Witness Polish and Soviet partisans, including Jewish resistance fighters, disrupting German war efforts during World War II



Transcript

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NARRATOR: The newsreel—it's how most Americans saw World War II unfold.

American audiences watched the Nazis occupy major eastern European cities in their advance toward Moscow and Stalingrad.

Typical images of Jews during this time period depicted them as helpless victims of genocide. Yet, from Soviet newsreels we can see a rare glimpse of another side of the Jewish experience during World War II—as partisans, Jewish resistance fighters behind enemy lines who were determined on derailing the German war effort.

This rare footage documents Polish and Russian partisans, which included thousands of Jews, who escaped the virtual death sentence of Nazi occupation. To fight the Nazis partisans endured extreme conditions: harsh winters and little food and being without permanent shelter for years on end.

Despite the conditions, partisans built underground bunkers; they made and salvaged weapons and clothing.

Underground newspapers describing their victories were printed and distributed. Local farmers gave them goods, sometimes voluntarily, sometimes not so.

As the war progressed, the Soviet army, realizing the strategic value of the partisans, air-dropped weapons and supplies to help them.

Partisans destroyed communication lines, blew up railroads, destroyed bridges, ambushed patrols, and attacked strategic strongholds.

It's difficult to quantify the effect of partisan attacks, but as a group they inflicted a substantial toll on the German army.

The German troops suffered tremendous casualties, and thousands of Nazi trains and bridges were destroyed.

This newsreel footage is a testament to the heroic contributions of the Jewish partisans who fought in World War II.

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