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Transport from Krasnobrod, Zamosc, Lublin, Poland to Izbica, Krasnystaw, Lublin, Poland on 26/10/1942

Transport
Departure Date 26/10/1942 Arrival Date 26/10/1942
Construction site of a bakery, ghetto Krasnobród
Horse-drawn wagons

In 1921, some 1,148 Jews lived in Krasnobród, slightly more than 50 percent of the total population of the townlet.[1] Located in southeastern Poland, the townlet of Krasnobród was the seat of the Krasnobród gmina (municipality) and is about 25 kilometers from the town of Zamość. On September 13, 1939, Rosh HaShana (Jewish New Year) eve, German army units entered Krasnobród with heavy bombardment and set massive fires to the houses.  Under German occupation, the townlet belonged to Zamość County, in the Lublin District of the General Government.

According to a 1939 registration of Jewish communities in the Zamość County, 725 Jews lived in Krasnobród, among them 113 children under the age of ten.[2] The numbers of Jewish inhabitants fluctuated over the years following 1939. Nazi military bombardments caused refugees to flee to neighboring places, such as Komarów and Zamość.[3] Residents also left, along with the withdrawing Red Army,[4] after its brief occupation of the townlet. 

When the Germans reentered Krasnobród, in the middle of October 1939,[5] they immediately imposed forced labor upon the Jewish residents. For example, some were coerced to build an airfield near Zamość.[6] A Jewish resident of Krasnobród, Moshe Knebel, described the extensive violence and looting of Jewish property in his hometown in a video testimony given to Yad Vashem.[7]...

Overview
    No. of transports at the event : 1
    No. of deportees at departure : 100
    No. of deportees upon arrival : 100
    Date of Departure : 26/10/1942
    Date of Arrival : 26/10/1942