Tree trunk from the Rudniki Forest
Extent and Medium
overall: Height: 137.250 inches (348.615 cm) | Diameter: 14.881 inches (37.798 cm)
Archival History
The tree trunk was donated to the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum in 1992 by the Lithuanian Ministry of Forestry.
Acquisition
United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Collection, Gift of the Lithuanian Ministry of Forestry
Scope and Content
Tree trunk from the Rudniki Forest outside of Vilna (Vilnius), Lithuania. The forest was used as a haven for Jewish partisans, mainly from summer 1943 through summer 1944. Prior to the outbreak of World War II, Vilna was part of northeastern Poland. In September 1939, under the terms of the German-Soviet Pact, Vilna, along with the rest of eastern Poland, was occupied by Soviet forces. The Soviet Union then transferred the Vilna region to Lithuania. On June 22, 1941, Germany broke the pact by attacking Soviet forces, and two days later they occupied Vilna. The occupying Germans established the Vilna ghetto in early September. In January 1942, the Fareynegte Partizaner Organizatsye (FPO, United Partisan Organization), an underground partisan movement, was formed in the ghetto under the direction of Yitzhak Wittenberg. FPO members sabotaged equipment in German factories where they were forced laborers, forged documents for fellow Jews, and smuggled weapons into the ghetto. In September 1943, as the final liquidation of the ghetto began, resistance members fought the Germans who had entered the ghetto to begin the deportations. The Jewish council in the ghetto however, hoping to minimize bloodshed, agreed to cooperate with the deportations. Without widespread support from the ghetto inhabitants, the FPO decided to retreat through the sewers to the nearby forests to continue their resistance. In the Rudniki Forest, the FPO met up with the Soviet partisan movement, and in July 1944, they joined the Red Army in the liberation of Vilna.
Conditions Governing Access
No restrictions on access
Conditions Governing Reproduction
No restrictions on use
Physical Characteristics and Technical Requirements
Tree trunk with brown, scaly bark, and white and yellow growth throughout. On the front of the trunk there is a large, solid piece of bark in-between two vertical splits, which is peeling upwards away from the trunk. The larger split on the left starts at the top and ends almost at the bottom, while the smaller split on the right starts at the bottom and extends roughly a quarter way up the trunk. There are a few small knobs near the top where branches were cut off.
Corporate Bodies
- Fareynikte partizaner organizatsye (Vilnius, Lithuania)
- Soviet Union. Raboche-Krestʹi︠a︡nskai︠a︡ Krasnai︠a︡ Armii︠a︡
Subjects
- Illegal arms transfers.
- Vilnius (Lithuania)
- Forced labor--Lithuania.
- Anti-fascist movements--Lithuania.
- Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945)--Lithuania--Vilnius.
- Jewish ghettos--Lithuania--Vilnius.
- Forests & fields--Lithuania.
- World War, 1939-1945--Jewish resistance--Lithuania.
Genre
- Trees.
- Object
- Materials