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Opinion

They fought like lions in every theatre of this war – remembering the Jewish heroes of WW2

Around 1.5 million Jews took up arms against the Nazis. We must remember them to dispel the ugly myth that we went like sheep

May 7, 2025 13:28
(l-r) Holocaust Memorial Day Trust CEO Olivia Marks-Woldman, D-Day veteran Mervyn Kersh and Holocaust Memorial Day Trust chair Laura Marks (Photo: HMDT)
(l-r) Holocaust Memorial Day Trust CEO Olivia Marks-Woldman, D-Day veteran Mervyn Kersh and Holocaust Memorial Day Trust chair Laura Marks at the unveiling of the HMD 2025 impact report (Photo: HMDT)
3 min read

One of the most persistent and insidious Holocaust distortions is that Jews “went like sheep to the slaughter”. This phrase, cloaked in false pity but steeped in contempt, perpetuates the old trope of the feeble Jew. Yet its supposed opposite, the armed, defiant Israeli Jew, is equally scorned. Such is the nature of this twisted bigotry: Jews are criticised whether they suffer or fight.

The truth is both more complex and more inspiring. We must, first of all, consider that the overwhelming majority of Shoah victims were women, children (1.5 million) and the elderly. Entire families were torn from their homes at gunpoint. Genocide doesn’t tend to offer its victims a fair fight.

And yet, even against such impossible odds, the record of Jewish resistance is as stunning as it is often overlooked. Jews fought back in some 100 ghettos and concentration camps, most famously in the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising, a battle that lasted, under the most dire circumstances, 27 days, nearly as long as the entire Polish army stood up to the Wehrmacht invasion.

But the full story of Jewish fighters in the Second World War is not just one of doomed heroism. It is also the story of Jewish soldiers in uniforms, a staggering 1.5 million of them. From Normandy to Stalingrad and the Pacific, these Jews fought in the regular Allied armies and in all theatres of the war.