Jewish partisan groups of note include the
Bielski partisans who operated a large "family camp" in
Belorussia (numbering over 1,200 by the summer of 1944), the
Parczew partisans of southeast Poland, and the
United Partisan Organization which attempted to start an uprising in the
Vilnius Ghetto in
Lithuania and later engaged in sabotage and guerrilla operations.
Thirty-two Jews from the
Mandate for Palestine were trained by the British and parachuted behind enemy lines to engage in resistance activities. The Polish
Home Army provided training and weapons to the
Warsaw Ghetto's
Jewish Combat Organization, and included in its ranks Jewish individuals and Jewish units, such as Lukawiecki Partisans commanded by
Edmund Łukawiecki and working under the umbrella of the Home Army, as well as the Jewish Platoon Wigry which took part in the 1944
Warsaw Uprising. It also collaborated with Jewish units in self-defence operations. Other Jews joined units affiliated with the
Soviet partisans in Poland. Eventually the
Armia Ludowa (AL) was founded as the main communist-affiliated partisan group in occupied Poland. This group was provided with weapons by the Soviet Union. There were around 30 Jewish partisan detachments and most of these were connected to the AL. About half of these were detachments off in forests. Independent partisan groups also operated in these forests, working to liberate Jews from local ghettos without outside support or coordination. Notably, the Swirz partisans, founded by brothers Isidore and Hersch Karten, liberated over 400 Jews in Eastern Galicia.
Soviet Union The Soviet Union was late in having partisan groups. The first ones started around 1941–1942. These groups mainly appeared in forests, as 6,000–8,000 Jews were able to escape to the forests. Many did not make it, but if they did they joined Soviet partisan detachments. One partisan group in the Soviet area was the
Minsk Ghetto. The Minsk Ghetto was the fourth largest ghetto in Europe. The group was led by the Jewish communists. The group within the Minsk ghetto was supported by the Jewish council which allowed them to organize a mass escape into the surrounding woods. This escape released between 6,000 and 8,000 Jews, who tried to join existing partisan groups. They were known for their resistance movements. There were a large number of partisan groups in the Soviet Union but not much information can be found on them due to Soviet record keeping. Those who joined were those fleeing deportation, or those that had escaped or had been liberated from concentration and labour camps. One such example was that of the
Rab battalion, which consisted of hundreds of Jewish inmates liberated from the Italian
Rab concentration camp in September 1943. 1,318 Jews fighting for the partisans were killed during the war, ten Jewish members were awarded Yugoslavia's highest medal at that time, the
Order of the People's Hero. == Notable partisans ==