The Monument to the Ghetto Heroes is located in Warsaw, Poland, at Ludwika Zamenhofa and near the POLIN Museum of the History of Polish Jews. To get there, you can take a tram to Muranów 06 station or a bus to Nalewki - Muzeum 02 station. Alternatively, you can take a taxi.
The Monument to the Ghetto Heroes is open 24 hours a day, daily.
The best time to visit Monument to the Ghetto Heroes is on weekdays, to avoid the nearby POLIN Museum of the History of Polish Jews visitor crowds passing by.
Schedule up to 30 minutes to see and pay homage to the heroes at the Monument.
The Monument to the Ghetto Heroes by Nathan Rapoport honors the Jewish men, women, and children who fought to defend themselves in the Warsaw ghetto battle with Germans in 1943 during World War II.
Its 36-feet wall symbolizes not only the Warsaw ghetto wall but also the holiest site of Judaism, the Western Wall in Jerusalem.
The Warsaw ghetto was located just where the Monument now stands and in 1948, the Monument was built amidst the ghetto ruins. Today, the neat park surrounds it and it sits side by side with the breakthrough POLIN Museum of the History of Polish Jews.
The Monument to the Ghetto Heroes is located at the Square of the Ghetto Heroes of Warsaw which is a public space, so you can approach the monument for free.