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Wave of Deportation from Chelm, Camp, Poland to Borek Forest, Murder Site, Poland on 10/1943

10/1943 20/07/1944
Chelm,Camp,Poland
Chelm SiPo (Sicherheitspolizei, Security Police) jail
Trucks
Gas Vans
Borek Forest,Murder Site,Poland

In 1939, on the eve of World War II, Chełm (Cholm), the capital of the Chełm County of the Lublin District, some seventy kilometers southeast of Lublin, was home to 15,000-18,000 Jews.[1]

After heavy bombardments by the German Luftwaffe from September 9, 1939 onwards, Soviet troops entered the city on September 25, 1939, and they remained there until October 7. Some 2,000-3,000 Jews left the city with the Red Army. The Germans occupied Chełm on October 9, 1939, subjecting the remaining Jewish residents to robbery, destruction of all houses of worship, and physical torture.[2] On December 1, 1939, some 1,800 Jewish men were brutally expelled from the city and forced on a death march to Hrubieszów.[3]

A few thousand local Jewish residents were sent to work in thirteen forced labor camps set up in the Chełm area, mostly under the auspices of the German Water Management (Wasserwirtschaftsverwaltung).[4]...

  • USC SHOAH FOUNDATION, 29630 copy YVA O.93 / 29630
  • USC SHOAH FOUNDATION, 40742 copy YVA O.93 / 40742
  • USC SHOAH FOUNDATION, 8994 copy YVA O.93 / 8994
  • YVA TR.11 / 57
  • ZENTRALE STELLE, LUDWIGSBURG 208 AR-Z 268/59 copy YVA TR.10 / 1174
  • ZENTRALE STELLE, LUDWIGSBURG II 208 AR-Z 395/59, Bd. I, II, III,IV, V copy YVA TR.10 / 1303
  • ZIH, WARSAW 301/2192 copy YVA M.49 / 2192
  • ZIH, WARSAW 301/2202 copy YVA M.49 / 2202
  • ZIH, WARSAW 301/4384 copy YVA M.49 / 4384
Miriam Weichselfish witnesses the deportation from Chełm SiPo prison
Avraham Mitelman witnesses the Chelm KdS Prison liquidation to Borek killing site
Miryam Krayzel witnesses the transport from the Chelm SiPo prison workshop to Borek Forest