Why the MILK MEDIA?
JEWISH RINGS IN THE TREBLINKA !!!
TREBLINKA — HOLOCAUST, EMPLOYMENT, SHOAH — GENOCIDUM ATROX, INDUSTRIAL HUMANITY
Arbeitslager Treblinka, SS-Sonderkommando Treblinka, Vernichtungslager Treblinka – the interchangeably utilized names of the complex of 2 German camps, work and extermination, existing between 1941 and 1944/1942-1943 in forests over Bug, along the Siedlce – Malkinia railway line, close the Poniatowo village. It is named after a railway station located 6 km from the camp.
A penal labour camp (German: Arbeitslager) in Treblinka was established in the summertime of 1941, after the German attack on the russian Union (Operation Barbarossa), close the open-air gravel mine that existed here. It was surrounded by barbed wire fences. Both Poles and Jews were imprisoned in the camp. The “criminal elements” were directed here, as well as the civilian population caught in retaliation for military actions under the independency Underground.
The camp extended to 17 hectares and was divided into 2 parts: prisoner and administrative and economic. The prisoner part was further divided internally to separate prisoners, Polish prisoners and judaic prisoners. The prisoners were supervised by 20 German SS – men and about 100 guards after SS training camp
In Trawls. The camp's commandant throughout its operation was SS-Hauptsturmführer Theodor van Eupen, attorney.
In the camp, the management of the camp was carried out by Germany, the protection of the camp was provided by Ukrainians, economical and law enforcement functions were performed by Jews, physical robots were performed by Poles. The Germans were eleven: the camp manager in the rank of major, 8 Germans as managers of individual departments and 2 gendarmes. The Ukrainian crew (wachmani trained in Trawniki) was comparatively many – 60 people.
The camp was liquidated in July 1944 as the Red Army approached; any prisoners were shot, any were resettled to another German extermination camps.
THE SELECTED CONSIDENTS BORDERED IN THE TREBLINKA
Janusz Korczak ,Jew – outstanding educator, writer, social activist and doctor,
Hilel Cajtlin, Jew, − author and thinker,
Arthur Gold hebrew – composer, violinist, author of many hits,
Adolf Gancwol – Ganiewski – photographer, judaic social activist,
Bruno Winawer, hebrew – writer.
The extermination camp – Treblinka II was formed in late spring 1942, as part of Einsatz Reinhard, alongside the already existing penal labour camp. It existed until November 1943. In terms of the number of victims, it was the second – after Birkenau – extermination camp of Jews.
The camp had a trapezoid form of 400 × 600 metres, surrounded by 2 rows of fences and barbed wire meshes. The interior barrier was 2-3 metres advanced and was pierced with branches to prevent insight from the outside.
The second barrier – located 40-50 meters from the first – was designed as anti-tank obstacles and barbed wire meshes.
Between them there was barren land – without any plants and places to hide – easy to watch by the guards. The fences besides divided the area of the camp. An eight-metre defender tower was built in each corner. Additional towers were besides erected around the confederate border – close gas chambers.
The camp was divided into 3 zones: residential area (Wohnlager), admission area (Auffanglager) and extermination camp (Totenlager).
The residential area was located in the northwest part of the camp. It consisted of SS barracks and Ukrainian guards and administrative buildings – offices, armory, warehouses and workshops.
The SS housing units were concentrated in 1 place. judaic prisoners lived in the fenced part of the residential area – a square of 100 × 100 metres.
The reception area was located in the south-western part of the camp and it was there that judaic transports arrived. There was a platform and a 300-metre rail siding. At the end of the track there was a wooden gate surrounded by barbed wire crossed branches. There was a large building at the front of the platform – the property of the victims was stored there. At first, there were no signs or signs at the platform and railway siding that indicated that it was a railway station. These elements – clock, arrows, timetables, fictional buffet and inscriptions – were created later in the camp's existence.
Next to the platform, north of the warehouse, there was an open area, and behind it was a "place – a "gallery room" which it entered through the gate. At the gate men were separated from women and children. There were 2 barracks on both sides of the square. On the left, women and children undressed and deposited valuables. Men undressed in the right barracks. Further south was the “place – sorting room” where the victims' clothes were sorted. At 1 end of the square – in the southeast corner of the camp – there were large pits for those who died during transport.
The area of extermination was located in the southeast of the camp. It was completely isolated from the remainder of the camp. The full size was about 200 × 250 metres.
Gas chambers stood inside the extermination area in a large brick building. For the first months, there were 3 gas chambers – 5 × 5 meters, at 2.6 meters high. 10 fresh red brick gas chambers were then built, much larger – 7 × 7 meters. In the building's building, there was a diesel engine that supplied exhaust gases to gas chambers and a generator that supplied electricity to the full camp.
