The Treblinka camp was operated from June 1941 to July 1944. Treblinka was the final destination for a little over 2,500 Jews in Bransk. The Jews were taken from Treblinka by train on November 8, 1942. Treblinka was established in 1941 as a forced labor camp for the Jews that were accused of committing crimes. Treblinka tried to minimize the chances of the Jewish rebellion or resistance. Sobibor was the second death camp. The Sobibor death camp was near the Sobibor village, which is located in the eastern part of Lublin. The death camp had branches built in to make sure that no one on the outside of the fence could look in and see what was going on. When the Jews got to the camp they had to be separated by their gender and later were executed. Sobibor had three gas chambers and each one held 160 to 180 persons. A small train held the persons that had died. The Belzec death camp is located in South Eastern Poland. In the early 1940s, the Germans set up many of labor camps in and around Belzec. The Polish workers that were paid for their hard work were replaced by the Jews. The entire camp was not very big, it was pretty small compared to the other death camps. The outer fence of the Belzec death camp was camouflage with the tree branches. Camp two of the Belzec death camp was where the exterminations of the Jews happened, this included gas chambers and large rectangular burial pits. The camouflaged barbed wires were a path to the gas chambers. Belzec death camp was split up into two sections. The first section was the reception area and could hold only 10 wagons, and the second section was where all of the exterminations of the Jews happened. The two camps were separated by two camouflaged barbed wire…
Shootings was one of the ways Jews were killed at Buchenwald. According to Paschen, "If a prisoner attempted to escape he was shot and ten of his countrymen were hung before the entire camp as a warning to the rest. The guard that did the shooting was given a three week furlough and one hundred marks as his reward and many a new prisoner was tricked into stepping out of line so that an S.S. man could shoot him." Even though shootings only took place once in awhile, there were still many victims. "Another way to kill prisoners was used in the stable. The prisoners had to enter a fake infirmary room and place themselves under a height gauge. At this time, an SS man killed them with a revolver by shooting through a small hole placed at the height…
They were all packed into tight cattle cars. During the long period of travel, they suffered cruel conditions including only having just enough room to breathe and scare living necessities. Several deaths occurred on the journey to their destination in Auschwitz. Eliezer went through terrifying experience on board the cattle car. Upon reaching a town the bystanders would throw bread into the cattle cars and sit there and watch as the Jews would fight and kill each other over the piece of bread. When they arrived to the concentration camp, they were separated by strong from the weak. They were stripped from their clothes. If they had any gold in their teeth, they were sent to the area where they would have them removed. Then the troops tattooed numbers on the Jews as a constant reminder that the Germans owned them and as means of an identification…
Also, the prisoners at first were employed as laborers in the construction of the camp. Consequently, the prisoners would get medical treatment denied so if they got a disease they would die. They were not allowed to talk to each other if they did their punishment was death or less food than the others. Most deaths from the camp came from diseases and lack of food and water. In…
Although there were hundreds of deaths daily inside of the camp Eliezer accompanied, the public hanging seemed to become increasingly more traumatic for the prisoners of the camp. In one instance two men were hanged in front of the thousands of prisoners, being extremely quiet and full of solidarity for the victims, unlike those burned in the crematoria. They were all forced to take their hats off, and walked by these men, often staring into their…
When the Jews had to run, the ones who lagged behind were shot by the German soldiers. “ The weaker captives who cannot maintain the rapid pace fall by the roadside and die or are shot by the german guards.” During certain periods of time, the sick and weak immates were executed in the crematories. “ At various times, weak and sick immates are selected for execution in the crematories.” On their way to the concentration camps people would throw food into the cattle cars and watch the Jews fight and even kill each other over it. “ As the train passed through towns, people throw bread into the open cars, then watch as the prisoners beat and kill each other for…
Belzec Execution Camp “I believe in the sun even when it is not shining. I believe in love even when I can't feel it. I believe in god even when he is silent.” was written on a wall during the Holocaust (pinterest). Belzec, a concentration camp located in Poland, was the second camp built and it was one of the biggest camps out off all of them. The Belzec camp was the second camp made and it was a death camp and many people died there each day.…
The prisoners would run naked along these paths, then they would run right into the gas chamber and there they would be gassed. The ill people were told by the SS they were going to be brought to the Red Cross flag at the end of the tube and then they would throw them in a pit along the tube, and then right there they would be shot. The camp was a little unknown camp that was kept a secret for 20-25 years after WW II. Treblinka was one of Hitler's final destination for the Jews of the concentration camp. “Treblinka had the second most people killed, it was next to Auschwitz.…
They travelled around from town to town rounding up Polish government officials, Gypsies and Jews then transported them in trucks to an enclosed wooden area (Aravines), built by Jewish slaves where they could not escape. After being unloaded the men, women and even children were lined up and stripped of their clothes and possessions then shot and buried in mass graves (Middle Tennessee State University 2000). The "Einsatzgruppen" was an effective way of killing off the Jews. All Hitler had to do was train men for this job then send them out around the countryside rounding up Jewish men, women and even young…
The Jews were also forced to go on death marches and one out every 4 Jews died on the marches they were forced to go through (Whitlock, Flint, and Michael Berenbaum. “Buchenwald.” Encyclopædia Britannica).…
There were hundreds, if not thousands of death camps settled across Europe during World War II. But despite the word “death camps”, a term that is used to describe the horrible events of the Holocaust, the historic mass killing of around six million Jews or more. These were more of working camps, but still, out of all of those, only six of them were used specifically for actually working the Jews to death. Belzec, Chelmno, Majdanek, Sobibor, as well as Treblinka were quite large, but none of those five are as large or as infamous as the Auschwitz death camp. Through the beginning of the 1941 to around 1945, the camp has gone from 835 square feet of absolute horror to true historical suffering and terror that won’t, and shouldn’t, be forgotten.…
Beating, hunger, disease-all concepts of the Bergen-Belsen concentration camp. Death was around the corner for many innocent prisoners. For some, death was preferred. Nazis put many Jewish people, and others into camps where there was no escape. People dying by the hundreds and helplessness overpowered these prisoners. There were two camps inside the Belsen camp-Camp 1 and Camp 2. The conditions were terrible, but eventually, there came an end to this horror.…
Henrick Himmler, chief of the German police, the Gestapo, thought that the camps would provide an economic base for the soldiers (The Holocaust: Buchenwald). This unfortunately did not happen, the work force was poorly organized and working conditions were inhumane. Camps were set up along railroad lines, so that the prisoners would be conveniently close to their destination.…
The soldiers frequently also got away with numerous accounts of abuse towards the prisoners, such as harassment and assault. The soldiers were ruthless and eager for the kill. In the book “Night,” by Ellie Wiesel, the German soldiers were cruel. Punishments such as beatings, whippings, continuous running, and public hangings were just some of the abuse and torture that was experienced. This is how the soldiers were taught to react towards the prisoners.…
The second purpose was that the Nazis needed prisoners to maintain weapons. The last reason was that the Nazis believed that they could use Jewish concentration camps prisoners as hostages [Death Marches]. Most of these marches lasted for months, and when some Jews couldn’t keep up the pace, they were shot [death Marches]. Tens of thousands of these Jews were executed during the death marches [YAD VASHEM]. The NAzis marched the jews to various concentration and death camps{Death Marches]. Over sixty thousand Jews marched to Wodzislaw, they were then placed on a crowded train and shipped to either concentration or death camps, but over half of the prisoners died on the way there[YAD…