Soldau concentration camp
KL Soldau (Działdowo) | |
---|---|
Concentration camp | |
Działdowo – Monument to Victims of Soldau concentration camp Location of KL Soldau in World War II, Działdowo | |
Coordinates | 53°14′N 20°11′E / 53.233°N 20.183°ECoordinates: 53°14′N 20°11′E / 53.233°N 20.183°E |
Known for | Forced labor camp |
Location | Polish areas annexed by Nazi Germany |
Operated by | Schutzstaffel |
Number of inmates | Around 30,000 |
Killed | 10,000 |
The Soldau concentration camp established by Nazi Germany during World War II was a concentration camp for Polish and Jewish prisoners in Działdowo (German: Soldau), a town in north-eastern Poland, which after the Nazi-Soviet invasion of Poland in September 1939 was annexed into the Province of East Prussia.[1]
The camp was founded in the former Polish Army barracks by SS-Brigadeführer Otto Rasch with the approval of Reinhard Heydrich. The first prisoners were brought in already at the end of September 1939. They were the Polish Army defenders of the Modlin Fortress who were forced to capitulate due to lack of ammunition and food.[2] The camp served different purposes throughout its existence. The Polish intelligentsia, priests and political prisoners were secretly executed there,[3] on top of 1,558 patients of all psychiatric hospitals in the district. It also served as a transit center for deportations from East Prussia to the semi-colonial General Government and for slave labour to the Reich. Intended as temporary – for the initial 1,000 inmates – the camp soon became permanent and rezoned as an Arbeitserziehungslager for the civilians brought in from across the new German Zichenau (region).[4] Some 10,000–13,000 prisoners died there, out of the total number of 30,000.[1][5] After the war the camp was first classified by the International Tracing Service (ITS) as an Vernichtungslager (extermination camp) due to its sheer number of victims.[4]
Camp history
The town of Działdowo was located in the part of occupied Poland which was annexed to the Third Reich. The first civilian prisoners arrived in trucks and in trains from the towns on the Polish–East Prussian border, evicted from their homes by the Nazis in an attempt to ethnically cleanse the area of non-Germans entirely. Also, the camp conducted early experiments in gassing.[6] In accordance with Action T4, mental patients at sanatoria in East Prussia and Regierungsbezirk Zichenau were taken to the Soldau camp; 1,558 patients were murdered by the Lange Commando in a gas van from May 21 to June 8, 1940.[7][8] Lange used his experience with exhaust gasses acquired at Soldau in setting up the Chelmno extermination camp thereafter.[6]
There were no toilet barracks, only two holes in the ground with boards put across each, out in the open. An epidemic of typhus broke out killing six German guards among countless prisoners.[9] During the summer of 1941, the Soldau camp was reorganized as an Arbeitserziehungslager (literally "work education camp"). The labor camp's prisoners, split between separate sub-camps, were engaged in forced agricultural labor and in construction. The camp was closed in January 1945.[10] Some 13,000 prisoners out of 30,000 perished according to Polish official estimates.[1]
The mass killings were conducted in the Białucki Forest (Las Białucki) spread over several hundred hectares. There was a road leading to it, built by the prisoners themselves. The victims were trucked in to the execution site. There was a small barracks for the awaiting SS shooters built in the forest along with five large pits on the right side of the road. Modern research suggests that the number of victims might have been greater than originally thought, reaching up to 20,000 people. Among them were not only Poles and Jews imprisoned at Soldau, but also Soviet POWs and even condemned Germans. At the end of 1944 dozens of Jews were brought in to incinerate corpses. All of them were massacred thereafter.[11][12]
Sub-camps
The Soldau (Działdowo) concentration camp had three sub-camps where prisoners were held. The sub-camps were located in nearby settlements of Iłowo-Osada (pictured), Mławka, and Nosarzewo Borowe – the location of the Truppenübungsplatz "Mielau" military training range spread over an area of 300 square kilometres (120 sq mi).[13] The range was built by prisoners of Soldau among other civilians. The facility, nicknamed the New Berlin, was used by the Nazis for repairing and refitting army tanks in Operation Barbarossa, and for testing anti-tank weapons and artillery.[13]
The sub-camp known as the Iłowo transit camp existed in 1941–45. Prisoners were held at a brick building (pictured) and the adjacent barracks in Iłowo.[14] Up to 2,000 Polish children 5-years-old and younger were among the prisoners as well as pregnant women-inmates awaiting birth. The men, including Poles and the Soviets (following Operation Barbarossa), were kept there usually for several days only before transfer. Many of the children belonged to slave labourers who were already deported to the Third Reich. The children underwent selections for Germanization and were being sent to German families. Among those who were not selected death rate was very high. There were no medicines in the camp and no doctors. The food and water were rationed. After giving birth the women prisoners were sent back to other work camps.[15][16]
Notable inmates
Known victims of Soldau concentration camp include:
- Blessed Antoni Julian Nowowiejski, Roman Catholic bishop (1858–1941)[17]
- Blessed Leon Wetmański, Catholic bishop (1886–1941)[17]
- Mieczysława Kowalska (pl), nun (1902–1941), one of 108 Martyrs of World War II beatified
- Władysław Skierkowski, priest (1886–1941)
Soviet NKWD camp in Działdowo
Following the Red Army arrival during the Soviet advance across Poland, on 18 January 1945 the already vacated Nazi camp in Działdowo was reinstated, this time by the NKVD secret police as the Soviet concentration camp for prisoners both native German (the Reichsdeutsche) as well as Volksdeutsche from the regions of Pomerania, Warmia, Masuria and Mazowsze. The camp was liquidated at the end of 1945. The inmates were transported out of Poland in freight trains to camps in the Soviet Union.[18][19]
See also
- List of Nazi-German concentration camps
- SS-Truppenübungsplatz Heidelager in Pustków, Podkarpackie Voivodeship
- SS-Truppenübungsplatz Westpreußen located in Dziemiany
Notes
- 1 2 3 Marek Przybyszewski, IBH Opracowania – Działdowo jako centrum administracyjne ziemi sasińskiej (Działdowo as centre of local administration). Internet Archive, 22 October 2010.
