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{{Short description|Form of official segregation in the seating of students}}
{{AS}}
{{Infobox
| above = Ghetto benches
| image = ]
| caption = The 1934 Index of a ] student at the Warsaw University Department of Medicine, with a stamp reading: ''Miejsce w ławkach nieparzystych'' (Seating in benches with an odd number)
| label1 = Location
| data1 = ], ], ]
| label2 = Period
| data2 = 1935–1939
}}
{{Discrimination sidebar|state=collapsed}}
'''Ghetto benches''' (known in Polish as ''getto ławkowe'')<ref name="adl"/><ref name="netfirms"/> was a form of official segregation in the seating of university students, introduced in 1935 at the ].<ref name="Antisemitism and Its Opponents in Modern Poland"/> ] at other ] institutions in the ] had adopted this form of ] when the practice became conditionally legalized by 1937.<ref name="maxveritas"/> Under the ''ghetto ławkowe'' system, ] university students were required under threat of expulsion to sit in a left-hand side section of the lecture halls reserved exclusively for them. This official policy of enforced segregation was often accompanied by acts of violence directed against Jewish students by members of the ] (outlawed after three months in 1934).


The seating in benches marked a peak of ] in Poland between the world wars according to ].<ref name="HD"/> It antagonized not only Jews, but also many Poles.<ref name="HD"/> Jewish students protested these policies, along with some Poles who supported them by standing instead of sitting.<ref name="Diagh"/> The segregation continued until the ] in ]. ] suppressed the entire ]al system. In the eastern half of Poland annexed by the ], such discriminatory policies in education were lifted.<ref name="Tomasz Kamusella, Krzysztof Jaskułowski 2009 203">{{cite book|author=Tomasz Kamusella, Krzysztof Jaskułowski|title=Nationalisms Today|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=r_0rT6V_OV4C&pg=PA203|year=2009|publisher=Peter Lang AG, International Academic Publishers|page=203|isbn=9783039118830}}</ref>
'''Ghetto benches''' or '''bench Ghetto''' (known in Polish as ''Ghetto ławkowe'')<ref>Anti-Defamation League of Bnai b'rith. A special report by the Anti-Defamation League, 2006</ref><ref>Litman Mor (Muravchick): The war for life. :"In Polish slang, we called it "Ghetto Lawkowe" (Ghetto of Benches).."</ref> was a form of semi-official ] in the seating of students, introduced in ]'s universities beginning in ] at ].<ref>{{cite book|author=Robert Blobaum|title=Antisemitism and Its Opponents in Modern Poland|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=gXisr7fgDjwC&pg=PA165&dq=ghetto+bench+1935&lr=lang_en%7Clang_lt%7Clang_pl&sig=q7WJVFnJQd2ia4y4z1Z-txlmyd8|publisher=] Press|year=2005|quote=The first to submit to the segregationist demands of nationalist students were the Engineering and Mechanical Department faculty councils of the Lwow Polytechnical Institute, which on December 8, 1935, adopted the appropriate resolutions; these were quickly imitated elsewhere.}}</ref> By ], most ]s at other ] institutions had adopted this form of segregation. Under the ''ghetto ławkowe'' system Jewish university students were forced, under threat of expulsion, to sit in a left-hand side section of the lecture halls reserved exclusively for them. This official policy of enforced segregation was often accompanied by violence directed against Jewish students by members of the Polish ] organization ] (delegalised after three months in 1934) and the right-wing nationalist ] (known as Endek).<ref name="dia30"/>

The "bench Ghetto" marked a peak of ] in Poland between the world wars.<ref name="HD"/> "It antagonized not only Jews, but also many Poles."<ref name="HD">], ''Historical Dictionary of Poland, 966-1945'', Greenwood Press, 1996, ISBN 0313260079, </ref> "Jewish students protested these policies, along with some Poles supporting them..."<ref name="Diagh"/> and stood instead of sitting.<ref name="dia30"/> The segregation continued in force until the ] in ] and ] suppressed the entire ]al system.


==Background== ==Background==
{{further|History of the Jews in 20th-century Poland}}
Discrimination against ] in education in Poland continued the practice of the ]'s '']'' policy, implemented during ]. ''Numerus clausus'' restricted, by means of ]s, the participation of ] in public life.<ref name="HD"/> By the time of Poland's independence (]), Polish universities had become the stronghold of the ], ] ] movement.<ref name="Melzer">{{cite book|author=]|title=No Way Out: The Politics of Polish Jewry, 1935-1939|publisher=Hebrew Union College
The percentage of Poland's Jewish population increased greatly during the ]. Following Poland's return to independence, several hundred thousand Jews joined the already numerous Polish Jewish minority living predominantly in the cities.<ref name="Kadish"/><ref name="johnson"/> The new arrivals were the least assimilated of all European Jewish communities of that period.<ref name="google"/> ] formed the second largest minority after ], of about 10 percent of the total population of the ]. Jewish representation in the institutions of higher learning began to increase already during ]. By the early 1920s, Jewish students constituted over one-third of all students attending Polish universities.<ref name="Rabinowicz"/><ref name="google1"/> The difficult situation in the private sector, compounded by the ],<ref name="Snyder">{{cite book |author-link=Timothy Snyder |first=Timothy |last=Snyder |title=The Reconstruction of Nations: Poland, Ukraine, Lithuania, Belarus, 1569–1999 |date=11 July 2004 |publisher=Yale University Press |isbn=0-300-10586-X |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=xSpEynLxJ1MC&pg=PA144 |page=144}}</ref> led to a massive enrollment in universities. In 1923, Jewish students constituted 63 percent of all students of ], 34 percent of medical sciences, 29 of philosophy, 25 percent of chemistry and 22 percent of law (26 percent by 1929) at all Polish universities. Anger over their numbers, which remained out of proportion with that of the mostly ] population of Poland during the ], contributed to a backlash.<ref name="AJ">{{cite journal |title=Sytuacja prawna mniejszosci żydowskiej w Drugiej Rzeczypospolitej |trans-title=The legal status of the Jewish minority in the Second Republic |at=pp. 65–66 (20/38 in PDF) |author=Anna Jaskóła, ] |publisher=Wydział Prawa, Administracji i Ekonomii. Instytut Historii Państwa i Prawa (Faculty of Law, Administration and Economy) |location=Wrocław |year=2010 |url=http://www.bibliotekacyfrowa.pl/Content/35560/004.pdf |journal=Chapter 3: Szkolnictwo żydowskie |via=direct download from BibliotekaCyfrowa.pl}}</ref>
Press|year=1997|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=co3KJikOaBYC&pg=PA71&dq=endecja+polish+unversities&lr=lang_en%7Clang_lt%7Clang_pl&sig=gWslTSJDH3z51HdxQlN52zY-YcQ|pages=pp. 71-73|quote=In fact, ever since the attainment of independence, the universities in Poland had been strongholds of Endejca supporters and centers for anti-semitic agitation.}}</ref>


