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List of Holocaust transports from Slovakia

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List of deportation transports from Slovakia during the Holocaust
"Deportation of Jews from Slovakia" redirects here. You may be looking for1938 deportation of Jews from Slovakia orThe Holocaust in Slovakia.

Deportation of Jews from Slovakia
Photograph of a restored train car, with its sliding door open, used to transport Slovak Jews
Restored train car used to transport Slovak Jews
Date1942 and 1944–1945
LocationSlovak Republic,General Governorate,Nazi Germany
TargetSlovak Jews
Organised bySlovak Republic, Nazi Germany
Deaths57,000 (1942)
10,000 (1944–1945)
Total: 67,000

Duringthe Holocaust, most of Slovakia's Jewish population was deported in two waves—in 1942 and in 1944–1945. In 1942, there were two destinations: 18,746 Jews were deported in eighteen transports toAuschwitz concentration camp and another 39,000–40,000[a] were deported in thirty-eight transports toMajdanek andSobibór extermination camps and various ghettos in theLublin district of theGeneral Governorate. A total of 57,628 people were deported; only a few hundred returned. In 1944 and 1945, 13,500 Jews were deported to Auschwitz (8,000 deportees), with smaller numbers sent to theSachsenhausen,Ravensbrück,Bergen-Belsen, andTheresienstadt concentration camps. Altogether, these deportations resulted in the deaths of around 67,000 of the 89,000 Jews living in Slovakia.

Background

List of Holocaust transports from Slovakia is located in Slovakia
Patrónka
Patrónka
Žilina
Žilina
Poprad
Poprad
Nováky
Nováky
Selected mentioned locations in Slovakia

In the political crisis that followed the September 1938Munich Agreement,[1] the conservative,ethnonationalistSlovak People’s Party[2][3] unilaterally declared a state of autonomy for Slovakia withinCzechoslovakia. Slovak Jews, who numbered 89,000 in 1940, were targeted for persecution. In November 1938, 7,500 Jews (impoverished or without Slovak citizenship) weredeported to the Hungarian border. Although they were allowed to return within a few months, these deportations were a rehearsal for those to follow in 1942.[4][5]

On 14 March 1939, theSlovak State declared independence with German support. Many Jews lost their jobs and property due toAryanization, which resulted in large numbers of them becoming impoverished. This became a pressing social problem for the Slovak government, which it "solved" by deporting the unemployed Jews. Slovakia initially agreed with the German government to deport 20,000 Jews of working age to German-occupied Poland, paying Nazi Germany 500 Reichsmarks each (supposedly to cover the cost of resettlement). However, this was only the first step in the deportation of all Jews, because deporting workers while leaving their families behind would worsen the economic situation of the remaining Jews.[6][7]

In the meantime, Nazi Germany had been working towards theFinal Solution—the murder of all the Jews that it could reach. In 1939, theLublin District inGerman-occupied Poland was set aside as a "Jewish reservation". In 1942 it became a reception point for Jews from Nazi Germany and Slovakia. Starting in late 1941, theSchutzstaffel (SS) began planning for the deportation of the Jews in Lublin to theOperation Reinhard death camps—Bełżec,Sobibór andTreblinka—to free up space for the Slovak and German Jews.[8]

1942

See also:The Holocaust in Slovakia § Deportations

Initial phase

Linda Reich(center), deported on thefirst transport from Slovakia, and other prisoners sort belongings confiscated from Jews deported fromCarpathian Ruthenia, 1944

The original deportation plan, approved in February 1942 by the German and Slovak governments, entailed the deportation of 7,000 single women aged 16–35 toAuschwitz and 13,000 single men aged 16–45 toMajdanek as forced laborers.[7][9] The cover name for the operation wasAktion David.[10][11] The SS officer andJudenberater (adviser on Jewish issues)Dieter Wisliceny and Slovak officials promised that deportees would not be mistreated and would be allowed to return home after a fixed period.[12] Initially, many Jews believed that it was better to report for deportation than risk reprisals against their families for failing to do so.[13] However, 3,000 of the 7,000 women who were supposed to be deported refused to report as ordered. Methods of escape included sham marriages, being sent away to live with relatives, or being hidden temporarily by non-Jews. TheHlinka Guard struggled to meet its targets;[14] as a result, only 3,800 women and 4,500 men were deported during the initial phase of deportations.[15] Nevertheless, they opened "a new chapter in the history of the Holocaust" because the Slovak women were the first Jewish prisoners in Auschwitz. Their arrival precipitated the conversion of the camp into anextermination camp.[16]

Department 14, a subsidiary of Slovakia's Central Economic Office, organized the transports,[17] while the Slovak Transport Ministry provided thecattle cars.[18][19] Members of the Hlinka Guard, theFreiwillige Schutzstaffel (FS) and thegendarmerie were in charge of rounding up the Jews, guarding the transit centers, and eventually loading them into overcrowded cattle cars for deportation.[20][19] Transports were timed to reach the Slovak border nearČadca at 04:28.[21][b] InZwardon at 08:30, the Hlinka Guard turned the transports over to the GermanSchutzpolizei.[25][20][26] The transports would arrive in Auschwitz the same afternoon[27] and at Majdanek the next morning.[26]

