"General Jürgen Stroop gained notoriety for brutally suppressing the Warsaw Ghetto uprising of April-May 1943.
In recognition of his services to the Third Reich, Stroop was awarded the Iron Cross First Class. p "In April 1943 Stroop (pictured, left) was ordered to remove the remaining 56,000 Jews from Warsaw and to crush the revolt that had recently broken out.
He approached the task with ruthless efficiency.
More than 2000 SS and army units descended upon the ghetto and systematically destroyed it building by building.
His detailed report of his activities attests to his cold-blooded callousness.
On May 16 Stroop reported that the 'operation' was complete and that 'the Jewish Quarter of Warsaw is no more.'
"Stroop was sentenced to death by a Polish court of law and executed on September 8, 1951."
"A Finnish battalion of the Waffen-SS returns home from action on the Soviet front.
This Freiwillige (volunteer) unit was one of the many non-German groups that joined the Waffen-SS.
Their anti-Russian attitudes were exploited by the Nazi regime for the benefit of both the war effort and facilitation of the "Final Solution.""
"A family interned in the Marzahn Gypsy camp in Germany awaits its fate.
Large-scale deportations to Auschwitz began in February 1943, when a "family camp" for Gypsies was established at the Birkenau killing center.
The appalling conditions condemned thousands to death, while Josef Mengele conducted ghastly "medical experiments" on Gypsy twins."
On June 4, 1943 the New York Times ran a story on Zygelbojm's suicide, and included the entire note. It will be reproduced here next month.