Proposals to reinstitute the '']'', which would restrict Jewish enrollment to 10 percent of the student body (roughly the percentage of Jews living in Poland), were made as early as 1923. However, the proposals were rejected as they would have violated the ]. In spite of these earlier objections, Poland later renounced the Treaty in 1934.<ref name="Cieplinski"/> Polish nationalism and hostility towards minorities, particularly Jews, increased.<ref name="dia30"/> Discriminatory policies regarding ] in education in Poland continued the practice of the ]'s ''numerus clausus'' policy, implemented by the Empire during ], which restricted, by means of ]s, the participation of ] in public life.<ref name="HD"/> Issues that had earlier been resolved by the ] were now decided locally, uniting the Poles while dividing the nation as a whole.<ref name="haller1"/>
Poland's Jewish population was ]d and constituted up to 50% of intelligentsia, while being only 10% of the total population. Polish self-determination leading to Poland's newly regained independence was accompanied by a drive toward furthering education amongst Polish children, while the Jewish representation in educational institutions increased sharply during ]. At the time of Poland's independence in 1918, Polish nationalism and hostility towards minorities, particularly Jews, increased sharply. Issues that had earlier been resolved by the king acting with local magnates were now decided by a central power, and the autonomy of the Jewish communities was diminished.<ref name=haller1>{{cite book|author=Celia Stopnicka Heller|year=1993|title=On the Edge of Destruction: Jews of Poland Between the Two World Wars|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=GmVt-O3AR34C&pg=PA77&dq=apparent+paradox+of+Jewish+existence+in+independent+Poland&as_brr=3&sig=SoiZ92QDXdq0s2JjwnkIRAyJizk
|publisher=] Press|pages=pp.77-78}}</ref> Longstanding Polish antisemitic sentiments were revived in this period, particularly by the radical nationalist forces.<ref>Celia Stopnicka Heller. . 1993
Wayne State University Press.</ref> During the ], the Jewish university-student population was disproportionately higher than that of ] Poles; in the early 1920s, Jews constituted over one-third of students attending Polish universities.<ref name="Rabinowicz"/> Proposals to reinstitute the numerus clausus, which would restrict Jewish enrollment to 10% of the student body (roughly the percentage of Jews living in Poland) were made as early as 1923, and violent attacks against Jewish students by members of ] increased.<ref name="dia30">{{pl icon}} , Dia-pozytyw. Serwis informacyjny.</ref> However, as this would have violated the ], the proposals were rejected. In spite of these earlier objections, Poland later renounced the Minority Treaty in 1934.<ref name="Cieplinski">], "," ''Binghamton Journal of History'', fall 2002, last accessed ] ].</ref>


Various means of limiting the number of Jewish students were adopted, seeking to reduce the Jewish role in Poland's economic and social life.<ref name="Melzer"/> The situation of Jews improved under ],<ref name="Cieplinski"/><ref>Paulsson, Gunnar S., ''Secret City: The Hidden Jews of Warsaw, 1940-1945'', ], 2003, ISBN 0300095465, </ref> but after his death in 1935 the ] regained much of their power and the status of Jewish students deteriorated. A student "Green League" was organized in 1931; its platform called for the boycott of Jewish businesses and the enforcement of the ''numerus clausus''. Its members distributed anti-semitic material, and violent incidents were said to be more widespread during their school holidays. In 1934 a group of ]s petitioned the ] of Warsaw, ], to stop the "youthful outbursts"; Kakowski responded that the incidents were regrettable, but also stated that Jewish newspapers were "infecting public culture with atheism."<ref name="Cieplinski"/> Various means of limiting the number of Jewish students were adopted, seeking to reduce the Jewish role in Poland's economic and social life.<ref name="Melzer"/> The situation of Jews improved under ],<ref name="Cieplinski"/><ref name="google2"/> but after his death in 1935 the ] regained much of their power and the status of Jewish students deteriorated. A student "Green Ribbon" League was organized in 1931; its members distributed anti-semitic material and called for the boycott of Jewish businesses and the enforcement of the ''numerus clausus''.<ref name="google3"/><ref name="google4"/> In 1934 a group of ]s petitioned the ] of Warsaw, ], to stop the "youthful outbursts"; Kakowski responded that the incidents were regrettable, but also claimed that Jewish newspapers were "infecting public culture with atheism."<ref name="Cieplinski"/>


As ] were heavily hit by unemployment during the ], agitation against Jewish students intensified.<ref name="Melzer"/> There were growing demands to decrease the number of Jews in science and business so that "Christian" Poles could fill their positions.<ref name="dia30"/> In November 1931, violence accompanied demands to reduce the number of Jewish students at several Polish universities.<ref name="Melzer"/> The universities' autonomous status contributed to this,<ref name="Melzer"/><ref name="Rabinowicz"> H. Rabinowicz "The Battle of the Ghetto Benches," '']'', New Series, vol. 55, no. 2 (October, 1964), pp. 151-59.</ref> as university ]s tended not to call in police to protect Jewish students from attacks on the campuses,<ref name="Melzer"/> and no action was taken against students involved in anti-Jewish violence.<ref name="Melzer72"/><ref name="Melzer73"/> Agitation against Jewish students intensified during the ] and afterwards, as unemployment began to affect the Polish intellectual strata.<ref name="Melzer"/> There were growing demands to decrease the number of Jews in science and business so that Christian Poles could fill their positions.<ref name="dia30"/> In November 1931, violence accompanied demands to reduce the number of Jewish students at several Polish universities.<ref name="Melzer"/> The universities' autonomous status contributed to this,<ref name="Rabinowicz"/><ref name="Melzer"/> as university ]s tended not to call in police to protect Jewish students from attacks on the campuses,<ref name="Melzer"/> and no action was taken against students involved in anti-Jewish violence.<ref name="Melzer72"/><ref name="Melzer73"/>