On 25 March 1942, thefirst transport train left Poprad at 20:00.[23][28] Before its departure, Wisliceny spoke to the deportees on the platform, saying that they would be allowed to return home after they finished the work that Germany had planned for them. The first deportees were unaware of what lay ahead and tried to be optimistic. According to survivors, songs in Hebrew and Slovak were sung as the first two transports of women to Auschwitz left the platforms.[29] Most of the Slovak Jewish women deported to Auschwitz in 1942 who survived the war were from the first two transports in March, because they were younger and stronger.[30] Those from eastern Slovakia were especially likely to be young, because most Jews from that area wereHaredim and tended to marry young: more than half were aged 21 or younger. The women deported fromBratislava were older on average because they married later in life and some did not marry at all; only 40 percent were 21 or younger.[28]

DateSourceDestinationNumber of deportees
25–26 March[23][31]PopradAuschwitz997[27]
27 MarchŽilinaMajdanek1000[32]
27–28 MarchPatrónkaAuschwitz798,[31][33] 1000,[34] or 1002[22]
28–30 MarchSereďMajdanek1000[32][35]
30–31 MarchNovákyMajdanek1003[32][21]
1–2 AprilPatrónkaAuschwitz965[36][37]
2[23]–3 AprilPopradAuschwitz997[31][38]
5 AprilŽilinaMajdanek1495[32]
Most information can also be verified toFatran 2007, p. 180

Transports to Lublin

Photograph of a list of twenty Jews deported from Žilina to the Sobibór extermination camp dated 14 June 1942
List of Jews deported from Žilina toSobibór extermination camp, 14 June 1942

SS leaderReinhard Heydrich visited Bratislava on 10 April 1942. He andVojtech Tuka agreed that further deportations would target whole families and eventually remove all Jews from Slovakia.[39][40] Ostensibly, the change was to avoid separating families, but it also solved the problem of caring for the children and elderly family members of able-bodied deportees.[19] The family transports began on 11 April and took their victims to the Lublin district.[39][40] This change disrupted the SS's plans in the Lublin district. Instead of able-bodied male Slovak Jews being deported to Majdanek, the SS needed to prepare space for Slovak Jewish families in the region's overcrowded ghettos.[15] The transports from Slovakia were the largest and longest of all the deportations of Jews to the Lublin District.[26]

The trains went through two railway distribution points, inNałęczów and Lublin, where they were met by a ranking SS officer. In Lublin, there was usually a selection and able-bodied men were selected for labor at Majdanek, while the remainder were sent to ghettos along the rail lines. For the trains that went through Nałęczów, the Jews were dispatched to locations seeking forced labor, usually without separating families.[41] Most of the trains brought their victims (30,000 in total)[42] to ghettos whose inhabitants had been recently deported to the Bełżec or Sobibór death camps,[15] as part of a "revolving door" policy in which foreign Jews were brought in to replace those murdered.[43] The final transports to the Lublin district occurred during the first half of June 1942; ten transports stopped briefly at Majdanek, where able-bodied men (generally those aged 15–50) were selected for labor; the trains continued to Sobibór, where the remaining victims were murdered.[39][44]

The victims were given only four hours warning to prevent them from escaping. Beatings and forcible beard shaving were commonplace, as was subjecting Jews to invasive searches to uncover hidden valuables.[45] Although some guards and local officials accepted bribes to keep Jews off the transports, the victim would typically be deported on the next train.[46] Others took advantage of their power to rape Jewish women.[47] Jews were only allowed to bring 50 kilograms (110 lb) of personal items with them, but even this was frequently stolen.[48] Official exemptions were supposed to keep Jews from being deported, but local authorities sometimes deported exemption holders.[49]

Most groups stayed only briefly in the Lublin ghettos before they were deported again to the death camps, while a few remained in the ghettos for months or years.[39][50] Several thousand of the deportees ended up in the forced-labor camps in the Lublin area (such asPoniatowa,Końskowola, andKrychów).[51] Unusually, the deportees in the Lublin area were quickly able to establish contact with the Jews remaining in Slovakia, which led toextensive aid efforts.[52] However, the fate of the Jews deported from Slovakia was ultimately "sealed within the framework of Operation Reinhard", along with that of the Polish Jews.[53] Of the estimated 8,500 men who were deported directly to Majdanek, only 883 were still alive by July 1943.[15][54] (Another few thousand Slovak Jews were deported to Majdanek following the liquidation of ghettos in the Lublin district, but most of them were murdered immediately.)[54] The remaining Slovak Jews at Majdanek were shot duringOperation Harvest Festival; the only significant group of Slovak Jews to remain in Lublin district was a group of about 100 at theLuftwaffe camp inDęblin–Irena.[55]

