Sobibor Death Camp
How would you like to be brought into a camp in which you thought was for a laboring job? Well that is what thousands of Jews and other races faced at the Sobibor Death Camp. However, they had anything but a good time. Majority of these innocent people didn't make it out alive, well, more than majority, basically all, only a few survived these harsh conditions. Hundreds and hundreds of these civilians were brought into the death camp by train, where they were stashed away inside box cars with hundreds of other people, with hardly any breathing room. Sobibor began building its walls in March of 1942, and was the second extermination camp to come into working conditions with the "Aktion Reinhard Program" It was temporarily maintained by about seven hundred Jews. They actually maintained two camps, with three parts to them. There was the administration section, and the barracks and storage for plundered goods, extermination, burial and cremation section. Sobibor was placed in a very low populated area, this location was chosen because of its isolation and it's prime location near the railroad. When the camp was finished it measured a whopping thirteen hundred feet by two thousand feet. It was surrounded by three layers of barbed w
Even if it were to go through, it wouldn't have worked because what they had done to the tunnel already had been ruined by the rain. If any of these people were even caught trying to escape, they were killed immediately. They were then stripped of their clothes and all of their personal belongings, and placed in line to wait for the "showers" to be ready for the next group of victims. Throughout the awful times at Sobibor, thousands of people died and just a mere forty eight survived these very harsh conditions. In September of that same year, the number of gas chambers increased from three to six. That building was the very last thing that these people saw. But until that day in October hundreds of thousands of people lost there lives in the "showers," or gas chambers . The camp was in full force and working until some of the remaining alive inmates revolted on October 14, 1943. There was this one sergeant that worked there, Sergeant Wagner, he would walk up to you and beat you with a whip or anything else he could find just because he wanted to. It is estimated that about two hundred and fifty thousand people lost their lives at this camp, and majority of them being Jews. The lives were taken through three gas chambers, placed in a brick building using Carbon Monoxide. ire fencing, with watch towers all around, in order to keep its victims and labor workers from escaping. Around the whole camp there was a mind field, not so much to keep the prisoners from escaping, but more to keep outsiders from approaching the prisoners. These people were told to take off all of there clothes for a shower, but they would go inside, the doors would close, and realized that it was anything but a shower. Sobibor was one of the Nazi's best kept secrets, it was kept so secret, that one of its survivors was telling an Auschwitz survivor about his rough times, and he thought that he was making it all up, because they had never heard of Sobibor.
Common topics in this essay:
Carbon Monoxide,
Sobibor April,
Reinhard Program,
Camp Majority,
August September,
Sergeant Wagner,
Sobibor Nazi's,
,
Prisoner War,
Jews July,
gas chambers,
survived harsh conditions,
brick building,
thousands people,
death camp,
camp majority,
people lost,
harsh conditions,
survived harsh,
people lost lives,
october 14 1943,
lost lives,
twelve feet,
|