==Attempts to legalize segregated seating== ==Attempts to legalize segregated seating==
In 1935 students associated with ] and the ], influenced by the ] ],<ref name="Melzer72">Melzer, p.72</ref> demanded ] of Jews into separate sections in the classrooms, known as "ghetto benches".<ref name="Melzer72"/> The majority of Jewish students refused to accept this system of seating, considering it to be a violation of their ].<ref name="Michlic">] ''Poland's Threatening Other: The Image of the Jew from 1880 to the Present'', University of Nebraska Press, 2006 p. 113-114</ref> Facing the refusal to obey the new system, at some universities Polish students attempted to forcibly move Jews to the ghetto benches.<ref name="Melzer72"/><ref name="Michlic"/> In 1935, students associated with ] and the ], influenced by the ] ],<ref name="Melzer72"/> demanded ] of Jews into separate sections in the classrooms, known as "ghetto benches."<ref name="Melzer72"/> The majority of Jewish students refused to accept this system of seating, considering it to be a violation of their ].<ref name="Michlic"/> At some universities Polish students even attempted to forcibly move Jews to the ghetto benches.<ref name="Melzer72"/><ref name="Michlic"/>


In 1935 anti-Jewish riots broke out at the ] and the ]. From the campuses violence spread to the streets of Warsaw.<ref name="Melzer72"/> Subsequently violence broke out at other universities in Poland as well.<ref name="Melzer72"/> An uninterrupted wave of anti-Jewish violence eventually led to the temporary closure of all of Warsaw's institutions of higher education in November 1935. The ] press put the blame for the riots on Jews refusing to comply with special seating arrangements set by Polish students.<ref name="Melzer72"/> Following ]'s death in 1935, anti-Jewish riots broke out at the ] and the ]. The violence spread from the campuses to the streets of Warsaw.<ref name="Melzer72"/> Subsequently, violence broke out at other universities in Poland as well.<ref name="Melzer72"/> The student riots and violence were however mutual. Especially Jewish students from Academic Zionist Association "Kadimah" (Akademicki Związek Syjonistyczny "Kadimah") were involved in violence against Polish students.<ref name="kulińska"/> An uninterrupted wave of anti-Jewish violence eventually led to the temporary closure of all of Warsaw's institutions of higher education in November 1935. The ] press put the blame for the riots on Jews refusing to comply with special seating arrangements set by Polish students.<ref name="Melzer72"/>


==Introduction of ghetto benches== ==Introduction of ghetto benches==
] (1937).]] ] in 1930s.]]


Ghetto benches were officially sanctioned for the first time in December 1935 at the ].<ref name="Melzer72"/> Following several violent attacks against Jewish students, school officials ordered that they sit in separate sections, under threat of expulsion.<ref name="Rabinowicz"/> Penalties were imposed on those who stayed away from classes in protest against segregated seating.<ref name="Melzer73"/> The move to legalize ghetto benches was contested by the Jewish community, which saw it as a dangerous precedent. Ghetto benches were criticized by Jewish deputies to the '']'' (Polish parliament). In January 1936 a delegation of representatives of the Jewish community of ] (''Lviv'') met with ], who promised to discuss the issue with school administrations, and in February 1936 the ghetto-bench order was canceled by the Lwów Polytechnic's ].<ref name="Melzer73"> Melzer, p.73</ref> While the Polish government initially opposed the segregation policies, the universities enjoyed significant level of autonomy and were able to impose their local regulations. Ghetto benches were officially sanctioned for the first time in December 1935 at the ].<ref name="Melzer72"/> Following several violent attacks against the Jewish students, school officials ordered that they sit in separate sections, under threat of expulsion.<ref name="Rabinowicz"/> Penalties were imposed on those who stayed away from classes in protest against segregated seating.<ref name="Melzer73"/> The move to legalize ghetto benches was contested by the Jewish community, which saw it as a dangerous precedent. Ghetto benches were criticized by Jewish members of the '']''. In January 1936, a delegation of representatives of the Jewish community of ] met with ], who promised to discuss the issue with school administrations, and in February 1936 the ghetto-bench order was cancelled by the Lwów Polytechnic's ].<ref name="Melzer73"/>


This setback for the segregationist cause did not stop attempts to establish ghetto benches in Polish universities. Demands for segregated seating were again raised by the ]-led ] ('']''),<ref name="Melzer74"> Melzer, p.74</ref> the '']'' ], and other nationalist youth organizations.<ref name="Michlic"/> The Ministry of Education in Warsaw was opposed to the ghetto benches, declaring '']'' a violation of the constitution, and another one stated that: "Student ghettos would not be introduced at the Polish Universities".<ref name="Rabinowicz"/> However in light of the continuing serious riots at the university, which the Ministry condemned as "zoological patriotism", the Ministry slowly gave in and decided to withdrew its opposition, hoping that the introduction of the ghettos would end the riots.<ref name="Rabinowicz"/> The ethno-nationalists finally won their campaign for ghetto benches in 1937 when by Ministry decision universities were granted the right to regulate the seating of Polish and Jewish students.<ref name="Michlic"/> On ] ] the Rector of ] ordered the establishment of the institution of ghetto benches in the lecture halls.<ref name="Rabinowicz"/> Within few days similar orders were given in other universities of Poland <ref name="Melzer76"> Melzer, p.76</ref> Over 50<ref name="Rabinowicz"/> notable Polish professors (for example, ], ], ], ]) criticized the introduction of the ghetto benches and declined to enforce either a quota or the ghetto bench system, but their voices were ignored;<ref name="Watts">], ''Bitter Glory: Poland and Its Fate, 1918-1939'', Hippocrene Books, 1998, ISBN 0781806739, p. 363</ref> together with a few Polish students that objected to the ghettos, they would protest by standing in class, refusing to sit down.<ref name="Diagh">{{pl icon}} , based on Alina Cała, Hanna Węgrzynek and Gabriela Zalewska, ''Historia i kultura Żydów polskich. Słownik'', WSiP</ref> The only rector that refused to establish ghetto benches in his university was Prof. ] of ]. Facing the decision to sign the order introducing segregated seating, Prof. Kulczyński resigned from his position.<ref name="Melzer76"/><ref name="Rabinowicz"/> Nevertheless the instruction ordering special "mandatory seats" for all Jewish students still was issued by the vice-rector of Lwów University the next morning.<ref name="Melzer76"/> The only faculty in Poland that did not have ghetto benches introduced was that of the Children's Clinic in the ] led by Professor ], who refused to obey to the Rector's order.<ref name="Rabinowicz"/> Some fifty-six professors of Warsaw, Poznań, and Wilno universities signed a protest against the Ghetto benches in December 1937. The total number was nearly 100, about one in every six Polish professors. The list included the "elite of Polish scholarship", signatories such as ], sociologists Józef Chałasiński, Stanisław and Maria Ossowski and ], biologists ] and ], psychologist Władysław Witwicki, physicist ], and historians Seweryn Wysłouch, ] and Natalia Gąsiorowska.<ref name="Connelly">John Connelly, , UNC Press, 2000, 456 pages.</ref> This setback for the segregationist cause did not stop attempts to establish ghetto benches in other Polish universities. Demands for segregated seating were again raised by the ]-led ] ('']''),<ref name="Melzer74"/> the '']'' ], and other nationalist youth organizations.<ref name="Michlic"/> The Ministry of Education in Warsaw was opposed to the ghetto benches, declaring '']'' a violation of the constitution, and Polish Minister of Education stated that: "Student ghettos would not be introduced at the Polish Universities."<ref name="Rabinowicz"/> However, in light of the continuing serious riots at the university, which the Ministry condemned as "zoological patriotism," the Ministry slowly gave in and decided to withdraw its opposition, hoping that the introduction of the ghettos would end the riots.<ref name="Rabinowicz"/> The ethno-nationalists finally won their campaign for ghetto benches in 1937 when by Ministry decision universities were granted the right to regulate the seating of Polish and Jewish students.<ref name="Michlic"/> On October 5, 1937, the Rector of ] ordered the establishment of the institution of ghetto benches in the lecture halls.<ref name="Rabinowicz"/> Within a few days, similar orders were given in other universities of Poland.<ref name="Melzer76"/>


