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  1. Sep 4, 2020 · Sobibor Uprising | Holocaust Encyclopedia. Under the most adverse conditions, Jewish prisoners initiated resistance and uprisings in some Nazi camps. On October 14, 1943, prisoners in Sobibor killed 11 members of the camp's SS staff, including the camp’s deputy commandant Johann Niemann.

  2. Sobibor consisted of two camps which were divided into three parts: administration section; barracks and storage; and finally the extermination, burial, and cremation section. Initially, three gas chambers housed in a brick building using carbon monoxide and three more gas chambers were added later.

  3. Sobibór was one of the three extermination camps in the German-occupied area of Eastern Poland created by the Nazis as part of Operation Reinhardt . The camp opened in the spring of 1942 and operated until October 1943. It was made up of three smaller areas known as sub-camps.

  4. The Sobibor death camp would feature prominently in the insidious Final Solution—a program of systematic, state-directed, continent-wide genocide assembled and directed by Himmler, Heydrich (succeeded, after his assassination, by Ernst Kaltenbrunner), and Eichmann.

  5. Jan 28, 2020 · 28 January 2020. ushmm. A Sobibor gateway says "SS Sonderkommando" - the name for special death camp units. Previously unseen photos from the Sobibor death camp in Nazi-occupied Poland have...

  6. May 17, 2021 · April 28, 1942. After the killing center is constructed, SS First Lieutenant Franz Stangl arrives in Sobibor. There, he takes up the position of camp commandant. Stangl was previously the deputy supervisor of the so-called "euthanasia" killing center at Hartheim, near Linz, Austria.

  7. Holocaust. Concentrationcamps. Sobibor was an extermination camp built and operated by Nazi Germany as part of Operation Reinhard (the codename of the secretive German plan in World War 2 to exterminate Polish Jews in the General Government district of German-occupied Poland.

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