DateSourceDestinationSecondary destinationNumber of deporteesNotes
11[56]–13 April[57]TrnavaLubartów/MajdanekKamionka, Firlej1040About 900 Jews arrived in Lubartów from the first transport and 680 from the second. They were soon transferred elsewhere, mostly to Firlej and Ostrów.[58]
14[32]–15 April[57]NitraLubartów/MajdanekOstrów Lubelski1038
16[34]–17 April[59]NitraRejowiec/MajdanekTrawniki1048About 840 Jews arrived in Rejowiec.[59]
20 April[59]NitraRejowiec1030
21[35]–22 April[60]Topoľčany/SereďOpole1001From the five transports to Opole (totaling 4,302 deportees), only 1,400 Jews remained in the ghetto; the remainder were sent to labor camps in the area.[60]
27 AprilNové Mesto nad Váhom,Piešťany, andHlohovecOpolePoniatowa1179–1382[61]
5[32]–7 May[57]TrebišovLubartów/MajdanekKamionka1040841 Slovak Jews arrived in Lubartów.[57]
6[32]–8 May[62]MichalovceŁuków1038Slovak Jews remained at Łuków until the ghetto's liquidation on 2 May 1943.[63]
7[32]–9 May[62]MichalovceŁuków1040
8 MayMichalovceMiędzyrzec Podlaski1001[32] or 1,025[64]
11 May[65]HumennéChełm1009The SS confiscated the deportees' luggage. Some were conscripted to work for theWasserwirtschaftsinspektion (Water Regulation Authority) at Siedliszcze. Others were deported toSobibór extermination camp on 22–23 May. The ghetto was liquidated on 5–9 November 1942.[65]
12 May[65]ŽilinaChełm1002
13 May[66]PrešovDęblin–Irena1040On 15 October 1942, most of the Slovak Jews were deported toTreblinka extermination camp.[66] About a hundred Slovak Jewish men and women—the last significant group of Slovak Jews to survive in the Lublin area—were kept by theLuftwaffe to work as forced laborers on the nearby airfield. On 22 July 1944, they were sent toCzęstochowa where a few dozen managed to survive until the liberation.[54][67][66]
14 May[66]PrešovDęblin–Irena1040
17[32]–20 May[68]BardejovKońskowola[68]1,025[68] or 1028The first transport to Końskowola included 700 elderly individuals and children.[68] The second arrived before 2 June. At Końskowola, Slovak Jews were employed in agricultural labor and suffered from severe hunger. In early October, the ghetto was liquidated. Except for 500 to 1,000 craftsmen who were deported to labor camps in the area, the remaining Jews were shot, either during the roundups or in ravines nearRudy.[69]
18 MayBardejovOpolePoniatowa1015
19 MayVranovOpoleKazimierz1005
20 MayMedzilaborceKońskowola[68]1001[32] or 1,630[68]
23 or 27 May[59]Sabinov/PrešovRejowiec1630At Rejowiec, some Slovak Jews worked for theJewish Ghetto Police. Either in June or August 1942, 2,000 mostly Slovak Jews were rounded up and deported to Sobibór; some 50–100 were taken out of the lines at Sobibór and sent to nearbyKrychów forced-labor camp.[70][71]
24 or 28 May[59]Stropkov/BardejovRejowiec1022
24[23]–25 May[59]PopradRejowiec1000
25[60] or 26 May to 30 May[72]ŽilinaOpole1000
29 May[73]Spišská Nová VesIzbica/Majdanek1032[32] or 1052[73]At Izbica, Jews were held temporarily under extremely overcrowded conditions before being deported toBełżec extermination camp and Sobibór.[74]
29[23]–30 May[73]PopradIzbica/Majdanek1000
30 May[23]–1 JunePopradSobibór/Majdanek1000These transports were the only ones that went directly from Slovakia to one of theOperation Reinhard extermination camps. They signified the end of the "revolving door", as German policy shifted from temporarily warehousing Jews deported to Poland in ghettos to murdering them immediately.[75][76]
2 JuneLiptovský Svätý MikulášSobibór/Majdanek1014
5 JuneBratislava/ŽilinaSobibór/Majdanek1000
7 JuneBratislava/ŽilinaSobibór/Majdanek1000
8 JuneŽilinaSobibór/Majdanek1001
9 JuneZvolen/KremnicaSobibór/Majdanek1019
11 JuneNovákySobibór/Majdanek1000
12 JuneSereď/ŽilinaSobibór/Majdanek1000
12[23]–13 JunePopradSobibór/Majdanek1000
14 JuneNováky/ŽilinaSobibór/Majdanek1000
Where two primary destinations are listed, there was a selection in Lublin and able-bodied men (generally those aged 15–50 years) were sent to Majdanek.[44] All information fromBüchler 1991, p. 166 unless otherwise indicated. Most information can also be verified toFatran 2007, p. 180;Silberklang 2013, pp. 303–306.

