Belzec, Sobibor, Treblinka : the Operation Reinhard death camps

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Bibliographic Information

Belzec, Sobibor, Treblinka : the Operation Reinhard death camps

Yitzhak Arad

Indiana University Press, c1987

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Note

Bibliography: p. 401-406

Includes indexes

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Between the years 1942 and 1943, under the code name Operation Reinhard, more than one and a half million Jews were gassed in the concentration camps of Belzec, Sobibor, and Treblinka, located in Nazi-occupied Poland. Jewish survivors of the operation numbered fewer than 200. Yitzhak Arad reveals, here, the complete story of Operation Reinhard for the first time. Using sources previously overlooked, such as German and Polish official records and testimonies from Nazi war criminal trials, Arad records the history of the Belzec, Sobibor, and Treblinka death camps from their construction in 1941 to their destruction in 1943. He describes the camps' physical layouts, the process of extermination used, and the actions of the SS men and Ukrainian guards who operated the camps. Arad tells the tale of the death camps' inmates - though many of their lives lasted but a few hours following their arrival - his underground organizations, the revolts and escapes, and the details concerning the day-to-day survival of those spared instant death in the gas chambers. Arad's work retrieves the experience of Operation Reinhard's victims and survivors from obscurity and bears eloquent witness to the tragedy, which was theirs. Yitzhak Arad, Chairman of Yad Vashem, Holocaust Remembrance Authority, is a lecturer in Jewish History at the University of Tel Aviv and author of "Ghetto in Flames: Story of the Vilna Ghetto."

Table of Contents

CONTENTS PART ONE THE EXTERMINATION MACHINE 1. The Final Solution: From Shooting to Gas 2. Operation Reinhard: Organization and Manpower 3. Belzec: Construction and Experiments 4. Construction of Sobibor 5. Construction of Treblinka 6. Preparing for the Deportations 7. Expulsion from the Ghettos 8. The Trains of Death 9. Belzec: March 17 to June, 1942 10. Sobibor: May to July, 1942 11. Treblinka: July 23 to August 28, 1942 12. Reorganization in Treblinka 13. The Mission of Gerstein and Pfannenstiel 14. Jewish Working Prisoners 15. Women Prisoners 16. Improved Extermination Techniques and Installations 17. The Annihilation of the Jews in the General Government 18. Deportations from Bialystok General District and Ostland 19. Transports from Other European Countries 20. The Extermination of Gypsies 21. The Economic Plunder 22. Himmle's Visit to SObibor and Treblinka 23. The Erasure of the Crimes PART TWO LIFE IN THE SHADOW OF DEATH 24 Portraits of the Perpetrators 25 The Prisoners' of Daily Life 26 The Prisoners and the Deportees 27 Faith and Religion 28 Diseases, Epidemics, and Suicide 29 Social Life PART THREE ESCAPE AND RESISTANCE 30 The Cognizance and Reaction of the Victims in Occupied Poland 31 Escapes from the Trains and Spontaneous Acts of Resistance 32 Escapes from the Camps 33 The Underground in Teblinka 34 The Plan for the Uprising in Treblinka 35 August 2, 1943: The Uprising in Treblinka 36 Pursuit and Escape from Treblinka 37 Ideas and Organization for Resistance in Sobibor 38 The Underground in Sobibor 39 The Plan for Uprising in Sobibor 40 October 14, 1943: The Uprising in Sobibor 41 Pursuit and Escape from Sobibor 42 Survival amoung the Local Population 43 Reports about the Death Camps in Polish Wartime Publications 44 An Evaluation of the Uprisings and Their Results 45 Operation Erntefest 46 The Liquidation of the Camps and the Termination of Operation Reinhard Epilogue APPENDIX A The Deportation of the Jews from the General Government, Bialystok General District, and Ostland APPENDIX B The Fate of the Perpetrators of Operation Reinhard Bibliographic Key to the Notes Notes Index

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