Treblinka. Research. Memories. Documents
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Treblinka death camp. In about a year from the summer of 1942, more than 800,000 Jews and several thousand Gypsies - men, women, children and old people deported from the occupied territories of Poland, the Soviet Union, the Czech Republic, Greece and other European countries - died here. It took only a few hours to destroy an echelon of 20 freight cars. The corpse odor spread for dozens of kilometers in the surrounding area. Among others, the famous teacher Janusz Korczak and his pupils, the sisters of Sigmund Freud and the love of A. P. Chekhov's youth, Eudokia Efros, found peace here. On August 2, 1943, an uprising broke out in the Treblinka death camp, which became one of the symbols of resistance to the Nazi policy of genocide. And nearby was the labor camp of the same name, where Poles and Jews worked for the benefit of the Reich's economy in terrible conditions for three years. You are holding in your hands the first scientific book in Russian, which is devoted to this "conveyor of death". It is based on previously unpublished materials of Soviet investigative bodies. Collected by the fall of 1944, they allow you to learn in detail what happened in the Treblinka camps. These documented testimonies are supplemented by memoirs of surviving prisoners, translated from Polish and Hebrew, as well as research articles. They systematically present the history of the death camp, reveal the crimes committed by Soviet collaborators, and refute attempts by Holocaust deniers to downplay Nazi crimes at Treblinka.
See also:
- All books by the publisher
- All books in the series War of Annihilation. Third Reich vs. Russia