Over 50 notable Polish professors (including ], ], ], and ]) criticized the introduction of the ghetto benches,<ref name="Rabinowicz"/> and refused to enforce either a quota, or the ghetto bench system, but their voices were ignored together with those gentile students who objected to the policy;<ref name="Watts"/> they would protest by standing in class, and refusing to sit down.<ref name="Diagh"/> Rector ] of the ] in ] (Vilnius) resigned from his position in protest of the introduction of the benches.<ref name="Hass1999"/> Another rector who refused to establish ghetto benches in his university was Prof. ] of ]. Facing the decision to sign the order introducing segregated seating, Prof. Kulczyński resigned from his position instead of signing it.<ref name="Rabinowicz"/><ref name="Melzer76"/> Nevertheless, the instruction ordering special "mandatory seats" for all Jewish students still was issued by the vice-rector of Lwów University the next morning.<ref name="Melzer76"/> The only faculty in Poland that did not have ghetto benches introduced was that of the Children's Clinic in the ] led by Professor ], who refused to obey the Rector's order.<ref name="Rabinowicz"/> Some fifty-six professors of universities in Warsaw, Poznań, and Wilno signed a protest against the Ghetto benches in December 1937. The list included the "elite of Polish scholarship," such as ]; sociologists ], ], ] and ]; biologists ] and ]; psychologist ]; physicist ]; as well as historians ] and ].<ref name="Connelly"/>
The introduction of ghetto benches was criticized internationally. Over 300 British professors signed an anti-ghetto bench manifesto. ] in New York published an open letter signed by 202 professors condemning ghetto benches as "alien to the spirit of academic freedom."<ref name="Rabinowicz"/>


The introduction of ghetto benches was criticized internationally by the Anglophonic nations. Over 300 British professors signed an anti-ghetto bench manifesto. In New York, the League for Academic Freedom published an open letter signed by 202 professors condemning ghetto benches as "alien to the spirit of academic freedom."<ref name="Rabinowicz"/>
Despite the arguments by ] government that introduction of ghetto benches would stop the disturbances, anti-Jewish violence continued, resulting in clashes between Jewish and Polish students organisations which even resulted in two fatalities among the Jewish students<ref name="Michlic"/><ref name="dia30"/> and assaults or even assassination attempts <ref name="Connelly">] Captive University: The Sovietization of East German, Czech and Polish Higher Education, UNC Press, 2000, ISBN 0807848654, p. 82</ref> on Polish professors critical of the segregation policies.<ref name="dia30"/>


Despite the arguments by ] government that introduction of ghetto benches would stop the disturbances, the clashes between Jewish and gentile youth resulted in two fatalities among the Jewish students,<ref name="dia30"/><ref name="Michlic"/> and further assaults, or even an assassination attempt on Polish professor Konrad Górski critical of the segregation policies.<ref name="Connelly"/><ref name="dia30"/>
The practice of segregated seating for the Jewish students in Poland ended with the ] in the beginning of the ] after which most of the Polish education was shut down (see ]) although ] remained. Most ] perished in the ].


==Aftermath== ==Aftermath==
The ghetto bench system and other anti-Semitic demonstrations of the segment of student youth inspired vengeance among some Jewish students of the Polytechnic upon the ].<ref name="Politechnika">{{pl icon}} "Politechnika Lwowska 1844-1945". Wydawnictwo Politechniki Wrocławskiej, 1993, ISBN 8370850588. Editorial Committee: Jan Boberski, Stanisław Marian Brzozowski, Konrad Dyba, Zbysław Popławski, Jerzy Schroeder, Robert Szewalski (editor-in-chief), Jerzy Węgierski </ref> The ghetto bench system and other anti-Semitic demonstrations of the segment of student youth inspired vengeance among some Jewish students of ] upon the arrival of the Soviet authorities, following the ].<ref name="Politechnika"/>


