Plawy
Plawy was another agricultural subcamp. It was established at the end of 1944 close to fields that had been worked in spring 1944 by kommandos from Birkenau, located nearby. New barracks were erected in November 1944 alongside barns and two stables. In January 1945, 200 female prisoners, most of them Russians and Hungarians, were moved into one barrack and 140 male prisoners, consisting of Russians, Poles and Slovakian Jews, in another barrack. The barracks were separated from each other, and from other subcamp buildings, by barbed wire fences.
There were 100 cows in the subcamp, fed and milked by the female prisoners, who also cleaned the farmyard, carried beets and potatoes for fodder and fertiliser. The male prisoners looked after 70 to 80 horses, transported crops and delivered milk to the dairy.
The subcamp was evacuated on 18th January 1945, the prisoners walking on a death march to Wodzisław Śląski from where they were transported by train into January.
Photographs of the site on the Subcamps of Auschwitz website
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