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Warsaw Ghetto Uprising: Last surviving fighter, Simcha Rotem, dies at 94

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Simcha RotemImage source, AFP
Image caption,

Simcha Rotem fought in April 1943 to choose his own manner of death

The last surviving fighter of the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising of 1943 has died at the age of 94.

Simcha Rotem, also known as Kazik, was one of the Jewish partisans who rose up against the Nazis when they began mass deportations from the Polish capital.

Thousands died in the uprising but Rotem helped scores of fighters escape through the drainage system.

He then returned to take part in - and survive - the 1944 Warsaw Uprising led by Polish resistance fighters.

Rotem died in Jerusalem on Saturday.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said: "His story will be with our people forever."

President Reuven Rivlin said: "Thank you for everything, Kazik. We promise to try every day to be deserving of the description 'human'."

Image source, Getty Images
Image caption,

Nazi soldiers march Jews out of the ghetto on 19 April 1943

Rotem was 15 when the Nazi Germany invaded Poland in 1939.

He joined the ZOB, the Warsaw Ghetto's Jewish Combat Organisation, in 1942 although he admitted that in the face of the Nazis' firepower "I felt utterly helpless".

By April 1943, many of the ghetto's Jews had died and the thousands remaining faced deportation, so Rotem joined those who decided to fight to "choose the kind of death" they wanted.

He said in 2013: "But to this very day I keep thinking whether we had the right to make the decision to start the uprising and by the same token to shorten the lives of many people by a week, a day or two."

Rotem was one of the dozens who survived, helped through the sewer system by Polish workers and on into surrounding forests.

He came back to fight with the Polish resistance in the 1944 Warsaw Uprising that was crushed by the Nazis after 63 days, with many accusing the advancing Soviets of failing to help.

Image source, JANEK SKARZYNSKI
Image caption,

Rotem also fought in the crushed 1944 Warsaw Uprising

Rotem joined in efforts to root out Nazis after the war, then worked in Israel until retiring in 1986.

He was awarded Poland's Grand Cross of the Order of Polonia Restituta in 2013.

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