The practice of segregated seating for the Jewish students in Poland ended with the ] in the beginning of the ]. After which most Polish educational institutions were shut down (see ]) although ] remained. Most ] ultimately perished during the ] and the ].
In the third week of October 1939 there was a liquidation meeting with ] directed by lieutenant-colonel Jusimow, during which communist Jewish activists recognized pre-war Polish members of an anti-Semitic organization from their college and pointed them out to NKVD officers. All four were taken out, beaten and shot in the hallway while the NKVD orchestra was performing inside. Their names were: Henryk Różakolski, Jan Płończak (from the student Bratniak organization), Ludwik Płaczek, and Józef Obrocki. The meeting was terminated, shocked people left the hall walking past their murdered colleagues.<ref name="Represje">{{pl icon}} Zbysław Popławski, "Represje okupantów na Politechnice Lwowskiej". Towarzystwo Miłośników Lwowa i Kresów Południowo Wschodnich. Wrocław. 1990. </ref><ref>"Politechnika Lwowska 1844-1945", </ref>


==See also==
The search for the presumed guilty continued all the time.<ref name="Politechnika" /> Professor Eberman from the Combustion Engines department, as well as engineers Jerzy Węgierski and Zbigniew Budzianowski were fired, singled out by their Jewish students. In 1940 an assistant professor of sculpture, renown artist and ], Jan Nalborczyk, was arrested and bludgeoned in prison. Dr Zdzisław Rodewald from Institute of Chemistry ].<ref name="Represje" />
*]
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*]


==References== ==References==
{{reflist}} {{reflist|refs=


<ref name="adl">Anti-Defamation League of Bnai b'rith. {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20081001193732/http://www.adl.org/international/PolandDemocracyandExtremism.pdf |date=2008-10-01 }} A special report by the Anti-Defamation League, 2006</ref>
==Further reading==
* {{pl icon}} Monika Natkowska, ''"Numerus clausus", "ghetto ławkowe", "numerus nullus": Antisemityzm na uniwersytecie Warszawskim 1931–39'' ("Numerus clauses", "ghetto benches", "numerus nullus": Antisemitism in Warsaw University" 1931–39), Warsaw, 1999.
* {{pl icon}} Zbysław Popławski, "Dzieje Politechniki Lwowskiej 1844-1945", Wrocław 1992.
* H. Rabinowicz. "The Battle of the Ghetto Benches." ''The ]'', New Series, Vol. 55, No. 2 (Oct., 1964), pp. 151-159.


<ref name="Antisemitism and Its Opponents in Modern Poland">{{cite book|author=Robert Blobaum|title=Antisemitism and Its Opponents in Modern Poland|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=gXisr7fgDjwC&pg=PA165 |publisher=] Press|year=2005|quote=The first to submit to the segregationist demands of nationalist students were the Engineering and Mechanical Department faculty councils of the Lwow Polytechnical Institute, which on December 8, 1935, adopted the appropriate resolutions; these were quickly imitated elsewhere. | isbn=978-0-8014-8969-3}}</ref>
==External links==
*


<ref name="maxveritas"></ref>
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<ref name="dia30">{{in lang|pl}} , Dia-pozytyw. Serwis informacyjny.</ref>
{{Segregationfooter}}


<ref name="HD">], ''Historical Dictionary of Poland, 966-1945'', Greenwood Press, 1996, {{ISBN|0-313-26007-9}}, </ref>
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]
]
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<ref name="Diagh">{{in lang|pl}} {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070311220308/http://www.diapozytyw.pl/pl/site/slownik_terminow/getto_lawkowe/ |date=2007-03-11 }}, based on ], Hanna Węgrzynek and Gabriela Zalewska, ''Historia i kultura Żydów polskich. Słownik'', WSiP</ref>
]

]
<ref name="Kadish">Sharman Kadish, Bolsheviks and British Jews: The Anglo-Jewish Community, Britain, and the Russian Revolution. Published by Routledge, pg. 87 </ref>

<ref name="netfirms">Litman Mor (Muravchick): The war for life. :"In Polish slang, we called it "Ghetto Lawkowe" (Ghetto of Benches).."</ref>

<ref name="johnson">A History of the Jews by Paul Johnson, London, 1987, p.527, see also: ]</ref>

<ref name="google">Celia Stopnicka Heller, , 1993, Wayne State University Press, 396 pages {{ISBN|0-8143-2494-0}}</ref>

<ref name="google1">Edward H. Flannery, ''The Anguish of the Jews: Twenty-Three Centuries of Antisemitism'', Paulist Press, 2005, {{ISBN|0-8091-4324-0}}, </ref>

<ref name="Rabinowicz">{{cite journal |first=Harry |last=Rabinowicz |jstor=1453795 |title=The Battle of the Ghetto Benches |journal=] |volume=New Series, vol. 55, no.&nbsp;2 |date=October 1964 |issue=2 |pages=151–59|doi=10.2307/1453795 }}</ref>

<ref name="Melzer">{{cite book |first=Emmanuel |last=Melzer |title=No Way Out: The Politics of Polish Jewry, 1935-1939 |publisher=Hebrew Union College Press |year=1997 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=co3KJikOaBYC&q=endecja+polish+universities&pg=PA71 |pages=71–73 |via=books.google.com, no preview | isbn=978-0-87820-418-2}}</ref>

<ref name="Cieplinski">{{cite journal |first=Feigue |last=Cieplinski |title=Poles and Jews: the Quest for Self-Determination, 1919–1934 |url=http://www.binghamton.edu/history/resources/bjoh/PolesAndJews.htm |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20020918204723/http://www.binghamton.edu/history/resources/bjoh/PolesAndJews.htm |url-status=dead |archive-date=2002-09-18 |date=2002-09-18 |journal=Binghamton Journal of History |issue=Fall 2002 |access-date=2 June 2006}}</ref>

<ref name="haller1">{{cite book |first=Celia |last=Stopnicka Heller |year=1993 |title=On the Edge of Destruction: Jews of Poland Between the Two World Wars |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=GmVt-O3AR34C&q=apparent+paradox+of+Jewish+existence+in+independent+Poland&pg=PA77 |publisher=] Press |pages=77–78 | isbn=978-0-8143-2494-3}}</ref>

<ref name="google2">Paulsson, Gunnar S., ''Secret City: The Hidden Jews of Warsaw, 1940-1945'', ], 2003, {{ISBN|0-300-09546-5}}, </ref>

<ref name="google3">Joanna B. Michlic. University of Nebraska Press, 2006. Page 113</ref>

<ref name="google4">Emanuel Melzer. Hebrew Union College Press, 1997. Page 6.</ref>

