BELZEC: CHRONOLOGY |
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GLOBOCNIK HEADS LUBLIN SS AND POLICE CONSTRUCTION OF BELZEC |
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Under supervision of SS and police personnel and Trawniki-trained auxiliary police guards, Polish civilian workers begin construction of a killing center on the outskirts of Belzec, which is located in southeastern Poland, along a major rail line that connects the large Jewish population centers in and around Lvov, Krakow, and Lublin. The Belzec killing center is the first Aktion Reinhard killing center to become operative. The gas chambers are constructed in a wooden building and will operate with carbon monoxide gas. The camp will be ready for mass killing operations by March 1942. In February 1942, SS and police personnel and Trawniki-trained guards murder small groups of Jews deported from towns near Belzec to test efficiency and capacity in the gas chambers. GASSING OPERATIONS BEGIN |
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The systematic mass murder of Jews begins in Belzec with the deportation of Jews from Lublin. This deportation was the first carried out within the framework of what became known as Operation Reinhard. By April 14, 1942, the SS and police will have killed nearly 30,000 of the 37,000 Jews of Lublin and about 15,000 Jews from Lvov (Lwow, L’viv). During the summer of 1942, the SS and police will deport over 120,000 Jews from the Krakow district to Belzec. Between March and June 1942, the Germans kill an estimated 85,000 Jews in Belzec. |
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GASSING OPERATIONS TEMPORARILY HALT The first phase of gassing operations ends at Belzec after the arrival of over 11,000 Jews from Tarnow. Operation Reinhard authorities in Lublin halt deportations in order to replace the wooden building housing the gas chambers with a more substantial building. SS and police authorities construct a larger building with six gas chambers, capable of killing 1,500 people at one time. The six gas chambers begin operations in July and, like the original chamber, use carbon monoxide gas from the exhaust fumes of a motor vehicle engine DEPORTATIONS TO BELZEC RESUME Deportations to Belzec resume. During this phase of deportations, the SS and police deport around 350,000 Jews from Krakow, Lublin, and Lvov Districts to Belzec. POLISH UNDERGROUND REPORTS ON BELZEC Polish underground officials in occupied Poland send a report to the Polish government-in-exile in London detailing the extermination process in the Belzec camp. Polish underground organizations also send reports about all Aktion Reinhard camps to Jewish organizations, the Polish government-in-exile in London, the British government, and other Allied organizations in western Europe. Many of the reports are met with doubt and distrust; thus, little or no action is taken to warn Jews still in ghettos about the camps. SS OFFICIAL INSPECTS BELZEC SS official Kurt Gerstein inspects Belzec. Gerstein, as an official of the Institute of Hygiene of the Waffen SS in the SS Operations Main Office, checks the efficiency of carbon monoxide as a gassing agent in the three Aktion Reinhard camps. OPERATIONS CEASE AT BELZEC The Operation Reinhard authorities halt deportations to Belzec. In total German authorities killed approximately 434,500 Jews in the Belzec killing center. |
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