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It is difficult to imagine a more dreadful existence than that faced by the half-million Jews imprisoned in the Warsaw ghetto from 1940 to 1943. Under the pretext of a quarantine (for typhus), Nazi authorities ordered walls to be erected around the ghetto, sealing it off from the outside world. Thirty percent of the population of Warsaw was confined to just over 2 percent of the city's land mass. Deprived of food, fuel, and often water, people began to freeze and to starve, even as trainloads of Jews from other parts of Europe were forced into the ghetto. In a
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