<ref name="Melzer72">Melzer, p. 72</ref>

<ref name="Melzer73">Melzer, p. 73</ref>

<ref name="Connelly">{{cite book |last=Connelly |first=John |author-link=John Connelly (historian) |title= Captive University: The Sovietization of East German, Czech and Polish Higher Education |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=OyU6o8V_K90C&q=%22in+solidarity+with+students+who+stood+in+protest+of+the+ghetto+benches%22&pg=PA82 |publisher= UNC Press |year=2000 |isbn=0-8078-4865-4 |page=82}}</ref>

<ref name="Michlic">] ''Poland's Threatening Other: The Image of the Jew from 1880 to the Present'', ], 2006 pp. 113–114</ref>

<ref name="kulińska">{{cite book |title= Związek Akademicki "Młodzież Wszechpolska" i "Młodzież Wielkiej Polski" w latach 1922–47 |last=Kulińska |first=Lucyna |author-link=Lucyna Kulińska |year= 2000 |publisher= Abrys |location= Kraków |isbn= 83-85827-56-0 |pages= 38–39 }}</ref>

<ref name="Melzer74">Melzer, p.74</ref>

<ref name="Melzer76">Melzer, p.76</ref>

<ref name="Watts">Richard M. Watt, ''Bitter Glory: Poland and Its Fate, 1918–1939'', Hippocrene Books, 1998, {{ISBN|0-7818-0673-9}}, p. 363</ref>

<ref name="Hass1999">{{cite book|author=Ludwik Hass|title=Wolnomularze polscy w kraju i na śwíecíe 1821–1999: słownik biograficzny|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=r9wqAAAAMAAJ|access-date=11 March 2011|year=1999|publisher=Rytm|isbn=978-83-87893-52-1|page=183}}</ref>

<ref name="Politechnika">{{in lang|pl}} "Politechnika Lwowska 1844-1945". Wydawnictwo Politechniki Wrocławskiej, 1993, {{ISBN|83-7085-058-8}}. Editorial Committee: Jan Boberski, Stanisław Marian Brzozowski, Konrad Dyba, Zbysław Popławski, Jerzy Schroeder, Robert Szewalski (editor-in-chief), Jerzy Węgierski {{cite web |url=http://www.lwow.com.pl/politechnika/politechnika2.html |title=Excerpt online |access-date=2008-06-09 |url-status=bot: unknown |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080609015832/http://www.lwow.com.pl/politechnika/politechnika2.html |archive-date=June 9, 2008 }}</ref>
}}

==Further reading==
* {{in lang|pl}} Monika Natkowska, ''"Numerus clausus," "ghetto ławkowe," "numerus nullus": Antisemityzm na uniwersytecie Warszawskim 1931–39'' ("Numerus clauses," "ghetto benches," "numerus nullus": Antisemitism in Warsaw University" 1931–39), Warsaw, 1999.
* {{in lang|pl}} Zbysław Popławski, "Dzieje Politechniki Lwowskiej 1844–1945," Wrocław 1992.
* H. Rabinowicz. "The Battle of the Ghetto Benches." ''The ]'', New Series, Vol. 55, No. 2 (Oct., 1964), pp.&nbsp;151–159.
* {{in lang|pl}}

==External links==
*
{{Segregation by type}}{{Antisemitism topics}}{{Discrimination}}
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]
]
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]

Latest revision as of 11:36, 9 August 2024

Form of official segregation in the seating of students
Ghetto benches
The 1934 Index of a Polish-Jewish student at the Warsaw University Department of Medicine, with a stamp reading: Miejsce w ławkach nieparzystych (Seating in benches with an odd number)
LocationWarsaw University, Lwów Polytechnic, Wilno University
Period1935–1939
Part of a series on
Discrimination
Forms
Attributes
Social
Religious
Ethnic/national
Manifestations
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Ghetto benches (known in Polish as getto ławkowe) was a form of official segregation in the seating of university students, introduced in 1935 at the Lwów Polytechnic. Rectors at other higher education institutions in the Second Polish Republic had adopted this form of segregation when the practice became conditionally legalized by 1937. Under the ghetto ławkowe system, Jewish university students were required under threat of expulsion to sit in a left-hand side section of the lecture halls reserved exclusively for them. This official policy of enforced segregation was often accompanied by acts of violence directed against Jewish students by members of the ONR (outlawed after three months in 1934).

The seating in benches marked a peak of antisemitism in Poland between the world wars according to Jerzy Jan Lerski. It antagonized not only Jews, but also many Poles. Jewish students protested these policies, along with some Poles who supported them by standing instead of sitting. The segregation continued until the invasion of Poland in World War II. Poland's occupation by Nazi Germany suppressed the entire Polish educational system. In the eastern half of Poland annexed by the Soviet Union, such discriminatory policies in education were lifted.

Background

Further information: History of the Jews in 20th-century Poland

The percentage of Poland's Jewish population increased greatly during the Russian Civil War. Following Poland's return to independence, several hundred thousand Jews joined the already numerous Polish Jewish minority living predominantly in the cities. The new arrivals were the least assimilated of all European Jewish communities of that period. Jews formed the second largest minority after Ukrainians, of about 10 percent of the total population of the Polish Second Republic. Jewish representation in the institutions of higher learning began to increase already during World War I. By the early 1920s, Jewish students constituted over one-third of all students attending Polish universities. The difficult situation in the private sector, compounded by the Great Depression, led to a massive enrollment in universities. In 1923, Jewish students constituted 63 percent of all students of stomatology, 34 percent of medical sciences, 29 of philosophy, 25 percent of chemistry and 22 percent of law (26 percent by 1929) at all Polish universities. Anger over their numbers, which remained out of proportion with that of the mostly gentile population of Poland during the Interbellum, contributed to a backlash.

Proposals to reinstitute the numerus clausus, which would restrict Jewish enrollment to 10 percent of the student body (roughly the percentage of Jews living in Poland), were made as early as 1923. However, the proposals were rejected as they would have violated the Little Treaty of Versailles. In spite of these earlier objections, Poland later renounced the Treaty in 1934. Polish nationalism and hostility towards minorities, particularly Jews, increased. Discriminatory policies regarding Jews in education in Poland continued the practice of the Russian Empire's numerus clausus policy, implemented by the Empire during Poland's partitions, which restricted, by means of quotas, the participation of Jews in public life. Issues that had earlier been resolved by the Russian Empire were now decided locally, uniting the Poles while dividing the nation as a whole.

