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Sobibor Extermination Camp


T

he Sobibor extermination camp was the second killing center established as part of Operation Reinhard. This operation was the organized killing of all the Jews in German-occupied Poland. Sobibor, along with Belzec and Treblinka, systematically killed thousands of Jews in a horrifying process. Jews were brought to Sobibor by train, forced to undress, and then marched through a tunnel, called “the tube,” to the gas chambers labeled as showers. Only a few Jews survived Sobibor, many being used as forced laborers to clean up after the executions. In October 1943, prisoners, sensing a slowing of operations, staged an uprising where more than 100 prisoners escaped. Sobibor was closed at the end of 1943 when Operation Reinhard ended after 1.7 million Jews had been killed.

Victims: First phase—May-July 1942
61,400 Jews are killed
Victims: Total
167,000 killed, almost all were Jews
Other: Deportations from France begin
Apr 1943
Other: Sobibor constructed near Chelm-Wlodawa rail line
Mar 1942
Other: Regular transports and gassings begin
3 May 1942
Other: Himmler orders killing operations accelerated
19 Jul 1942
Other: Deportations from the Netherlands begin
5 Mar 1943
Other: Lt. Franz Stangl becomes camp commandant
28 Apr 1942
Other: Deportations resume, up to 1,300 killed daily
Oct 1942
Other: First deportation arrives, 2,400 Jews killed
Apr 1942
Other: Operation Reinhard ends
4 Nov 1943
Other: SS deport at least 13,700 Jews from Soviet Union
Sept 1943
Other: Prisoner uprising, almost 100 escape
14 Oct 1943

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Created:26 Aug 2009

Modified: 8 Jul 2019

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Forces War Records, Sobibor Extermination Camp (https://uk.forceswarrecords.com/memorial/94257002/sobibor-extermination-camp : accessed 17 Nov 2024), database and images,


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