DPs. Profile of A. Czerniakow. Cultural life in the ghetto. Living conditions in the Cracow ghetto, profiles of the Jewish Policemen and German informers. Co-operation with the RGO (Central Welfare Council). Situation in the ghettos in Kielce, Radom and Czestochowa. Profiles of ZSS activists in Warsaw. The author's journey to Lvov and Przemysl, L. Landau's profile. Part II: Organisation of the German enterprises in the ghettos. Financial problems of the ZSS. Deportations from the Cracow ghetto to the death camps, the author's efforts to save ZSS members. Liquidation of the ZSS (1 December 1942). Liquidation of the Cracow ghetto, participation of the Jewish Police in pursuing hiding Jews. Information about liquidations of the ghettos in Tarnow, Rzeszow, Bochnia, Wieliczka. The author's stay in Warsaw during the great liquidation action in summer 1942. Information about liquidation of the ghettos in Radom, Czestochowa and Lublin. Living conditions in the camp in Plaszow. Resumption of ZSS under the name of the Jewish Aid Agency in General Government (Judische Unterstutzungstelle - JUS) in March 1943 and its activity until spring 1944. The diary is unfinished. The author was a theatre director, during the war he was in Warsaw and Cracow as president of the ZSS. From summer 1944 to the liberation he hid with his family. After the war he was condemned by Jewish public opinion for his activities, which helped German authorities to hide from other countries the scale of the genocide. Arrested in 1945 on charge of collaboration, acquitted and released from prison in 1946. In 1957 he left for Israel.

    (4)

    Reicher, Edward W ostrym świetle dnia. Dziennik żydowskiego lekarza 1939-1945 (In Broad Daylight. A Diary of a Jewish Doctor 1939 - 1945)

    (9)

    Documents from the State Archive of New Records regarding the Warsaw Ghetto

    (10)

    Notes from the Warsaw Ghetto: the 'journal' of Emanuel Ringelblum; Emanuel Ringelblum’s work was edited and translated into English by Jacob Sloan, and published in New York by McGraw-Hill Book Company, cop. 1958 under the title Notes from the Warsaw Ghetto: the 'Journal' of Emanuel Ringelblum

    (12)

    Feinstein, Marek; testimony 301-509

    (14)

    Ernest, Stefan; Pam. 'Trzeci Front. O wojnie wielkich Niemiec z Zydami Warszawy 1939-1943' (On the War of Great Germany with the Jews 1939 – 1943)

    (15)

    Czerniakow, Adam Adama Czerniakowa dziennik getta warszawskiego. 6 IX 1939 - 23 VII 1942, (The Warsaw Diary of Adam Czerniakow)

    (16)

    Pamiętniki Żydów; sygn.302/27; w Archiwum ŻIH;

    Pamiętnik zawiera informacje o różnych aspektach życia w getcie
    warszawskim: wewnętrzne więzienie w getcie, przymusowa dezynfekcja, działalność agentów gestapo (tzw. trzynastki) oraz przedsiębiorców Kona i Hellera, przesiedlenia ludności z prowincji, działalność komitetów domowych, rozwarstwienie społeczne ludności getta, szmugiel żywności, konfiskata futer, zmniejszanie granic getta, wystawy sztuki, przesiedlenie Cyganów do getta. Fragmenty o charakterze informacyjnym przeplatają się ze zbeletryzowaną narracją, poświęconą przeżyciom.
    Autor (ur. 1915) był z zawodu artystą-malarzem, a podczas okupacji funkcjonariuszem Żydowskiej Służby Porządkowej w getcie warszawskim. Jak wynika z posłowia do pamiętnika, podczas powstania w getcie wydostał się na tzw. aryjską stronę, a po powstaniu warszawskim został wywieziony do Sachsenhausen. W 1945 r. przekazał pamiętnik Żydowskiej Komisji Histo-rycznej w Warszawie. Zmarł we Francji w 1955 r.

    (18, 19)

    Kaplan, Chaim Aron Scroll of Agony. The Warsaw Diary, transl. from Hebrew and ed. by A. I. Katsh

    (20)

    Bryskier, Henryk fragments of testimonies in: Michal Grynberg, Words to Outlive Us: Eyewitness Accounts from the Warsaw Ghetto, transl. Philip Boehm, Picador, New York, 2003.

    (22)

    Adler, Stanislaw <> <>

    (23)

    Documents from Ringelblum's Archive, part II

    (24)

    The author started to write on 5 January 1944, and the last entry is dated 14 January 1945. The diary was written in ten, common, chequered school notebooks. Written irregularly. Bermanowa probably took a pen in her hand only when she either found the time or when she felt strong enough. Successive entries, dated scrupulously, written in Polish, were written in occupied Warsaw ('in hiding'), then in occupied ('free') capital and in a number of places near Warsaw (again 'on the Aryan papers'). The first event described took place during the Polish-German War of 1939, the latest - three days before the liberation of Warsaw (17 January 1945).

  • (1) s.83,86,102, (2) 111,122,130,219,329, (3) 58-59,136,160,185, (4) 59, (5) 249, (6) II 45/3, 49/2, 57/2,64/3, 90/5, 104/2, III 60/1, 63/2, 89/1, 91/2, 92/2, (7) 108 p, (8) str.90,92,277, (9) [27,, s., 10], (10) [273p], (11) 49,60,119, (13) , str.40, (15) 123; 254, (16) 158, (17) 39, 271, (18) 298, (19) 194, (20) [211], (21) 40, (23) 91, s. 5, (24) 271, (25) , cz2 str.86