A rare photo of the Sobibór camp--a vest pocket operation compared to the industrial scale of the Auschwitz camps, but ruthlessly efficient. |
Note: When a
version of this entry ran in this blog back in 2014 it elicited a furious and
verbose response from outraged Poles and/or Polish Americans. Although it was clear in the article that I
was discussing Nazi German operated concentration and death camps located in
occupied Poland and there were no disputes to the accuracy of my accounts, in
paragraph 11 I made one passing reference to “one
of the first Polish extermination camps.”
That was evidently an unforgivable offence to Polish national
honor. In their lengthy complaints all commentators,
whose complaints I duly posted pointed out that there were no Polish camps
because the camps were built and operated by Germans, not Poles. Fair enough.
In the revised text below the offending passage has been amended, But this has not been the first time I have aroused
the indignation of some Poles, who evidently spend hours a day surfing the
internet to find any possible insult to the national honor. And there is evidently an organized campaign
of such monitors to squelch any indignities.
A few years ago an entry on the Warsaw Ghetto uprising drew comments
because it was thought not to be respectful of the Polish Resistance in some
way that was never clear to me—the very real and brave Polish Resistance was
simply not the topic at hand. And way
back before I had a blog, and possibly even before I had a computer, a long,
comic poem that I wrote about a very real and historically verifiable deal
between Black and Polish politicians in Illinois which led to the recognition
of both the Martin Luther King and Pulaski Day holidays in the state was
published in the “Poets Corner” section of my local newspaper in the Northwest
Chicago boonies. That drew a five page
long, single spaced, marginless epistle excoriating me for dishonoring the
noble Father of the American Cavalry and for my supposed self-evident
anti-Polish bigotry. Sigh. I imagine
this introduction will not make those industrious critics happy either.
It has
always chapped my ass to hear people who don’t know what the
hell they are talking about wonder aloud about why “there was no
resistance” when the Nazis rounded up Jews and other “undesirables”
or in the labor or extermination camps. First it is another example of blaming
the victim, that always popular parlor game. And secondly it doesn’t take into account
the information that Jews had—early on even they could not imagine industrial
scale murder and genocide, a term that had not yet
even been conceived—or the overwhelming, highly organized force
arrayed against them. These comments
come most prominently, but not exclusively, from right wingers who
want to promote an armed-to-the-teeth citizenry to resist jack
booted thugs and who think concentration camp escapes could be
played out like in The Great
Escape and other movies.
In fact
many Jews who were able attempted to escape. Others famously went into hiding, and
some joined or created resistance units. Individuals committed—and were executed
for, often along with family or community members—attacks on
Nazi police, troops, and local collaborators. There were famously organized uprisings
in Warsaw and other ghettos.
But
most Jews swept up in the machinery of death were unprepared,
confused, and needed to be protective of family. Once in the camps those not immediately
killed were worked nearly to death, starved, frozen,
and subject to disease and within weeks too physically weakened to
resist.
There
were at least three attempts at mass breakouts from the camps—at Treblinka
on August 2, 1943 and at Auschwitz-Birkenau on October 7, 1944 which
included an uprising which resulted in one of the crematoriums being blown
up. In those two cases almost all of
the attempted escapees were killed. But
on October 14, 1943, about 600 prisoners tried to escape from the Sobibór
camp in eastern Poland. About
half got beyond the wire and about 50 survived to the end of the war. This is their story.
Sobibór
was a village in a sparsely populated region of eastern
Poland. The Nazis had established 18
labor camps in the region. The new camp
near the village was constructed in the spring of 1942 to receive Jews from
Poland, France, Germany, the Netherlands, Czechoslovakia, the
Soviet Union, and Soviet POWs and to screen them for assignment
to the labor camps—and to quickly dispose of those deemed unsuitable
or unusable. Fewer than 1,000 inmates
were held there at any time. Many of
those selected for the labor camps were there for only hours or days. The life expectancy of the rejects
was days or short weeks.
S.S. officers and a railroad official at the Sobibór railway station where incoming prisoners were quickly sorted out--and many immediately shot. |
The camp was largely built by local villagers
and a Sonderkommando, a group of about eighty Jews from ghettos in the vicinity
of the camp guarded by a squad of Ukrainians trained at Trawniki. Upon completion of construction, these
Jews were shot. The gas
chambers at the new camp were hooked up to large internal
combustion engines which pumped in carbon monoxide rich exhaust to
smother the victims. Similar
technology had been used on a smaller scale with closed busses,
but this was the first major application on a large scale. The chambers were tested in April on
twenty-five Jews from Krychów who were satisfactorily asphyxiated. After that the camp went into full
operation and the nearby rail platform became a busy place.