Transports to Auschwitz

Photograph of a restored train car, with its sliding door open, used to transport Slovak Jews
Restored train car used to transport Slovak Jews. SŽ stands forSlovenské Železnice (Slovak Railways).[11]

A moratorium on transports to the east was imposed on 19 June 1942 due to military campaigns on theEastern Front. The rest of the family transports (eight in total) were therefore directed to Auschwitz. The first arrived on 4 July,[77] which led to the initial selection on the ramp atAuschwitz II-Birkenau, which became a regular event. The majority of deportees—especially mothers with children—were not chosen for forced labor and instead were killed in gas chambers.[78][79] By 1 August, most of the Jews not exempt from deportation had already been deported or had fled to Hungary to avoid the deportations, leading to a six-week halt in the transports.[80] An additional three trains departed for Auschwitz in September and October.[81]

For the first three months after the arrival of the first transport in March, Slovak Jewish women were the only female Jewish prisoners in Auschwitz.[30] In mid-August, most of the Slovak Jewish women at Auschwitz were transferred to Auschwitz II-Birkenau,[30] which was still under construction. Conditions were much worse;[78] employed mostly on outdoor labor details, most of the women died within the first four months at Birkenau.[82] Along with backbreaking physical labor and starvation, many died in epidemics oftyphus ormalaria and the mass executions ordered by the SS to contain the epidemics. (To contain a typhus epidemic in October 1942, the SS murdered 6,000 prisoners—mostly Slovak Jewish women—including some who were healthy; another selection on 5 December eliminated the last major group of Slovak Jewish women in Birkenau.)[83] Of the 404 men who were registered on 19 June, only 45 were still alive six weeks later.[84] By the end of 1942, 92% of the deportees had died. This left only 500 or 600 Slovak Jews still alive at Auschwitz and itssubcamps[85][86]—about half of whom had obtained privileged positions in administration which allowed them to obtain the necessities for survival.[87]

DateSourceWomen registeredMen registeredMurdered in gas chambersTotalNotes
12–13 AprilSereď[35][34]4436341077These transports contained single men and women as well as childless couples.[88]
17 AprilŽilina[34]279731000
19 AprilŽilina[34]536461000
22–23 AprilPoprad[23][34]4575431000
24 AprilŽilina[34]5584421000
29 AprilŽilina[34]3004233001054These two transports had to be supplemented with families with children to meet the quota.[88]
19–20 JuneŽilina[84]2554043411000
3–4 JulyŽilina[89]1082646281000This was the first family transport to Auschwitz, the first selection ever on the ramp at Birkenau, and the first group to be murdered in Bunker II.[88][79]
10–11 JulyŽilina[89]1481826701000
16[89]–18 JulyŽilina[89]1783274591000
24–25 JulyŽilina[89]931927151000
31 July–1 AugustŽilina[89]75165608848By 1 August, most of the Jews not exempt from deportation had already been deported or had fled to Hungary, leading to a six-week halt in the transports.[80]
19 SeptemberŽilina[81]712067231000The final transports targeted Jews in the labor camps, especially those who were mentally or physically disabled.[90]
23 SeptemberŽilina[81]672946391000
20–21 OctoberŽilina[24][89]78121649848 (or 860)[89]
All information fromBüchler 1996, p. 320 except source locations, fromFatran 2007, pp. 180–181. Most of it can also be verified toCzech 1997, pp. 154, 157–160, 184, 191–192, 196, 199, 203, 208, 241, 243, 256.

Summary

Between 25 March and 20 October 1942, about 57,700[c] Jews (two-thirds of the population) were deported.[92][93] Sixty-three of the deportation trains from Slovakia were organized byFranz Novak.[94] The deportations disproportionately affected poor, rural, and Orthodox Jews; although the Šariš-Zemplín region in eastern Slovakia lost 85 to 90 percent of its Jewish population, Žilina reported that almost half of its Jews remained after the deportation.[95] The deportees were held briefly in camps in Slovakia before deportation; 26,384 from Žilina,[24] 7,500 from Patrónka,[22] 7,000 from Poprad,[23] 4,160[96] (or 4,463)[97] from Sereď, and 4,000 to 5,000 from Nováky.[98] Eighteen trains with 18,746 victims[42] went to Auschwitz, and another thirty-eight transports (with 39,000 to 40,000 deportees)[a] went to ghettos and concentration and extermination camps in the Lublin district.[100][20] Only a few hundred (estimated at 250[101] or 800[102]) survived the war.[20][103] Czech historian Daniel Putík estimates that only 1.5 percent (around 280 people) of those deported to Auschwitz in 1942 survived, while the death rate of those deported to the Lublin region approached 100 percent.[104]

Attempts by Germany and Slovak People's Party radicals to resume the transports in 1943 were unsuccessful due to the opposition of Slovak moderates and were followed by atwo-year hiatus.[105][106]

1944–1945

See also:The Holocaust in Slovakia § Resumption of deportations
A photograph shows hundreds of men and women in two lines on a platform beside two railroad lines. Another line of prisoners has formed on the opposite side of the tracks.
Selection on the ramp atAuschwitz II-Birkenau in 1944 (from theAuschwitz Album)