Various means of limiting the number of Jewish students were adopted, seeking to reduce the Jewish role in Poland's economic and social life. The situation of Jews improved under Józef Piłsudski, but after his death in 1935 the National Democrats regained much of their power and the status of Jewish students deteriorated. A student "Green Ribbon" League was organized in 1931; its members distributed anti-semitic material and called for the boycott of Jewish businesses and the enforcement of the numerus clausus. In 1934 a group of rabbis petitioned the Archbishop of Warsaw, Aleksander Kakowski, to stop the "youthful outbursts"; Kakowski responded that the incidents were regrettable, but also claimed that Jewish newspapers were "infecting public culture with atheism."

Agitation against Jewish students intensified during the economic recession of the 1930s and afterwards, as unemployment began to affect the Polish intellectual strata. There were growing demands to decrease the number of Jews in science and business so that Christian Poles could fill their positions. In November 1931, violence accompanied demands to reduce the number of Jewish students at several Polish universities. The universities' autonomous status contributed to this, as university rectors tended not to call in police to protect Jewish students from attacks on the campuses, and no action was taken against students involved in anti-Jewish violence.

Attempts to legalize segregated seating

In 1935, students associated with National Democracy and the National Radical Camp, influenced by the Nazi Nuremberg Laws, demanded segregation of Jews into separate sections in the classrooms, known as "ghetto benches." The majority of Jewish students refused to accept this system of seating, considering it to be a violation of their civil rights. At some universities Polish students even attempted to forcibly move Jews to the ghetto benches.

Following Piłsudski's death in 1935, anti-Jewish riots broke out at the University of Warsaw and the Warsaw Polytechnic. The violence spread from the campuses to the streets of Warsaw. Subsequently, violence broke out at other universities in Poland as well. The student riots and violence were however mutual. Especially Jewish students from Academic Zionist Association "Kadimah" (Akademicki Związek Syjonistyczny "Kadimah") were involved in violence against Polish students. An uninterrupted wave of anti-Jewish violence eventually led to the temporary closure of all of Warsaw's institutions of higher education in November 1935. The National Democracy press put the blame for the riots on Jews refusing to comply with special seating arrangements set by Polish students.

Introduction of ghetto benches

Demonstration of Polish students demanding implementation of ghetto benches at Lwów Polytechnic in 1930s.

While the Polish government initially opposed the segregation policies, the universities enjoyed significant level of autonomy and were able to impose their local regulations. Ghetto benches were officially sanctioned for the first time in December 1935 at the Lwów Polytechnic. Following several violent attacks against the Jewish students, school officials ordered that they sit in separate sections, under threat of expulsion. Penalties were imposed on those who stayed away from classes in protest against segregated seating. The move to legalize ghetto benches was contested by the Jewish community, which saw it as a dangerous precedent. Ghetto benches were criticized by Jewish members of the Sejm. In January 1936, a delegation of representatives of the Jewish community of Lwów met with Poland's Education Minister, who promised to discuss the issue with school administrations, and in February 1936 the ghetto-bench order was cancelled by the Lwów Polytechnic's academic senate.

This setback for the segregationist cause did not stop attempts to establish ghetto benches in other Polish universities. Demands for segregated seating were again raised by the OZON-led Union of Young Poland (Związek Młodej Polski), the ND All-Polish Youth, and other nationalist youth organizations. The Ministry of Education in Warsaw was opposed to the ghetto benches, declaring numerus clausus a violation of the constitution, and Polish Minister of Education stated that: "Student ghettos would not be introduced at the Polish Universities." However, in light of the continuing serious riots at the university, which the Ministry condemned as "zoological patriotism," the Ministry slowly gave in and decided to withdraw its opposition, hoping that the introduction of the ghettos would end the riots. The ethno-nationalists finally won their campaign for ghetto benches in 1937 when by Ministry decision universities were granted the right to regulate the seating of Polish and Jewish students. On October 5, 1937, the Rector of Warsaw Polytechnic ordered the establishment of the institution of ghetto benches in the lecture halls. Within a few days, similar orders were given in other universities of Poland.

Over 50 notable Polish professors (including Marceli Handelsman, Stanisław Ossowski, Tadeusz Kotarbiński, and Manfred Kridl) criticized the introduction of the ghetto benches, and refused to enforce either a quota, or the ghetto bench system, but their voices were ignored together with those gentile students who objected to the policy; they would protest by standing in class, and refusing to sit down. Rector Władysław Marian Jakowicki of the Stefan Batory University in Wilno (Vilnius) resigned from his position in protest of the introduction of the benches. Another rector who refused to establish ghetto benches in his university was Prof. Stanisław Kulczyński of Lwów University. Facing the decision to sign the order introducing segregated seating, Prof. Kulczyński resigned from his position instead of signing it. Nevertheless, the instruction ordering special "mandatory seats" for all Jewish students still was issued by the vice-rector of Lwów University the next morning. The only faculty in Poland that did not have ghetto benches introduced was that of the Children's Clinic in the Piłsudski University of Warsaw led by Professor Mieczysław Michałowicz, who refused to obey the Rector's order. Some fifty-six professors of universities in Warsaw, Poznań, and Wilno signed a protest against the Ghetto benches in December 1937. The list included the "elite of Polish scholarship," such as Tadeusz Kotarbiński; sociologists Józef Chałasiński, Stanisław, Maria Ossowska and Jan Stanisław Bystroń; biologists Stanisław Kulczyński and Jan Dembowski; psychologist Władysław Witwicki; physicist Konstanty Zakrzewski; as well as historians Seweryn Wysłouch and Tadeusz Manteuffel.

The introduction of ghetto benches was criticized internationally by the Anglophonic nations. Over 300 British professors signed an anti-ghetto bench manifesto. In New York, the League for Academic Freedom published an open letter signed by 202 professors condemning ghetto benches as "alien to the spirit of academic freedom."

Despite the arguments by Sanacja government that introduction of ghetto benches would stop the disturbances, the clashes between Jewish and gentile youth resulted in two fatalities among the Jewish students, and further assaults, or even an assassination attempt on Polish professor Konrad Górski critical of the segregation policies.

Aftermath

The ghetto bench system and other anti-Semitic demonstrations of the segment of student youth inspired vengeance among some Jewish students of Lwów Polytechnic upon the arrival of the Soviet authorities, following the Soviet invasion of Poland.

