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Wave of Deportation from Dabie, Ghetto, Poland to Buchwerder Forst, Camp, Poland on 07/1941

Transport
Departure Date 07/1941 Arrival Date 08/1941
Dabie,Ghetto,Poland
Buchwerder Forst,Camp,Poland
During these deportations, 100–150 men and 50 women were transported from Dąbie to forced labor camps. There are two known survivors: Leon Sontag (b. 1916) and Martin Gruenfeld (b. 1922). In their postwar testimonies, they reported that they had been sent to Hardt (Wąsowo) and Buchwerder-Forst (Bolewice/Bollwitz), which were two of the Reich’s highway labor camps (Reichsautobahnlager, RAB) located in close proximity to each other. Thus there may have been one transport to both labor camps, although there seems to have been two separate transports aside from that of the 50 women, whose destination remains unknown. The survivors recounted that the Germans had demanded that the Judenrat provide them with 100 men for a labor task that would last six weeks. The families of both survivors were forced to choose which family member would go. According to a report dated November 2, 1941 and signed by the commander of the gendarmerie in Grätz (Grodzisk Wielkopolski), and relating to the county of Grätz, 1,730 Jews were imprisoned in seven "Judenlager" (Jewish camps), including 350 in Buchwerder-Forst and 350 in Hardt, at the end of October 1941....
Leon Sontag - deported from Dąbie to Hardt in August 1941
Martin Gruenfeld - deported from Dąbie to Buchwerder in August 1941