IncreasingSlovak partisan activity triggered a German invasion on 29 August 1944. The partisans responded by launching a full-scaleuprising. The insurgents seized a large portion of central Slovakia but were defeated by the end of October.[107]Einsatzgruppe H, one of theSS death squads, was formed to deport or murder the estimated 25,000 Jews remaining in Slovakia.[108] Einsatzgruppe H was aided by local collaborators, includingSS-Heimatschutz,Abwehrgruppe 218, and theHlinka Guard Emergency Divisions.[109][110] Most of the Jews who were exempted from the 1942 deportations lived in western Slovakia,[111] but following the invasion many fled to the mountains.[112]

Slovak historianIvan Kamenec estimated that 13,500 Jews were deported, of whom 10,000 died,[107][113][114] but Israeli historian Gila Fatran and Czech historianLenka Šindelářová consider that 14,150 deportees can be verified and the true figure may be higher.[115][116] Of these, between 6,734 and 7,936 were deported to Auschwitz[104] and another 5,000 toRavensbrück,Sachsenhausen,Bergen-Belsen, andTheresienstadt. From Slovakia, Ravensbrück received transports totaling 1,600 women and children (mostly Jews) and 478 male prisoners, including Jews,Romani people, and political opponents. About 1,550 to 1,750 men (mostly Jews) were deported to Sachsenhausen, while about 200–300 people were deported from Sereď to Bergen-Belsen, especially Jews in mixed marriages and some intact families of Jews. Between 1,454 and 1,467 Jews were deported to Theresienstadt, especially the elderly, orphans, and women with young children.[117] About 200 or 300 Slovak political prisoners were deported toMauthausen on 19 January and 31 March 1945.[118] Many of those deported to theconcentration camps in Germany were sent onwards tosatellite camps, where they worked mostly in war industries.[119] On four transports from Sereď, selections were carried out at the camp with different cars being directed to Sachsenhausen, Bergen-Belsen, Ravensbrück, and/or Theresienstadt.[117] Many details of the transports are unknown, because much of the documentation was destroyed by the perpetrators, requiring historians to rely on survivor testimonies.[120][113][121]

DateSourceDestinationNumber of deporteesNotes
1 SeptemberČadcaAuschwitz100+Six men and eight women were registered at the camp. 72 males and an unknown number of females were sent to the gas chambers.[122]
5 SeptemberČadcaAuschwitzOne man and two women were registered at the camp. An unknown number were sent to the gas chambers.[122]
20 SeptemberUnknownAuschwitz177From this transport, 146 people were sent to the gas chambers and the remainder were registered.[122] Israeli historian Gila Fatran estimates a total of 400 Jews were deported on the three transports.[116]
30 SeptemberSereďAuschwitz1860[123][124]
3 OctoberSereďAuschwitz1836[125][124]
10[125]–12 October[126]SereďAuschwitz1882 or 1890[125][124]
17[127]–19 October[128]SereďAuschwitz862 or 920[127][124]113 Jewish women were registered.[128]
2 NovemberSereďAuschwitz920 or 930The gas chambers of Auschwitz were used for the last time on the previous day. All of the deportees were registered at the camp without a selection.[125][129][130]
2–3 NovemberPrešovRavensbrück364Mostly Jews, some Romani people.[131] According to Fatran, about 100 Jews in total were deported from Prešov.[116]
9 NovemberIlavaGermany183This transport included Jews but the prisoners were predominantly non-Jewish. According to a German official, another transport with 100 individuals had been dispatched from Ilava the previous week, and also sent to Germany.[122] According to Fatran, the total number of Jews deported from Ilava was about 100.[116]
c. 15 NovemberSereďRavensbrück488Jews[131]
16 NovemberSereďSachsenhausen,Bergen-Belsen600–800 (Sachsenhausen), 100–200 (Bergen-Belsen)Mostly Jews; there were someMischlinge sent to Bergen-Belsen[131]
28 NovemberPrešovRavensbrück53Women and children, mostly Jewish[132]
2–3 DecemberSereďSachsenhausen, Ravensbrück,Theresienstadtabout 580 (Sachsenhausen), 160–200 (Ravensbrück),[132] 416[133] or 421 (Theresienstadt)[132]Jews and several political prisoners were sent to Sachsenhausen; the transport to Ravensbrück consisted of Jewish women; those sent to Theresienstadt were exclusively Jews.[132] According to Slovak historian Katarína Hradská, the transport arrived in Theresienstadt on 23 December; 382 of those deported to Theresienstadt survived.[133]
c. 10 JanuaryKežmarokRavensbrück47Women and children, mostly Jews and some Romani people; also some political prisoners.[132]
16 JanuarySereďSachsenhausen, Ravensbrück, Theresienstadt370 (Sachsenhausen), 260–310 (Ravensbrück), 127[132] or 129[133] (Theresienstadt)Sent to Sachsenhausen were Jewish men and political prisoners; Jewish women were sent to Ravensbrück; the Jews sent to Theresienstadt were mostly those incapable of work[132] The transport arrived in Theresienstadt 19 January and 127 of the 129 deportees survived.[133]
9–12 MarchSereďTheresienstadt548According to Hradská, there were 546 survivors.[125][133]
31 March–7 AprilSereďTheresienstadt354According to Hradská, there were 352 survivors.[125][133]