The entrance door to the gas chambers led to a wooden corridor. Each door to the chambers was 1.8 metres tall and 90 cm wide. The door was sealed tightly from the outside. In the gas chambers themselves – other the entrance door – there were wider doors (2.5 by 1.8 meters). They were besides hermetically sealed. Gas chambers up to a certain tallness were lined with tiles, and showers were installed on the ceiling – all to keep the impression that it was only a bath.
The pipes were utilized to deliver gas to the chambers. erstwhile the door was locked, there was no light in the gas chamber. East of the gas chambers there were immense pits on the bodies of the victims. They were 50 metres long, 25 wide and 10 metres deep.
Excavated excavators brought from the quarries of the Treblinka Penal Camp were utilized to dig them up. To facilitate the transport of bodies into the pits, narrow gauge railway tracks were built.
The bodies were carried to the pits with wagons pushed by prisoners. A barracks for prisoners employed in the extermination area was placed south of the gas chambers. The full barracks and a tiny square were surrounded by barbed wire. The entrance door was other the gas chamber.
There was besides a kitchen and a toilet in the barracks. In the centre of the extermination area, a defender tower and guardhouse were built.
The camp was supervised by 20-25 SS officers (Germans and Austrians) and 80-120 Ukrainians. Prisoners to handle transports and loot property, were caught from transports, each time around 700-800.
Chamber service and burning bodies were left to about 300 prisoners, separated from the others. Among the latter, the rotation was highly large.
The commandant was at the beginning of the medical doctor Irmfried Eberl, in August 1942 changed to Franz Stangel. As of August 1943.
By November 1943 (complete liquidation of the camp) the commandant was Kurt Franz.
When the camp was ready by mid-July 1942, rail transports were moving towards Treblinka, carrying the victims. Trains headed for the Treblinka extermination camp stopped at a railway station in the village of Treblinka, about 4 kilometres from the camp.
The train, usually composed of about 60 wagons, was divided into 3 parts, which were inserted into the camp. As the train approached the death camp, a loud whistle was coming out of the locomotive pushing the wagons. It was a signal for the Ukrainian Wachmans to take positions around the reception area and on the roofs of the buildings that surrounded it. A group of SS men and another Ukrainian Wachmans occupied position on the platform.
The first transport brought Jews from the Warsaw ghetto in the 3rd decade of July (most most likely July 23). And then, all day, another train would arrive on the Treblinka railway ramp, bringing people not only from Poland but from many European countries. In Treblinka Germany did everything to deceive, mislead and hide from the victims the intent of their arrival.
Deportees left the carriages, went out to the platform and passed through the gate to a fenced square inside the camp. erstwhile crossing the gate, women were separated from men. Men were headed to the right, women and children to the left. On the large board it was in Polish and German:
Warsaw Jews!
“...You are in the Durchgangslager Transition Camp from which you will be transferred to Arbeitslager labour Camps. To prevent an outbreak, you gotta hand over your clothes and items for immediate disinfection. Gold, money, abroad currency and jewelry should be returned to the deposit box where you will get your receipt. They'll be returned later on the receipt. For cleanliness, everyone must bathe before further journey...’.
German torturers predicted in their plans a peculiar care for the property of the victims. Clothing, footwear, fur, valuable jewelry were transported to the Reich. According to the railway papers held, it was found that only from 2 to 21 September 1942 more than 200 wagons containing shoes and clothing were sent from Treblinka camp to the Reich. About all 2 weeks, peculiar trucks carried valuables, gold, jewelry, currency, watches, etc. to the Reich.
Women and children went to the barracks on the left side of the square, where they undressed before going under the “showers”. The clothes must have tied in the bags. The items were returned to the deposit box at the end of the barracks. The way clothes were prepared and deposits were collected was to make an illusion that after a bath, everyone would get their things and fresh clothes back.
Men stayed outside until women and children were taken “in the shower”. respective twelve men were chosen to work – they had to clean the wagons, take care of the clothes and luggage left by the victims. Women and children were forced to run through a corridor called the "road to heaven" – it was a fenced way about 4 metres wide that led to gas chambers. At that time, men were ordered to undress, quit valuables, and then they were besides brutally driven into gas chambers.
The poisonous gas was carbon monoxide from the exhaust gases. Death took place slowly, for about 10-15 minutes and in TRAINING MEN.
The usage of exhaust gases for killing in chambers was very convenient due to easy availability of fuel and a inexpensive solution for Germans, unlike cyclone B.
The time from the beginning of the wagons to the closing of the chambers was about 20 minutes. In the gas chamber, the prisoners had to stand with their hands up.
