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Showing posts from November 18, 2020

Jawiszowice

  The subcamp of Jawischowitz was located in the Polish village of Jawiszowice. Prisoners held there worked in the Brzeszcze coal mine, owned by Reichswerke Hermann Göring. The camp itself was established in August 1942 and was one of the largest Auschwitz subcamps. It held 2,500 prisoners in 1944, most of them Jews from Poland, France, Germany, the Netherlands, Italy, and Hungary, alongside non-Jewish Poles, Russians, and Germans. There were 70 SS guards in 1944. The subcamp was commanded initially by SS-Unterscharführer Wilhelm Kowol, subsequently SS-Hauptscharführer Josef Remmele . It was surrounded by electrified barbed wire and consisted of at least ten wooden barracks, of which seven held prisoners. Other barracks contained a kitchen, hospital, storage space, workshops, washrooms and toilets.  Every few weeks, SS doctors held a selection, during which those considered unfit for work were removed and sent to the gas chambers in Auschwitz. From 1942 to 1944, at least 1,800 prisoner

Goleszów (German - Golleschau)

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  Goleszów subcamp was located near  Cieszyn, in the vicinity of a quarry and cement factory, operated by an SS-owned company called  Golleschauer Portland-Zemment AG. The subcamp was established in July 1942 and was one of several early Auschwitz subcamps. The subcamp held around 400-500 prisoners, most of them Jews with some Poles. In spring 1944, these prisoners were joined by Polish, Czech and Hungarian Jews, bringing the total number of prisoners to over one thousand. The prisoners were held in a two-storey located next to the cement factory. There was a roll-call square and barracks for SS guards nearby. The prisoners were put to work laying railway tracks, breaking stones, sifting coal, packing cement and stoking kilns that burnt lime for cement production. Prisoners working in the quarry loaded rocks into wagons. Almost 130 prisoners died, out of a total of 2,348, according to the subcamp record book. Some of them were shot, while others committed suicide.  The camp was command

Plawy

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  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

Rajsko (German name: Raisko)

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  Aerial view of the main subcamp site (Google Earth) Raisko subcamp was established in the village of Rajsko, again after the inhabitants had been expelled, this expulsion occurring in Spring 1941. The buildings were then partly demolished. The camp was another agricultural unit, the first prisoners being male but with female prisoners subsequently arriving in 1942. Initially, the prisoners walked to the site from Auschwitz I and Birkenau, but from June 1943 female prisoners were housed permanently on site. The work at the subcamp involved gardening and plant growing, with vegetables grown in hothouses and flower beds. Some female prisoners worked in an experimental unit where they cultivated an Asian plant called kok saghyz which had roots containing a substance called caoutchouc, used in the production of rubber. In 1943 there were 250 prisoners in the subcamp, but this number had increased to 320 by June 1944. Most of the prisoners initially were Polish, with others being Jews, Rus