An estimated 10,000 of the deportees died.[113] The mortality rate was highest on the transports to Auschwitz in September and October, because there was a selection and most of the deportees were immediately murdered in the gas chambers. The death rate of those deported to concentration camps in Germany was around 25–50 percent. Of those deported to the Theresienstadt Ghetto, however, 98 percent survived.[134] The high death rate at concentration camps such as Sachsenhausen, Bergen-Belsen and Ravensbrück was due to the exploitation of forced labor fortotal war and inmates were murdered based on their inability to work, rather than their race or religion. Others died during thedeath marches.[135] Between several hundred[107] and 2,000[116][136] Jews were killed in Slovakia, and about 10,850 survived to be liberated by theRed Army in March and April 1945.[116][137]

DestinationKilledTotalNotes
AuschwitzMost6,734–7,936
Bergen-Belsen30–50 percent200–300Very few of the children deported to Bergen-Belsen survived.[138]
RavensbrückLess than 30 percentAbout 2,000
SachsenhausenAt least 25 percent1,550–1,750
Theresienstadt2 percent (40 people[133])1,454–1,467Hradská attributes the deaths tonatural causes[133]
Not deportedSeveral hundred[107] to 2,000[116][136]10,850 survived[116]
All information fromPutík 2015, p. 47 unless otherwise indicated.

Notes

  1. ^abEstimates include 39,006 (Katarína Hradská),[91] 39,875 (Gila Fatran), 39,883 (Yehoshua Büchler),[50] or 39,899 passengers (Laura Crago[99] and Janina Kiełboń). The exact number is unknown and impossible to determine due to discrepancies in the sources. For example, some Jews died or committed suicide before they were deported or during transport and were not counted consistently.[61]
  2. ^Transports leftPatrónka,[22]Poprad,[23] andNováky in the evening,[20] andŽilina at 03:20.[24]
  3. ^Estimates include 57,628[20] and 57,752.[91]