In this way, more victims could be accommodated once. small children were thrown on top of this crushed human mass. The engine exhaust gas was about 25 minutes.
Initially, the bodies of gas victims were thrown into the pits. However, after the Germans detected war crimes committed on Polish officers by Stalin, among others in Katyn, Himmler issued an order to dig up and burn all the bodies in order to cover the tracks.
It took respective months to dig up and burn the corpse. Since then, the corpses of gas victims have already been burned.
The working column of judaic prisoners moved them to the place where peculiar grates were installed from railway tracks. They were translated with wood and after flammable liquid was poured, they were set on fire.
2-3 hours after the 2 000 transport The Jews' gas chambers were already cleaned, the bodies burned, the clothes were sorted, and the artificial teeth of gold were torn. On the day Treblinka II could "accept" up to 12-14 1000 people.
After the rebellion of prisoners in August 1943, the extermination camp in Treblinka began to be liquidated
. In November 1943, the camp no longer existed. The gas chambers were destroyed, the another barracks were dismantled, the barrier removed. The site of the camp, covering the ashes of hundreds of thousands of people, was plowed and cast by the Germans with lupin.
At Treblinka I camp, the stay ended with death for half the prisoners, and for many of the others – transport to another concentration camps. In the first period, they were Poles, residents of Sokołów County, and later another residents of the Warsaw District.
Jewish prisoners, selected from transports to Treblinka II camp, were seldom sent here. The average number of prisoners in the camp was 1-1,2 thousand. The prisoners worked in a gravel mine and at a station in Malkini to burden wagons. any of the prisoners were employed in camp workshops and women were employed in a farm located at the camp. Prisoners worked in conditions of hunger and terror.
Through the Treblinka Penal Camp, more than 20,000 prisoners died of starvation, disease, torture or being shot. Among the prisoners, there were isolated escapes and attempts at collective rebellion.
Treblinka II extermination camp functioned briefly, as from July 1942 to November 1943. It is estimated that 800-920,000 people died here.
According to the data in the telegram sent in January 1943 to Adolf Eichmann by Hermann Höfle, the full number of people murdered in Treblinka at 31 December 1942 was 713 555.
The victims were mostly Jews from Warsaw, Białystok, Grodna, Kielce, Radom, Łukowa, Częstochowa, Kozienic and many smaller towns.
Polish Jews were brought here in freight wagons, transports from Western Europe were frequently carried out on passenger trains, behind purchased tickets.
Jews were brought here from Germany, Austria, Bulgaria, Greece, Yugoslavia, the Czech Republic, Slovakia, Belgium and France. This camp was the center of the Holocaust exclusively for Jews, but for 2 or 3 known transports of Roma.
The lives of the prisoners of Treblinka II, working on the device of the Holocaust, are known from the fewer accounts of those who escaped or escaped during the rebellion, primarily from the written and released as an underground print as early as 1944 by Jankiel Wiernik "Year in Treblinka" and later Samuel Willenberg "Rebellion in Treblinka". The prisoners were divided into working commissions.
JEWINGS IN TREBLINKA
The prisoners decided to make a resistance.
In August 1943, an armed revolt of prisoners broke out. fewer who remained alive managed to get to the armory.
Several twelve rifles, ammunition, and grenades were removed. There was a shooting that shortly swept the full camp.
During the Uprising of Jews in Treblinka, about 25 Germans and 66 Ukrainian Wachmans – guards and about 800 judaic prisoners were killed. Most of the camp rooms were burned down. About 200 prisoners managed to escape the burning Treblinka.
Of this number, however, the majority died during the fight against German soldiers who went in pursuit.
DOCUMENT OF fact
Edward Kopówka and Fr Paweł Rytel – Andrianik documented the sacrifice of more than 310 Poles (including 18 priests) from the Treblinka area, who gave their lives for helping Jews, and the accomplishment of 335 people awarded the Medal of Righteous among the planet Nations.
Not many in the West and even in Poland realize how much harm the anti-Polish releases of Jan Tomasz Gross bring to the image of Poland in the world.
Some historians are discouraged from doing investigation on Polish-Jewish relations, fearing that their findings will not break through the media sound based on anti-Polish stereotypes.
The book “I will give them a name forever, ” published by the Loretanek Sisters Publishing House. Poles from the Treblinka area saving Jews" (Oksford – Treblinka 2011), by Edward Kopówka, Museum manager in Treblinka, and Fr Paweł Rytl – Andrianik, who is simply a reliable historical survey showing the real, completely different image of the Polish Nation from Gross's publishing house.
Treblinka belongs to 1 of the most symbolic places of the Holocaust of Jews and Roma (it is estimated that over 800,000 people died there).