The practice of segregated seating for the Jewish students in Poland ended with the demise of the Polish state in the beginning of the Second World War. After which most Polish educational institutions were shut down (see Education in Poland during World War II) although Lwów Polytechnic remained. Most Polish Jews ultimately perished during the German occupation of Poland and the Holocaust.

See also

References

  1. Anti-Defamation League of Bnai b'rith. Poland: Democracy and the Challenge of Extremism. Archived 2008-10-01 at the Wayback Machine A special report by the Anti-Defamation League, 2006
  2. Litman Mor (Muravchick): The war for life. Chapter 5: A BA. In Anti-Semitism (1935-1940):"In Polish slang, we called it "Ghetto Lawkowe" (Ghetto of Benches).."
  3. Robert Blobaum (2005). Antisemitism and Its Opponents in Modern Poland. Cornell University Press. ISBN 978-0-8014-8969-3. The first to submit to the segregationist demands of nationalist students were the Engineering and Mechanical Department faculty councils of the Lwow Polytechnical Institute, which on December 8, 1935, adopted the appropriate resolutions; these were quickly imitated elsewhere.
  4. Analysis of Hans-Wilhelm Steinfeld’s remarks on Polish-Jewish relations in Lviv
  5. ^ Jerzy Jan Lerski, Historical Dictionary of Poland, 966-1945, Greenwood Press, 1996, ISBN 0-313-26007-9, Google Print, p.22
  6. ^ (in Polish) Getto ławkowe Archived 2007-03-11 at the Wayback Machine, based on Alina Cała, Hanna Węgrzynek and Gabriela Zalewska, Historia i kultura Żydów polskich. Słownik, WSiP
  7. Tomasz Kamusella, Krzysztof Jaskułowski (2009). Nationalisms Today. Peter Lang AG, International Academic Publishers. p. 203. ISBN 9783039118830.
  8. Sharman Kadish, Bolsheviks and British Jews: The Anglo-Jewish Community, Britain, and the Russian Revolution. Published by Routledge, pg. 87
  9. A History of the Jews by Paul Johnson, London, 1987, p.527, see also: History of the Jews in Russia
  10. Celia Stopnicka Heller, On the Edge of Destruction..., 1993, Wayne State University Press, 396 pages ISBN 0-8143-2494-0
  11. ^ Rabinowicz, Harry (October 1964). "The Battle of the Ghetto Benches". The Jewish Quarterly Review. New Series, vol. 55, no. 2 (2): 151–59. doi:10.2307/1453795. JSTOR 1453795.
  12. Edward H. Flannery, The Anguish of the Jews: Twenty-Three Centuries of Antisemitism, Paulist Press, 2005, ISBN 0-8091-4324-0, Google Print. p.200
  13. Snyder, Timothy (11 July 2004). The Reconstruction of Nations: Poland, Ukraine, Lithuania, Belarus, 1569–1999. Yale University Press. p. 144. ISBN 0-300-10586-X.
  14. Anna Jaskóła, University of Wrocław (2010). "Sytuacja prawna mniejszosci żydowskiej w Drugiej Rzeczypospolitej" [The legal status of the Jewish minority in the Second Republic] (PDF). Chapter 3: Szkolnictwo żydowskie. Wrocław: Wydział Prawa, Administracji i Ekonomii. Instytut Historii Państwa i Prawa (Faculty of Law, Administration and Economy). pp. 65–66 (20/38 in PDF) – via direct download from BibliotekaCyfrowa.pl.
  15. ^ Cieplinski, Feigue (2002-09-18). "Poles and Jews: the Quest for Self-Determination, 1919–1934". Binghamton Journal of History (Fall 2002). Archived from the original on 2002-09-18. Retrieved 2 June 2006.
  16. ^ (in Polish) Antysemityzm lat 30-tych, Dia-pozytyw. Serwis informacyjny.
  17. Stopnicka Heller, Celia (1993). On the Edge of Destruction: Jews of Poland Between the Two World Wars. Wayne State University Press. pp. 77–78. ISBN 978-0-8143-2494-3.
  18. ^ Melzer, Emmanuel (1997). No Way Out: The Politics of Polish Jewry, 1935-1939. Hebrew Union College Press. pp. 71–73. ISBN 978-0-87820-418-2 – via books.google.com, no preview.
  19. Paulsson, Gunnar S., Secret City: The Hidden Jews of Warsaw, 1940-1945, Yale University Press, 2003, ISBN 0-300-09546-5, Internet Archive, p. 37
  20. Joanna B. Michlic. Poland's Threatening Other: The Image of the Jew from 1880 to the Present. University of Nebraska Press, 2006. Page 113
  21. Emanuel Melzer. No Way Out: The Politics of Polish Jewry, 1935-1939. Hebrew Union College Press, 1997. Page 6.
  22. ^ Melzer, p. 72
  23. ^ Melzer, p. 73
  24. ^ Joanna Beata Michlic Poland's Threatening Other: The Image of the Jew from 1880 to the Present, University of Nebraska Press, 2006 pp. 113–114
  25. Kulińska, Lucyna (2000). Związek Akademicki "Młodzież Wszechpolska" i "Młodzież Wielkiej Polski" w latach 1922–47. Kraków: Abrys. pp. 38–39. ISBN 83-85827-56-0.
  26. Melzer, p.74
  27. ^ Melzer, p.76
  28. Richard M. Watt, Bitter Glory: Poland and Its Fate, 1918–1939, Hippocrene Books, 1998, ISBN 0-7818-0673-9, p. 363
  29. Ludwik Hass (1999). Wolnomularze polscy w kraju i na śwíecíe 1821–1999: słownik biograficzny. Rytm. p. 183. ISBN 978-83-87893-52-1. Retrieved 11 March 2011.
  30. ^ Connelly, John (2000). Captive University: The Sovietization of East German, Czech and Polish Higher Education. UNC Press. p. 82. ISBN 0-8078-4865-4.
  31. (in Polish) "Politechnika Lwowska 1844-1945". Wydawnictwo Politechniki Wrocławskiej, 1993, ISBN 83-7085-058-8. Editorial Committee: Jan Boberski, Stanisław Marian Brzozowski, Konrad Dyba, Zbysław Popławski, Jerzy Schroeder, Robert Szewalski (editor-in-chief), Jerzy Węgierski "Excerpt online". Archived from the original on June 9, 2008. Retrieved 2008-06-09.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)

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