Revolt

Treblinka Death Camp Revolt

August 1943

(Testimonies)

 

 

 

The memorial at Treblinka

A brief summary of the revolt:

Jewish inmates organized a resistance group in Treblinka in early 1943. When camp operations neared completion, the prisoners feared they would be killed and the camp dismantled. During the late spring and summer of 1943, the resistance leaders decided to revolt.

 

On August 2, 1943, prisoners quietly seized weapons from the camp armory, but were discovered before they could take over the camp. Hundreds of prisoners stormed the main gate in an attempt to escape. Many were killed by machine-gun fire. More than 300 did escape -- though two thirds of those who escaped were eventually tracked down and killed by German SS and police as well as military units. Acting under orders from Lublin, German SS and police personnel supervised the surviving prisoners, who were forced to dismantle the camp. After completion of this job, the German SS and police authorities shot the surviving prisoners.


Read more [Here]

The HolocaustResearchProject

 

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  • 9/6/2007 12:01 PM Jennier Tratari wrote:
    Thank you for this detailed piece on the Treblinka deathcamp! Your website is a great education resource!
    Reply to this
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