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The
extermination camp at the village of Chelmno in Poland was the first
camp in which mass executions were carried out by means of gas and
the first site, outside Nazi occupied USSR, where mass killings were
carried out in the framework of the “Final Solution”.
The
camp was set up in an old palace inside the village where three gas
vans were operated. The victims were first concentrated in the
courtyard of the palace where they were reassured that they were
being sent to a work camp. They were then taken to the ground floor
where they were told to strip. Their valuables were collected in
baskets and marked with their names to create the impression that
they would shortly be returned. From here they were taken to the
cellar where they were forced to run down an enclosed ramp at the
end of which was a gas van with open doors. They had no alternative
other than to enter it. When the doors of the van were closed, the
engine was switched on and the van started moving with the exhaust
pipe leading into it. In this manner, the victims suffocated within
10 minutes. The van continued to travel into the forest where the
slain were unloaded. The Nazis worked to destroy the site and
obliterate all signs of the mass murders. The victims’ belongings
were buried along with the ruins of the buildings.
At
Chelmno more than 320,000 people from Poland, Germany, Austria and
Luxemburg were murdered. Only three people managed to escape their
fate at this extermination camp, and only Shimon Srebnik is alive
today and lives in Israel.
Displayed
here are some of the remnants of Chelmno victims’ belongings that
were excavated by the directors of the site in Poland and
transferred to Yad Vashem in April 2001.
Permanent
Loan, Yad Vashem
Collection, Jerusalem, Israel
Courtesy
of Dr. Lucja Nowak Director,
Konin Regional Museum
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