:13:03
This couldn't be done.
:13:05
They could hide everything
but not the smell.
:13:09
This was impossible.
:13:11
So, what he saw. . .
:13:14
. . .were trains going in,
going out empty. . .
:13:19
. . .and the smell of burnt flesh.
:13:23
In just 7 weeks...
:13:25
...265,000 people are deported
to their deaths at Treblinka.
:13:31
The 60,000
who remained in the ghetto...
:13:34
...are without illusions
as to what the Germans have in store.
:13:38
I didn't see for me any chance--
:13:42
Not for me, for the Jews in general. . .
:13:48
. . .the possibility to survive.
:13:52
That means that what you can do. . .
:13:56
. . .is choose the way
you are going to die.
:14:00
Instead of going
to the concentration camp. . .
:14:05
. . .and be put in the gas chambers. . .
:14:11
. . .the way to do it, how to die,
is to fight.
:14:17
For me, the fighting organization
was a difficult job. . .
:14:21
. . .because it included all parties.
:14:23
Zionists of one sort,
Zionists of another sort.
:14:28
Religious Jews, Bund, communists.
:14:33
There was so many factions
of resistance groups. . .
:14:37
. . .that organizing them
was impossible.
:14:40
Only when deportation started
did they decide to work together. . .
:14:45
. . .because they understood
the gravity of the situation.
:14:49
The resistance had to then overthrow
the order of the Jewish councils.
:14:54
It had to get rid of traitors
within their midst.
:14:57
The first resistance attacks
were on the Jewish police.