Frumka Pà Âotnicka (1914 â 3 August 1943) was a Polish resistance fighter during World War II; activist of the Jewish Fighting Organization (à »OB) and member of the Labour Zionist organization Dror. She was one of the organizers of self-defence in the Warsaw Ghetto, and participant in the military preparations for the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising. Following the liquidation of the Ghetto, Pà Âotnicka relocated to the Dàbrowa Basin in southern Poland. On the advice of Mordechai Anielewicz, Pà Âotnicka organized a local chapter of à »OB in BÃÂdzin with the active participation of Józef and Bolesà Âaw Koà ¼uch as well as Cwi (Tzvi) Brandes, and soon thereafter witnessed the murderous liquidation of both Sosnowiec and BÃÂdzin Ghettos by the German authorities.
During the final deportation action of early August 1943, the Jewish Combat Organization in BÃÂdzin staged an uprising against the Germans (as in nearby Sosnowiec). The BÃÂdzin-Sosnowiec ghetto uprising lasted for several days even though the SS broke through the main line of defence within hours. PÃ Âotnicka died on 3 August 1943 in one of the BÃÂdzin bunkers, fighting against the Germans. Posthumously, she received the Order of the Cross of Grunwald from the Polish Committee of National Liberation in April 1945.
Pà Âotnicka was born in Plotnitsa, a village near Pià Âsk, during World War I, part of the newly reborn Poland since 1919 after a century of foreign Partitions. She relocated to Warsaw in 1938 to assume a position at the headquarters of the Dror Zionist Youth Movement founded on Polish lands in 1915 in the course of the war with imperial Russia.
Following the 1939 invasion of Poland by Nazi Germany and the Soviet Union, PÃ Âotnicka undertook underground activities as leader of the HeHalutz youth movement. Using false identities and facial disguise, she travelled across General Government territory between Jewish ghettos in German-occupied Poland. She witnessed the Holocaust trains departing from train stations to undisclosed death camps during the extermination of the Jews known as the "Final Solution". As a courier ('kashariyot'), she delivered light weapons procured by the Warsaw Ghetto underground, as well as blueprints, drafted by the headquarters, for the manufacture of Molotov cocktails and hand grenades. Among the Jewish communities she visited, PÃ Âotnicka was referred to as "Die Mameh", Yiddish for "Mom". She relayed the reports of murderous liquidation of so many ghettos that she began to call herself a "gravedigger".
After the GroÃÂaktion Warschau in September 1942 Pà Âotnicka was sent from Warsaw to BÃÂdzin in occupied south-western Poland by the Jewish Combat Organization (à »OB) in order to help the self-defence organization there. The seeds of à »OB were planted in the Warsaw Ghetto only two months earlier, when the German SS headed by Hermann Höfle began the roundups of Jews aimed at deporting 254,000 prisoners to the newly built Treblinka extermination camp. Pà Âotnicka was the first Jewish courier in the Warsaw Ghetto to smuggle weapons from the Aryan part of the city inside sacks of potatoes.
Pà Âotnicka was issued a Paraguayan passport issued by the à Âadoà  Group.
In the BÃÂdzin Ghetto, the Jewish underground cell was formed in 1941. The ghetto was never surrounded by a wall, even though it was tightly guarded by the German and the Jewish Ghetto Police. In March 1941 there were 25,171 Jews in BÃÂdzin; this increased to 27,000 after the ominous expulsion of the Jewish community of Oà ÂwiÃÂcim, the location of the Auschwitz II Birkenau redevelopment. In May 1942 deportations to Auschwitz began with the first transport of 3,200 BÃÂdzin Jews loaded onto Holocaust trains at the Umschlagplatz. On the advice of Mordechai Anielewicz who stayed in Dàbrowa Basin temporarily in mid-1942, Pà Âotnicka, Brandes and the Koà ¼uch brothers, organized a local chapter of à »OB. On 3 August 1943, during the final deportation action, the partisans launched an uprising which lasted for several days. Pà Âotnicka was killed in a bunker at Podsiadà Ây Street on the same day.
The engraved Syenite commemorative plaque, located at the intersection of Niska and Dubois Streets in Warsaw, is dedicated to her memory. The memorial stone is part of an innercity Memory Trail of the Struggle and Martyrdom of the Jews ', inaugurated in 1988, extending from the intersection of Zamenhof and Anielewicz streets to the intersection of Dzika and Stawki Streets. PÃ Âotnicka was registered by Yad Vashem as a victim of the Holocaust in 1957.