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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Trawniki_menTrawniki men - Wikipedia

    Over 5,000 Hiwis. During World War II, Trawniki men ( [travˈniki]; German: Trawnikimänner) were Central and Eastern European Nazi collaborators, consisting of either volunteers or recruits from prisoner-of-war camps set up by Nazi Germany for Soviet Red Army soldiers captured in the border regions during Operation Barbarossa launched in June ...

    • Trawniki

      Trawniki [travˈniki] is a village in Świdnik County, Lublin...

  2. Between February 15 and April 30, the SS and police remove 2,848 men, 2,397 women, and 388 children from Warsaw to Trawniki. September 1943. Two transports of Jewish workers arrive in Trawniki from the Minsk ghetto after its liquidation. September 1943. Globocnik transfers out of Lublin. September 1943.

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  4. Trawniki. At the end of 1941, a labour camp was established at Trawniki, south of Lublin, in a former sugar factory. It later served as a camp for Soviet prisoners of war and Polish Jews. It fell under the command of Odilo Globocnik, a high-ranking SS and police commander in the Lublin area. In spring 1942, Jews were deported here from Germany ...

  5. www.deathcamps.org › occupation › trawnikiTrawniki - death camps

    Trawniki village is located approximately 40 km east of Lublin. In autumn 1941, the Nazis established a labour camp at an old sugar factory, and an SS training camp for SS recruits from Russia and the Baltic States. The camp housed Soviet POWs and Polish Jews, and belonged to the network of camps under the control of SS-Brigadeführer Odilo ...

  6. Jan 23, 2020 · New York City, 1992. Nazi recruit 865 ducked into the U.S. attorney’s office in the Southern District of New York, rode the elevator to the seventh floor and sat down in a hushed conference room ...

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