To give
an idea of how efficient the operation was, it was active from May 1942
to October 1943 when it was closed and replaced by larger and
more modern camps. But in less
than 18 months at least 200,000 and perhaps as many as 250,000 men, women, and
children were murdered there, the vast majority of them Jews.
Jews
from Poland and the USSR knew what was going to happen to
them. They arrived in packed
freight cars often hysterical with fear and grief. Many were shot on the platform when
they did not respond quickly to orders.
On the other hand at least in the early going Jews from Western
Europe arrived in overcrowded passenger coaches. They had been assured that they were
going to labor camps and were allowed to bring some luggage. Their own doctors and nurses were
allowed to attend the ill in transit.
Food and water during the journey were at least
adequate. These folks received
the shock of a life time arriving on the same platform. Because many were in better health than
Eastern Jews, able bodied men and women were often separated immediately
from their families and sent to the work camps even before they entered
Sobibór.
Attractive young women and girls were
often singled out and sent to the secluded forester house run
as a brothel for the camp’s SS contingent. Post war trials highlighted the
experience of two Austrian actresses, Ruth and Gisela who
were gang raped there over a period of days before being taken outside
and shot. Other befell the same fate.
Some prisoners were held at the camp for longer
periods as laborers including attending the gas chambers and crematoria. Some were assigned, under heavy
guard, to wood cutting beyond the camp wire for fuel
for the crematoria pyres. From
time to time one would melt away into the forest and make an
escape. Some of those who did managed
to find and join resistance units operating from the near wilderness.
In the
spring and summer of 1943 rumors began to circulate in the camp that it
was to be shut down. This was
based on a reduction in the numbers of incoming prisoners. In actuality this was due to new camps
being opened. At this point SS
officials actually had plans to expand Sobibór. Fears of what might happen to them
seemed confirmed when survivors of the Bełżec camp, one of the first extermination
camps on Polish soil, was closed, arrived at the Sobibór rail station only to
be immediately shot in mass.
Polish
Jews on some of the labor gangs began to organize an escape committee
by late summer. They knew that they
would have to act relatively quickly before it inevitably became their
turn in the gas chambers. In
September several Jewish Red Army prisoners from Minsk arrived. Although there was initial distrust
between the Poles and the Soviets, several of the POWs joined the plot
and provided some military experience and leadership.
The
plan was brutal in its simplicity.
On signal, prisoners would overpower and kill all of the
SS men and Ukrainian guards in the camp, using hidden homemade weapons
and then taking the arms of the Nazis.
They would go from barracks to barracks liberating the
inmates and march out the front gates.
The Soviets and those who wished to join them would head east
to try to link up with Russian troops.
Others would scatter and make their way as best they
could.
The two main leaders of the Sobibór uprising--Red Army Lt. Alexander Pechersky and Polish Jew Leon Feldhendler. |
On
October 14, 1943 under the leadership of Polish prisoner Leon Feldhendler
and Soviet POW Alexander Pechersky they quickly managed to quietly overcome
and kill 11 SS men and unknown number of guards. But they were discovered and the alarm
went out. Under intense fire inmates ran for their lives
scrambling over, under and through the fences as they were able. About 300 out of the 600 prisoners in the
camp made it out, but they had lost cohesion.
158 inmates were killed by the guards during the
escape attempt or died in the minefield surrounding the camp. 107 others were captured over the next
few days as SS troops, guards, and police swept the woods. All were immediately executed. Of the remaining survivors 53 died of
other causes before the end of the war—many of starvation, freezing
to death, or illness as they hid out in the forests. About 50 eluded capture, made it to
Soviet lines, and survived the war.
Sobibór survivors at the end of the war. |
After the uprising a furious Heinrich Himmler
ordered the remaining prisoners killed, the camp closed, dismantled, and
the ground planted with trees.
The gas chambers and crematoria were destroyed, buried, and covered
over with an asphalt road way. They
were rediscovered in archeological excavations in
2012.
The site of the camp is now Polish historic site. Monuments on the grounds and at the railway station and a small museum commemorate the dead and the uprising. The Dutch, who lost more than 36,000 citizens at Sobibór famously including Helena ‘Lea’ Nordheim the Jewish Gold Medal women’s gymnasts from the 1928 Olympics and the team’s coach, Gerrit Kleerekoper have contributed funds to the upkeep and maintenance of the site as well as newly installed signage.
The site of the camp is now Polish historic site. Monuments on the grounds and at the railway station and a small museum commemorate the dead and the uprising. The Dutch, who lost more than 36,000 citizens at Sobibór famously including Helena ‘Lea’ Nordheim the Jewish Gold Medal women’s gymnasts from the 1928 Olympics and the team’s coach, Gerrit Kleerekoper have contributed funds to the upkeep and maintenance of the site as well as newly installed signage.