On 1 September 1941, Germans decided to establish Treblinka I, a camp intended mainly for Poles.
Importantly, Treblinka has besides become 1 of the symbolic sites in the last publication by Jan Tomasz Gross, “Golden Harvest”, in which he tries to show the expected animalization of the surrounding population, which seems to have caught up with the theft of Holocaust victims, organizing the alleged gold harvest.
Unfortunately, his description of Poland and Poles is considered actual in the world.
Of course, Gross has not only contributed to specified a image of Poland, many unfavorable Polish media proceed to repeat the revelations about “Polish concentration camps” and “Nazis”.
MUSEUM OF FIGHTING AND matrimony IN THE TREBLINC
All of this takes place on the basis of the alleged planet past policy. There is simply a constant war on this plane today. This can be seen, for example, in the issue of Polish-Russian relations (the Katyn case, the issue of russian prisoners of war 1920, etc.), this is very powerfully seen in the issue of blaming Poles for the Holocaust.
Meanwhile, the publication of Edward Kopówka and Fr Paweł Rytl – Andrianik is an highly valuable origin material showing a completely different image of Polish society.
Treblinka territory was not covered by the wider scope of the Żegota activities, so helping the Jews, which was organized here, was more spontaneous.
The authors of this publication documented the sacrifice of more than 310 Poles (including 18 priests) from that area, who gave their lives for helping Jews, and making 335 people awarded the Medal of Righteous among the planet Nations.
It should be recognised that the book “I will give them a name for ever” is the fruit of the highly self-sacrificing, many years of research.
The book consists of 2 parts – the first contains a list of people with a short description of the characteristics of the assistance. The second part is devoted to a broader description of selected characters. At the end, the authors posted accounts of witnesses – erstwhile prisoners Treblinka I and surrounding residents. The investigation area afraid 15 districts adjacent to the camp.
As the authors emphasize, this book does not have a polemic dimension, but is factual. There is no doubt, however, that the burden of these facts leads to polemic reflection. After all, the authors dealt exclusively with the activity of the Polish people who were helping Jews risking their lives and families.
It should be stressed that the origin materials presented in the publication were thoroughly verified, although the authors failed to exhaust all sources.
There are inactive many undeveloped materials in the Treblinka Museum of Combat and Martyrdom, which would surely complete the image of Poles' engagement in helping Jews in the Treblinka area.
The papers presented in the book “I will give them a name for ever” so talk of the demolition of the judaic population on the 1 hand, but on the another – the heroism of those Poles who gave their lives, saving Jews. fewer people present know, especially in the West, what punishments threatened Poles for helping the judaic population and what sacrifices were made.
Based on Governor-General Hans Frank's order
of October 15, 1941, the death punishment was predicted for a hebrew who escaped from the ghetto, but the same punishment threatened Poles who were helping Jews.
There was no specified law in western Europe, but the scale of aid for the judaic population in Poland was much greater than in the West.
This publication proves another one, namely that Poles were a nation that suffered the most in planet War II alongside the judaic people. Pope Benedict XVI stressed this, who, while on pilgrimage to Poland in 2006, said (in Auschwitz, 28 May):
"Jan Paul II was here as the boy of the Polish nation. I come here as the boy of the German people and so must and can repeat after my predecessor: I could not neglect to come here. I had to come here. Pope John Paul II was here as the boy of a nation that suffered most in this place and in general during the war" (p. 32).
In a planet where there is simply a fashion for anti-Polish historiography, for lies in the kind of: “Polish extermination camps”, “Nazis”, specified documentary works as Edward Kopówka and Fr. They can be returned after many years, due to the fact that the fact does not "terminate." The statute of limitations is for lying propaganda news. Therefore, any investigation effort showing the fact about those times is of large importance for contemporary and future generations of Poles.
It is only in this way that we can save the memory of our ancestors and only in this way we can save national honor and pride.
E. The digger, Fr. P. Rytel-Andrianik, “I will give them a name forever (Isaiah 56:5). Poles from the Treblinka area saving Jews”, The Loretanek Sisters Publishing House, Oxford – Treblinka.
A survey by Aleksander Szumański, a past witness – an independent journalist, correspondent of the planet Polish press, accredited (US) in Poland from 2005 to 2014, prosecuted and sentenced to death by German occupiers.
Compatant – Represented individual – Certificate of the Powers of the Compatants and Represented Persons No B 18668/KT3621.
Member of the Association of the Jews of the Kombatants and the Damaged in planet War II. No. 122.
‘Real people and chaotic animals“ Aleksander Szumański "Warsaw Newspaper" No. 46, 16-22 November 2012
Documents, sources, quotations:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Treblinka_%28KL%29#Postwar days