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

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

gangslager) <strong>of</strong> the Birkenau camp between May and October <strong>of</strong> 1944<br />

without registration. 998<br />

Schelvis tells us what happened to the transport <strong>of</strong> 1,000 Jews from<br />

Prague which left on 10 June 1942, i.e. after Sobibór had gone into operation:<br />

999<br />

“The train stopped briefly at Lublin, where some <strong>of</strong> the men aged<br />

between 13 and 50 were selected for work at the camp, then continued<br />

to the Chem area, where the deportees were put to work on various<br />

drainage projects, some at Ujazdów, near Hansk”<br />

He then claims, however, that “the majority” <strong>of</strong> the deportees were<br />

killed at Sobibór in October <strong>of</strong> 1942 “after an outbreak <strong>of</strong> typhoid,”<br />

whereas “a small group ended up at nearby Krychów, until they too<br />

were gassed at Sobibór.” Two Jews escaped during the removal from<br />

Ujazdow to Sobibór, one <strong>of</strong> them 12 years old, who would tell the story<br />

<strong>of</strong> this transport.<br />

Hence, male deportees between 13 and 50 years <strong>of</strong> age were selected<br />

at Majdanek and remained there; younger and older deportees (i.e. those<br />

unfit for work) and all women, 1000 regardless <strong>of</strong> age, were sent on to<br />

Ujazdow in Chem county. As we have seen above, the local county<br />

chief asked on 13 May 1942 “to send along the able-bodied Jews as<br />

well with the next transport,” which obviously means that at this point<br />

in time only the unfit had arrived.<br />

Fritz Reuter’s memo <strong>of</strong> 17 March 1942 cited above states that, if it is<br />

not possible to “separate Jews fit for work from those unfit already on<br />

departure,” this was to be done at Lublin. We have also seen that some<br />

local authorities protested because “food, which is added to the transport<br />

trains,” and “the baggage <strong>of</strong> the evacuees” <strong>of</strong>ten remained in Lublin.<br />

If this was normal practice, the unfit detainees who arrived at Majdanek<br />

were removed and eventually went to Sobibór or Beec; the<br />

able-bodied were selected for work and were housed at the camp without<br />

registration or moved to other camps.<br />

998<br />

<strong>And</strong>rzej Strzelecki, Endphase des KL Auschwitz, Verlag Staatliches Museum in<br />

Owicim-Brzezinka, 1995, p. 352.<br />

999<br />

J. Schelvis, op. cit. (note 71), p. 209. Ujazdów is located only some kilometers from Sobibór,<br />

as noted by Schelvis in the German edition <strong>of</strong> his study (op. cit., note 70).<br />

1000 At Majdanek, a women’s sector was opened on 1st October 1942 in Feld V. This is the<br />

reason why the Korherr report has only such a small number for the female Jews in this<br />

camp.

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