Transport from Kolo,Ghetto,Poland to Chelmno,Extermination Camp,Poland on 11/12/1941
Transport from Kolo, Ghetto, Poland to Chelmno, Extermination Camp, Poland on 11/12/1941
Transport
Departure Date 11/12/1941 Arrival Date 11/12/1941
Kolo,Ghetto,Poland
The synagogue in Kolo
Trucks
Chelmno,Extermination Camp,Poland
The mass deportation from the Koło ghetto started on December 7, 1941. On December 10, the remaining Jews in the ghetto were ordered to gather in front of the Judenrat office at Nowy Rynek (New Market) square, renamed Theaterplatz (Theater Square) by the Germans. The procedure of the three previous days repeated itself. An unknown number of men, women and children were selected for deportation from a list created by the Germans upon the information provided by the Judenrat. The Jews were told that they would be sent to western Poland to perform various construction work. They were allowed to keep only some personal items but no suitcases, and were then herded into the main synagogue next to the Judenrat office. This synagogue, the largest in Koło, was incinerated by the Germans on September 20, 1939, resulting in its interior being entirely destroyed. The devastated building, nevertheless, served as an assembly hall where most of the deportees were detained overnight without provisions or water. The next morning, on December 11, an SS officer again read out each name. Other SS men checked the personal belongings, confiscating valuables including cash. Each deportee then had to climb into a truck.
It is likely that the action was again carried out by the local Orpo (German abbreviation for Ordnungspolizei - Order Police - the regular uniformed police force). On the back of each open truck stood an armed police officer from the special force (Sonderkommando) Kulmhof, ordered to shoot any deportee who would try to escape.
It took the trucks about half an hours to drive the 10 km to Chełmno (Kulmhof) extermination camp, which had been readied to operate for the first time. The trucks waited in line outside the closed gate of the "palace compound" a large two-story brick country house, which was enclosed by a tall wooden fence. The perimeter was guarded by men of the Polizeibataillon Posen (Poznań)....