References

Citations

  1. ^Rajcan, Vadkerty & Hlavinka 2018a, p. 843.
  2. ^Hutzelmann 2018, p. 19.
  3. ^Paulovičová 2018, p. 5.
  4. ^Rajcan, Vadkerty & Hlavinka 2018a, pp. 843–844.
  5. ^Johnson 2005, p. 316.
  6. ^Rajcan, Vadkerty & Hlavinka 2018a, pp. 843, 845–847.
  7. ^abLongerich 2010, pp. 324–325.
  8. ^Longerich 2010, pp. 294–295.
  9. ^Büchler 1996, p. 301.
  10. ^Kamenec 2007, p. 217.
  11. ^abOschlies 2007.
  12. ^Büchler 1996, p. 302.
  13. ^Bauer 2002, pp. 177–178.
  14. ^Büchler 1991, pp. 302–303.
  15. ^abcdLongerich 2010, p. 325.
  16. ^Büchler 1996, pp. 306–307.
  17. ^Bauer 1994, p. 66.
  18. ^Hilberg 2003, p. 777.
  19. ^abcWard 2013, p. 230.
  20. ^abcdefRajcan, Vadkerty & Hlavinka 2018a, p. 847.
  21. ^abNižňanský, Rajcan & Hlavinka 2018c, p. 874.
  22. ^abcRajcan 2018b, p. 855.
  23. ^abcdefghijRajcan 2018d, p. 879.
  24. ^abcRajcan 2018f, p. 889.
  25. ^Hutzelmann 2018, p. 32.
  26. ^abcSilberklang 2013, p. 294.
  27. ^abGhert-Zand 2020.
  28. ^abBüchler 1996, p. 304.
  29. ^Büchler 1996, pp. 304–305.
  30. ^abcBüchler 1996, p. 308.
  31. ^abcBüchler 1996, p. 320.
  32. ^abcdefghijklBüchler 1991, p. 166.
  33. ^Czech 1997, p. 150.
  34. ^abcdefghFatran 2007, p. 180.
  35. ^abcNižňanský, Rajcan & Hlavinka 2018e, p. 881.
  36. ^Büchler 1996, pp. 305, 320.
  37. ^Czech 1997, p. 152.
  38. ^Czech 1997, p. 153.
  39. ^abcdLongerich 2010, pp. 325–326.
  40. ^abKamenec 2007, pp. 222–223.
  41. ^Silberklang 2013, p. 295.
  42. ^abHilberg 2003, p. 785.
  43. ^Silberklang 2013, pp. 299, 301.
  44. ^abBüchler 1991, pp. 159, 166.
  45. ^Sokolovič 2013, pp. 346–347.
  46. ^Kamenec 2011b, p. 107.
  47. ^Sokolovič 2013, p. 347.
  48. ^Nižňanský 2014, p. 66.
  49. ^Paulovičová 2012, p. 305.
  50. ^abSilberklang 2013, p. 296.
  51. ^Büchler 1991, pp. 159, 161.
  52. ^Büchler 1991, p. 160.
  53. ^Büchler 1991, p. 153.
  54. ^abcBüchler 1991, p. 159.
  55. ^Büchler 1991, pp. 159–160.
  56. ^Kamenec 2007, p. 222.
  57. ^abcdKuwałek 2012g, p. 673.
  58. ^Kuwałek 2012g, pp. 673–674.
  59. ^abcdefDean 2012, p. 704.
  60. ^abcCrago & White 2012, p. 689.
  61. ^abSilberklang 2013, pp. 296–297.
  62. ^abCrago 2012h, p. 679.
  63. ^Crago 2012h, pp. 680–681.
  64. ^Crago 2012i, p. 684.
  65. ^abcCrago 2012b, p. 624.
  66. ^abcdCrago 2012c, p. 638.
  67. ^Farkash 2014, p. 77.
  68. ^abcdefCrago 2012e, p. 655.
  69. ^Crago 2012e, pp. 655–656.
  70. ^Dean 2012, pp. 704–705.
  71. ^Büchler 1991, p. 158.
  72. ^Yad Vashem 2009, p. 552.
  73. ^abcKuwałek & Dean 2012, p. 641.
  74. ^Kuwałek & Dean 2012, pp. 640–642.
  75. ^Longerich 2010, pp. 325–326, 358.
  76. ^Silberklang 2013, pp. 296, 301–302.
  77. ^Longerich 2010, pp. 333–334.
  78. ^abBüchler 1996, p. 313.
  79. ^abLongerich 2010, pp. 326, 345.
  80. ^abBauer 1994, p. 97.
  81. ^abcKamenec 2007, p. 247.
  82. ^Büchler 1996, p. 309.
  83. ^Büchler 1996, pp. 313–314.
  84. ^abFriling 2006, p. 113.
  85. ^Hutzelmann 2018, p. 34.
  86. ^Büchler 1996, pp. 309, 322.
  87. ^Büchler 1996, p. 316.
  88. ^abcBüchler 1996, p. 307.
  89. ^abcdefghFatran 2007, p. 181.
  90. ^Fatran 1994, p. 171.
  91. ^abHradská 1996, p. 82.
  92. ^Bauer 1994, p. 69.
  93. ^Kamenec 2011a, p. 189.
  94. ^Browning 2007, p. 381.
  95. ^Ward 2002, p. 584.
  96. ^Danko 2010, p. 13.
  97. ^Nižňanský, Rajcan & Hlavinka 2018e, p. 882.
  98. ^Nižňanský, Rajcan & Hlavinka 2018c, p. 876.
  99. ^Crago 2012a, p. 608.
  100. ^Büchler 1991, p. 151.
  101. ^Rothkirchen 2001, p. 598.
  102. ^Ward 2013, p. 235.
  103. ^Kamenec 2002, p. 130.
  104. ^abPutík 2015, p. 47.
  105. ^Rajcan, Vadkerty & Hlavinka 2018a, p. 848.
  106. ^Longerich 2010, pp. 404–405.
  107. ^abcdRajcan, Vadkerty & Hlavinka 2018a, p. 849.
  108. ^Fatran 1996, pp. 99, 101.
  109. ^Fatran 1996, p. 101.
  110. ^Putík 2015, pp. 41–42.
  111. ^Hradská 1996, p. 90.
  112. ^Fatran 1996, p. 99.
  113. ^abcKamenec 2007, p. 337.
  114. ^Ward 2002, p. 589.
  115. ^Šindelářová 2013, p. 82.
  116. ^abcdefghFatran 1996, p. 119.
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  119. ^Putík 2015, p. 199.
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  121. ^Putík 2015, pp. 197, 212.
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  132. ^abcdefgPutík 2015, p. 69.
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  134. ^Putík 2015, pp. 47, 212.
  135. ^Putík 2015, pp. 209–210.
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General sources

