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Christmas Card Given to a Polish Prisoner at Ravensbrück

Christmas card given to Jadwiga Dzido in Ravensbruck
US Holocaust Memorial Museum

The Nazi regime opened Ravensbrück concentration camp in May 1939 to imprison women in Germany who did not fit the Nazi ideal for the so-called German “national community” (“Volksgemeinschaft”).1 The first prisoners of the camp included Jews, Roma and Sinti, Jehovah’s Witnesses, and other so-called “outsiders.” Following Germany’s invasion of Poland in September 1939, Polish women who resisted the German occupation were also sent to Ravensbrück. German authorities deported about 130,000 women from more than 30 countries to the camp between 1939 and 1945.2

In 1942, a Polish political prisoner in Ravensbrück created this Christmas card for a young Polish prisoner named Jadwiga Dzido. Dzido had lived in Łukow, Poland, before attending university in Warsaw. After the German invasion in 1939, the twenty-one-year-old Dzido joined a Polish resistance organization. She was arrested and tortured by the Gestapo before being sent to Ravensbrück in September 1941.3

At Ravensbrück, Dzido was forcibly subjected to unethical medical experiments by SS doctors. Seventy-three other female Polish political prisoners were also forced to become part of a series of tests of antibacterial drugs.4 These women were moved into Barrack 15 together. During the experiments, they began calling themselves “rabbits” because they were being treated like laboratory animals. SS doctors gave the women wounds similar to those that soldiers received in battle, and then they deliberately infected them with bacteria. Half of the “rabbits” received the anti-bacterial drug sulfa and half received no medication. Dzido was selected for the control group and was denied any medication for her injuries.

The women in Barrack 15 had different experiences than most prisoners at Ravensbrück. This included a reduced forced labor detail as well as access to certain materials for comfort and writing. The author of this card referenced their shared experience with a drawing of a rabbit and with the nickname króliczka, or “bunny.” The card offers a message of health and hope for Dzido’s recovery and her future.

Dzido’s wounds took over five months to close and she endured constant pain. Nevertheless, she managed to survive. After the war, she recounted her experiences at Ravensbrück during a trial of Nazi doctors.5 She testified that she had not regained full mobility, and she even showed her injuries to the tribunal.

Various organizations sought reparations for survivors of concentration camps in the years after World War II.6 The “rabbits” were at first denied any compensation.7 However, following years of advocacy, international media coverage, and political pressure, the United Nations decided that the surviving “rabbits” should receive payment for the suffering inflicted by illegal and unethical medical experiments in Nazi camps. Fifty-three victims of Ravensbrück jointly received more than 2.5 million German Marks (roughly $100 million today) as reparations in 1961.8

To see other documents and media about the formation of the Nazis' so-called "national community," visit the related Experiencing History collection, Nazi Propaganda and National Unity. To learn more about the meanings of belonging and membership in the Nazi "national community," see Claudia Koonz, The Nazi Conscience (Cambridge, MA: Belknap Press, 2003); and Thomas Kühne, Belonging and Genocide: Hitler's Community, 1918–1945 (New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 2010).

Dzido's political prisoner badge can be accessed in the archives of the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum.

Sulfa drugs or sulfonamides are a type of antibacterial medication created first by Gerhard Domagk while working for Bayer and IG Farben. He won the Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine in 1939 but could not accept the award due to Hitler's edict in 1937 that kept Germans from accepting Nobel awards. He was arrested shortly thereafter by the Gestapo. To learn more about Domagk and sulfa drugs, see John E. Lesch, The First Miracle Drugs: How the Sulfa Drugs Transformed Medicine (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2007).

To learn more about the "Doctors Trial," see Ulf Schmidt, Justice at Nuremberg: Leo Alexander and the Nazi Doctors Trial (New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2004). To view a portion of chief prosecutor Brigadier General Telford Taylor speaking at the Doctors Trial, please visit the USHMM Holocaust Encyclopedia.

One such group, the Association des Déportées et Internées Résistantes (ADIR) learned of the "Lapins" (French for "rabbits") in the late 1950s through the work of Caroline Ferriday, the chairwoman of Friends of ADIR. Ferriday began corresponding with a self-appointed "Lapins Committee," chaired by three survivors, including Jadwiga Dzido. Caroline Ferriday’s papers are available for research in-person at the USHMM Archives.

To learn more about survivors of Ravensbrück, see Anna Muller, “The Return: The Long Road Home of Female Concentration Camp Inmates,” The Polish Review 65, no.3 (2020). To learn more about other postwar reparations processes, see Rachel Blumenthal, Right to Reparations: The Claims Conference and Holocaust Survivors, 1951–1964 (Lanham, MD: Lexington Books, 2021).

More details and relevant documents regarding the advocacy efforts for victims of medical experimentation at Ravensbrück can be found in the Ferriday papers of the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum collections.

A Polish diminuitive of the name "Jadwiga."

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"Dear Jadzienko1 Little Rabbit, For Christmas I wish that baby Jesus will grant you health and hope and that you will get back home

Ravensbrück, 1942"

Archival Information for This Item

Source (Credit)
US Holocaust Memorial Museum
Source Number 63555
Date Created
December 25, 1942
Language(s)
Polish
Location
Ravensbrück, Germany
Still Image Type Artwork
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