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Sobibor - Holocaust Propaganda And Reality - Unity of Nobility ...

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20 J. GRAF, T. KUES, C. MATTOGNO, SOBIBÓR<br />

Throughout the camp’s existence, attempts were made to escape<br />

from it; some <strong>of</strong> them were successful. In retaliation for these attempts,<br />

the Germans executed many dozens <strong>of</strong> prisoners. During the<br />

summer <strong>of</strong> 1943, in order to prevent escapes, and also as a safety<br />

measure against attacks by partisans, the Germans planted mines<br />

along the entire circumference <strong>of</strong> the camp. In July and August <strong>of</strong><br />

that year, an underground group was organized among the Jewish<br />

prisoners in Sobibór under the leadership <strong>of</strong> Leon Feldhendler, who<br />

had been chairman <strong>of</strong> the Judenrat (Jewish Council) in Zókiew, a<br />

town in Eastern Galicia. The group’s aim was to organize an uprising<br />

and a mass escape from the camp. In the second half <strong>of</strong> September,<br />

Soviet Jewish Prisoners <strong>of</strong> War were brought to the camp from<br />

Minsk; one <strong>of</strong> them was Lt. Aleksandr Pechersky. The underground<br />

recruited him into its ranks and put him in command, with Feldhendler<br />

as his deputy. The plan was for the prisoners to kill the SS men,<br />

acquire weapons, and fight their way out <strong>of</strong> the camp. The uprising<br />

broke out on October 14, 1943, and in its course eleven SS men and<br />

several Ukrainians were killed. Some three hundred prisoners managed<br />

to escape, but most <strong>of</strong> them were killed by their pursuers.<br />

Those who had not joined the escape for various reasons and had<br />

remained in the camp were all killed as well. At the end <strong>of</strong> the war,<br />

about fifty Jews survived <strong>of</strong> those who had escaped during the uprising.<br />

In the wake <strong>of</strong> the uprising the Germans decided to liquidate Sobibór,<br />

abandoning the idea <strong>of</strong> turning it into a concentration camp.<br />

By the end <strong>of</strong> 1943 no trace was left; the camp area was plowed under,<br />

and crops were planted in its soil. A farm was put up in its<br />

place, and one <strong>of</strong> the Ukrainian camp guards settled there. In the<br />

summer <strong>of</strong> 1944 the area was liberated by the Soviet army and<br />

troops <strong>of</strong> the Polish People’s Army (see Gwardia Ludowa). […]”<br />

2.2. Sobibór as Described in Contemporary Documents<br />

The description <strong>of</strong> the function and the history <strong>of</strong> the Sobibór camp,<br />

which is found in the Encyclopedia <strong>of</strong> the <strong>Holocaust</strong>, relies exclusively<br />

on testimony and on trial sentences which, in turn, are based entirely on<br />

the accounts <strong>of</strong> eye witnesses (and on confessions by defendants). Contemporary<br />

documents concerning Sobibór are rare and do not support

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