Books

Journals

Theses

Encyclopedia of Camps and Ghettos

Main article:Encyclopedia of Camps and Ghettos, 1933–1945
Volume 2—open accessArchived 9 April 2020 at theWayback Machine
  • Crago, Laura (2012a). "Lublin Region (Distrikt Lublin)". InGeoffrey P., Megargee;Dean, Martin (eds.).Ghettos in German-Occupied Eastern Europe. Encyclopedia of Camps and Ghettos, 1933–1945. Vol. 2. Bloomington:United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. pp. 604–609.ISBN 978-0-253-00202-0.
  • Crago, Laura (2012b). "Chełm". In Geoffrey P., Megargee; Dean, Martin (eds.).Ghettos in German-Occupied Eastern Europe. Encyclopedia of Camps and Ghettos, 1933–1945. Vol. 2. Bloomington: United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. pp. 623–626.ISBN 978-0-253-00202-0.
  • Crago, Laura (2012c). "Irena (Dęblin–Irena)". In Geoffrey P., Megargee; Dean, Martin (eds.).Ghettos in German-Occupied Eastern Europe. Encyclopedia of Camps and Ghettos, 1933–1945. Vol. 2. Bloomington: United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. pp. 636–639.ISBN 978-0-253-00202-0.
  • Kuwałek, Robert; Dean, Martin (2012). "Izbica". In Geoffrey P., Megargee; Dean, Martin (eds.).Ghettos in German-Occupied Eastern Europe. Encyclopedia of Camps and Ghettos, 1933–1945. Vol. 2. Bloomington: United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. pp. 639–643.ISBN 978-0-253-00202-0.
  • Crago, Laura (2012e). "Końskowola". In Geoffrey P., Megargee; Dean, Martin (eds.).Ghettos in German-Occupied Eastern Europe. Encyclopedia of Camps and Ghettos, 1933–1945. Vol. 2. Bloomington: United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. pp. 654–657.ISBN 978-0-253-00202-0.
  • Kuwałek, Robert (2012g). "Lubartów". In Geoffrey P., Megargee; Dean, Martin (eds.).Ghettos in German-Occupied Eastern Europe. Encyclopedia of Camps and Ghettos, 1933–1945. Vol. 2. Bloomington: United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. pp. 672–674.ISBN 978-0-253-00202-0.
  • Crago, Laura (2012h). "Łuków". In Geoffrey P., Megargee; Dean, Martin (eds.).Ghettos in German-Occupied Eastern Europe. Encyclopedia of Camps and Ghettos, 1933–1945. Vol. 2. Bloomington: United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. pp. 678–682.ISBN 978-0-253-00202-0.
  • Crago, Laura (2012i). "Miedzyrzec Podlaski". In Geoffrey P., Megargee; Dean, Martin (eds.).Ghettos in German-Occupied Eastern Europe. Encyclopedia of Camps and Ghettos, 1933–1945. Vol. 2. Bloomington: United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. pp. 684–688.ISBN 978-0-253-00202-0.
  • Crago, Laura; White, Joseph Robert (2012). "Opole". In Geoffrey P., Megargee; Dean, Martin (eds.).Ghettos in German-Occupied Eastern Europe. Encyclopedia of Camps and Ghettos, 1933–1945. Vol. 2. Bloomington: United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. pp. 688–691.ISBN 978-0-253-00202-0.
  • Dean, Martin (2012). "Rejowiec". In Geoffrey P., Megargee; Dean, Martin (eds.).Ghettos in German-Occupied Eastern Europe. Encyclopedia of Camps and Ghettos, 1933–1945. Vol. 2. Bloomington: United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. pp. 703–705.ISBN 978-0-253-00202-0.
Volume 3
  • Rajcan, Vanda; Vadkerty, Madeline; Hlavinka, Ján (2018a). "Slovakia". InMegargee, Geoffrey P.; White, Joseph R.; Hecker, Mel (eds.).Camps and Ghettos under European Regimes Aligned with Nazi Germany. Encyclopedia of Camps and Ghettos. Vol. 3. Bloomington: United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. pp. 842–852.ISBN 978-0-253-02373-5.
  • Rajcan, Vanda (2018b). "Bratislava/Patrónka". In Megargee, Geoffrey P.; White, Joseph R.; Hecker, Mel (eds.).Camps and Ghettos under European Regimes Aligned with Nazi Germany. Encyclopedia of Camps and Ghettos. Vol. 3. Bloomington: United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. pp. 854–855.ISBN 978-0-253-02373-5.
  • Nižňanský, Eduard; Rajcan, Vanda; Hlavinka, Ján (2018c). "Nováky". In Megargee, Geoffrey P.; White, Joseph R.; Hecker, Mel (eds.).Camps and Ghettos under European Regimes Aligned with Nazi Germany. Encyclopedia of Camps and Ghettos. Vol. 3. Translated by Kramarikova, Marianna. Bloomington: United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. pp. 874–877.ISBN 978-0-253-02373-5.
  • Rajcan, Vanda (2018d). "Poprad". In Megargee, Geoffrey P.; White, Joseph R.; Hecker, Mel (eds.).Camps and Ghettos under European Regimes Aligned with Nazi Germany. Encyclopedia of Camps and Ghettos. Vol. 3. Bloomington: United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. pp. 878–880.ISBN 978-0-253-02373-5.
  • Nižňanský, Eduard; Rajcan, Vanda; Hlavinka, Ján (2018e). "Sereď". In Megargee, Geoffrey P.; White, Joseph R.; Hecker, Mel (eds.).Camps and Ghettos under European Regimes Aligned with Nazi Germany. Encyclopedia of Camps and Ghettos. Vol. 3. Translated by Kramarikova, Marianna. Bloomington: United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. pp. 881–883.ISBN 978-0-253-02373-5.
  • Rajcan, Vanda (2018f). "Žilina". In Megargee, Geoffrey P.; White, Joseph R.; Hecker, Mel (eds.).Camps and Ghettos under European Regimes Aligned with Nazi Germany. Encyclopedia of Camps and Ghettos. Vol. 3. Bloomington: United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. pp. 889–890.ISBN 978-0-253-02373-5.

Web

Further reading

  • Macadam, Heather Dune (2019).999: The Extraordinary Young Women of the First Official Jewish Transport to Auschwitz. New York: Kensington Publishing Corporation.ISBN 978-0-8065-3936-2.

External links

Camps and prisons
Massacres and roundups
Major perpetrators
Groups
Individuals
Jewish Center
Rescuers
Aftermath
Related articles
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