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Copy.
Teletype message
From: The SS and Police Fuehrer in the District of Warsaw
Warsaw, 14 May 1943.
Ref. No.: I ab/St/G 16 07 Journal No. 646/43 secret.
Re: Large-scale Ghetto operation.
To: The Higher SS and Police Fuehrer East, SS-Obergruppen- fuehrer and General
of Police Krüger or deputy.
Cracow
Progress
of large-scale operation on 14 May 1943, start 1000 hours.
The
raiding parties formed today went to work within the areas allotted to
each of them under orders to force open further dwelling dug-outs and to
catch the Jews. In this way a considerable number of bandits and Jews were
caught, especially as some traces had been discovered during the night
which were now followed up with good
results. The night patrols clashed with armed bandits several times. These
bandits fired a machine gun and small arms. In this operation we had four
casualties - 3 Waffen-SS men and 1 Policeman. Repeatedly, shots were fired
from the Aryan part against the external barricade. In the skirmishes
about 30 bandits were shot and 9 Jews and bandits, members of an armed
gang, were captured. One dug-out was taken during the night, the Jews
captured, and some pistols, among them one of 12-mm caliber, were
captured. In one dugout inhabited by 100 persons, we were able to capture
2 rifles, 16 Pistols, some hand grenades and incendiary appliances. Of the
bandits who resisted, some again wore German military uniform, German
steel helmets and "knobeloecher." Apart from the carbines. we captured 60
rounds of German rifle ammunition. One raiding party had a skirmish with a
gang, 10 to 14 strong, on the roofs of a block of buildings at the border
of the Ghetto (Aryan part). The bandits were destroyed; we suffered no
losses.
The captured bandits repeatedly testify that still not all
persons in the Ghetto have been caught. They confidently expect that the
action will soon be over, and that they will then be able to continue to
live in the Ghetto. Several bandits stated that they had long been in a
position to kill off the leader of the action, the "General," as they call
him, but that they would not do so, since they had orders to that effect
to avoid the risk of a further intensification of the anti-Jewish
measures.
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