A memorial at the site of the Sobibór camp now a Polish historical site was partially built and is maintained by the Dutch who lost 36,000 citizens in the camp. |
After
the war SS commandants, officers, and guards were tried for war
crimes. One of the most celebrated
cases took years. John Demjanjuk
had been a Ukrainian POW when he was recruited along with many others as
a camp guard. He was trained at the Trawniki
concentration camp. He served as a tower
guard at Sobibór. And would have
been among those who opened fire at the fleeing escapees. After the war Demjanjuk made his way to the United
States as a displaced person. He
became an American citizen, married and raised a family, settled in a suburb
of Cleveland where he worked as a mechanic at a Ford plant.
In 1975
Demjanjuk was finally identified as a Ukrainian collaborator and
his Nazi ID from Trawniki turned over
the Justice Department, which began deportation proceedings
against him two years later. He fought
his deportation for years, claiming at first that he was misidentified,
and later that he was a guard but had taken no part in executions or
shootings. Israel issued an extradition
request for him in 1983 and he was deported to trial there in 1986. Despite controversy over the authenticity
of the SS identification card and other issues, on April 18, 1988 Demjanjuk was
convicted in the Israeli court of being the notorious guard known
to prisoners as Ivan the Terrible. He
was sentenced to death.
An undisputed photo of John Demjanjuk in his guard uniform. |
After
serving more than 5 years in solitary confinement during appeals, the
Israeli Supreme Court overturned the conviction on the grounds of new
evidence that identified the real identified Ivan the Terrible as another
Ukrainian, Ivan Marchenko.
Demjanjuk was released to return to the
United States. In 1993, the Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals ruled that he
was a victim of fraud on the court, as lawyers with the Office
of Special Investigations had recklessly failed to disclose
evidence. In a report submitted to the Sixth Circuit prior to the Israeli
acquittal, Federal Judge Thomas A. Wiseman, Jr. concluded that American
federal officials had erred in asserting that Demjanjuk was Ivan the
Terrible, but that evidence instead pointed to Demjanjuk playing a lesser role as an SS guard. After
the Court of Appeals remanded the matter to Judge Wiseman, Judge
Wiseman dismissed a denaturalization petition in 1998,
effectively restoring Demjanjuk’s citizenship.
In 1999
the government filed a new civil complaint against Demjanjuk asking
again for denaturalization on the grounds that he was a guard at the Sobibór
and Majdanek camps in Poland under German occupation and at the Flossenburg
camp in Germany. It also accused Demjanjuk of being a member of an SS-run
unit that took part in capturing nearly two million Jews in the General
Government of Poland. In a new trial
in 2002 he was again stripped of citizenship.
He lost an appeal in 2004 and the U.S. Supreme Court declined to
hear the case.
In
December 2005 an immigration judge ordered Demjanjuk’s deportation to
Germany, Poland, or the Ukraine. He sought protection under the United
Nations Convention against Torture, claiming that he would be prosecuted
and tortured if he were deported to Ukraine. Chief U.S. Immigration
Judge Michael Creppy ruled there was no evidence to substantiate
Demjanjuk's claim.
Demjanjuk
lost more appeals in his lengthy battles, finally exhausting them
all. Then Germany served extradition
papers seeking custody of him. Finally
after another round of appeals seeking relief from the extradition, Demjanjuk
was finally deported on May 11, 2009.
On July
13 prosecutors charged him with 27,900 counts of accessory to murder. The aging and ill man could only briefly
attend court sessions each day and his lawyers asserted that due to the complexity
of the case it would take up to five years to try the case. They ask that the case be dismissed
due to his age, infirmity, and unlikelihood that he would survive
the trial. Then the Ukrainian
government interceded on his behalf arguing for mercy. None the less the trial got underway in
November.
Aged and infirm John Demjanjuk sat for an ID photo in German custody after his trial and conviction. |
On May
12, 2011, Demjanjuk, then 91, was convicted as an accessory to the
murder of 27,900 Jews and sentenced to five years in prison. He was released pending appeal and died
in a German nursing home on March 17, 2012. The German high court then invalidated the
conviction since the appeal could not be heard.
Justice
ground slowly for the accused guard.
It ground not at all for the dead of Sobibór.
In 1987 Escape from Sobibor was filmed as a British
made-for-TV movie starring Rutger Hauer and Alan Arkin which
was also shown on CBS TV in the United States. Hauer won a Golden Globe for his portrayal
of Soviet POW leader Lieutenant Aleksandr Pechersky.
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