Riga Ghetto | |
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Also known as | Ghetto Riga, Maskavas Forštate, Moscow Forshtat |
Location | Riga, Latvia and vicinity, including Rumbula and Biķernieki forests |
Date | July 1941 to October 1943 |
Incident type | Imprisonment, mass shootings, forced labour, starvation, exile, mass death from epidemics of neglected infectious diseases, forced abortions and sterilization |
Perpetrators | Hans-Adolf Prützmann, Franz Walter Stahlecker, Hinrich Lohse, Friedrich Jeckeln, Kurt Krause, Eduard Roschmann, Viktors Arājs, Herberts Cukurs |
Organizations | Nazi SS, Arajs Kommando, Latvian Auxiliary Police |
Camp | Kaiserwald |
Victims | About 30,000 Latvian Jews and 20,000 German, Czech, and Austrian Jews |
Survivors | About 1,000 people |
Memorials | At ruins of Great Choral Synagogue in Riga and in Rumbula and Biķernieki forests |
Riga Ghetto was a small area in Maskavas Forštate, a neighbourhood of Riga, Latvia, where Nazis forced Jews from Latvia, and later from the German "Reich" (Germany, Austria, Bohemia, and Moravia), to live during World War II. On October 25, 1941, the Nazis evicted the ghetto's non-Jewish inhabitants and relocated all Jews from Riga and its vicinity there. Most Latvian Jews (about 35,000) were killed on November 30 or December 8, 1941, in the Rumbula massacre. The Nazis transported a large number of German Jews to the ghetto; most of them were later killed in massacres.
While Riga Ghetto is commonly referred to as a single entity, in fact there were several "ghettos". The first was the large Latvian ghetto. After the Rumbula massacre, the surviving Latvian Jews were concentrated in a smaller area within the original ghetto, which became known as the "small ghetto". The small ghetto was divided into men's and women's sections. The area of the ghetto not allocated to the small ghetto was then reallocated to the Jews being deported from Germany, and became known as the German ghetto.[1]