- ↑ Marcin Hajduk (2011). "4 Pulk Piechoty naciera na Modlin (Attack on Modlin by the 32nd Infantry Division Regiment 4)". Fall Weiss : Infanterie Regiment 4 Kolberg (now Kołobrzeg, Poland). Retrieved 2 August 2014.
32 Division Infanterie Regiment 4 – Plan Barbarossa on YouTube
- ↑ Henry Friedlander (1995). The Origins of Nazi Genocide: From Euthanasia to the Final Solution, p. 139. The University of North Carolina Press. ISBN 0-8078-4675-9.
- 1 2 Stefan M. "Brief Chronology Of The Konzentrationslager System". Source: Das nationalsozialistische Lagersystem by Martin Weinmann, Anne Kaiser, Ursula Krause-Schmitt. International Tracing Service (1949). War Relics, 23 October 2013. Retrieved 28 July 2014.
- ↑ Browning, p. 34
- 1 2 Christopher R. Browning (2011). Remembering Survival: Inside a Nazi Slave-Labor Camp. W. W. Norton & Company. pp. 53–54. ISBN 0393338878.
- ↑ The Simon Wiesenthal Center. "Responses to Revisionist Arguments". Accessed November 28, 2006.
- ↑ Jewish Virtual Library. "The Development of the Gas-Van in the Murdering of the Jews". Accessed November 28, 2006.
- ↑ Christopher R. Browning (2011). Remembering Survival. Ibidem. p. 54.
- ↑ Keom.de. "Deutschland – ein Denkmal – ein Forschungsauftrag 1996 bis...". Accessed November 28, 2006.
- ↑ Mroczna historia Lasu Białuckiego. Tworzymy aby żyć, żyjemy aby tworzyć. 14 September 2011. (Polish)
- ↑ Pasjoniści, Rok Męczenników w Polskiej Prowincji Pasjonistów (PDF file, direct download 5.77 MB) Słowo Krzyża 4 (2010), Warsaw. ISSN 1897-7618. Pages: 8–9. (Polish)
- 1 2 Praca Zbiorowa (5 June 2012). "Nosarzewo Borowe : Truppenübungsplatz "Mielau"". Polska Niezwykła: Mazowieckie. Przewodnik (in Polish). Wydawnictwo Demart publishing. Retrieved 1 August 2014.
- ↑ Obóz przejściowy w Iłowie (Transit camp in Iłowo) Info Poland.org 2010. Published by Urząd Gminy Iłowo-Osada.
- ↑ Iłowo: warto zobaczyć (Iłowo points of interest) Ilowo.wm.pl, 2010-09-27.
- ↑ Iłowo-Osada. Hitlerowski Obóz Przejściowy Soldau (KL) Polska Niezwykła: warmińsko-mazurskie. Przewodnik.
- 1 2 Document 3264-PS. Nazi Conspiracy and Aggression, Volume V. US Government Printing Office, Washington DC: 1946, pp. 1018–1029.
- ↑ Zespół (2014). "Działdowo". Zapomniane Obozy (Forgotten Camps). Retrieved 19 August 2014.
- ↑ Patryk Piekarski & Jacek Zybert (2006). "Działdowo". Historia. Działdowskie Centrum Caritas. Retrieved 19 August 2014.
References
- Christopher Browning (2004). The Origins of the Final Solution : The Evolution of Nazi Jewish Policy, September 1939 – March 1942 (With contributions by Jürgen Matthäus), Lincoln : University of Nebraska Press.