Transport of Czech Jews to Baranavichy | |
---|---|
Location | Near the railway at the eastern end of Kolpenitskaya Street, outside Baranavichy, Belarus 53°9′26″N26°3′8″E / 53.15722°N 26.05222°E |
Date | 28 July to 31 July 1942 |
Incident type | Mass murder |
Perpetrators | Nazi regime |
Victims | 999 [1] or 1,000 [2] |
Survivors | 0 |
Memorials | Forest Gai World War II Memorial |
On 28 July 1942, Germans had either 999 [1] or 1,000 Jews transported by train from the Theresienstadt Ghetto and delivered to the city of Baranavichy, Reichskommissariat Ostland (now Belarus) [2] [lower-alpha 1] on 31 July. [1] Among the passengers were engineers, doctors, and other professionals from Czechoslovakia. [5] Although there were Jews from Germany and Austria in Theresienstadt at the time, all of the deportees in the 28 July transport had been arrested in the Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia; [6] 51 percent in Prague and 48 percent in Olomouc. Most were between the age of 40 and 65. [7]
Transporting 1,000 Jews out of Theresienstadt was part of a systematic plan to kill Jews. The Nazi regime centralized Jews in concentration camps and ghettos and then assassinated them in the ghettos or at extermination camps, like Auschwitz concentration camp. The Germans started deporting Jews from Theresienstadt to places where they would immediately be killed or sent to other killing centers in 1942. They deported almost 90,000 Jews from Theresienstadt. [8]
The train was delayed eight hours due to an attack by Soviet partisans. [9] The train's original destination had been Minsk, [1] but the transport did not continue to Minsk because it would have conflicted with the mass murder of 10,000 Jews that took place there from 28 to 31 July. [10]
The local commander of the Sicherheitspolizei in Baranavichy, SS-Untersturmführer Waldemar Amelung, had ten days to prepare the execution. [10] Trenches were dug 3 metres (9.8 ft) deep in the preceding days by prisoners from the Koldichevo concentration camp. [11]
Dr. Zelig Lewinbok, who provided testimony about The Holocaust, stated that the passengers were told that the train was stopping for lunch. [1] Instead, the Schutzstaffel (SS) had the Jews murdered in the Forest Gai northeast of the city, [3] [5] [lower-alpha 2] with no survivors. [4] Initially, the victims were loaded into three gas vans, operated by Erich Gnewuch , Karl Gebl, and Heinz Schlechte, for execution. [12] However, due to the delay, the executioners decided to shoot the remaining victims into trenches to finish before dark. Many victims were still alive when they fell into the trenches. [13] After the Jews from Theresienstadt were killed, their mass grave was covered up by Jewish laborers from Koldichevo. Then, the workers were killed. [1]
According to later testimonies, Czech railway workers or gendarmes who had accompanied the transport were also killed. [13] The Baranovichi Gorodskaya Commission of Mass Annihilation, assigned to investigate the mass murder after the war, determined that there had been 3,000 people killed on 31 July. [5] [14] A memorial to the victims was established in 1972 near the burial site. [3]
Terezín is a town in Litoměřice District in the Ústí nad Labem Region of the Czech Republic. It has about 2,800 inhabitants. It is a former military fortress composed of the citadel and adjacent walled garrison town. The town centre is well preserved and is protected by law as an urban monument reservation. Terezin is most infamously the location of the Nazis' notorious Theresienstadt Ghetto.
Baranavichy is a city in the Brest Region of western Belarus, with a population of 179,000. It is notable for an important railway junction and is home to Baranavichy State University.
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The Holocaust in Estonia refers to the Nazi crimes during the 1941-1944 occupation of Estonia by Nazi Germany.
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