Sobibór Uprising
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The Sobibor uprising was a revolt of about 600 prisoners that occurred on 14 October 1943, during
World War II World War II or the Second World War (1 September 1939 – 2 September 1945) was a World war, global conflict between two coalitions: the Allies of World War II, Allies and the Axis powers. World War II by country, Nearly all of the wo ...
and the
Holocaust The Holocaust (), known in Hebrew language, Hebrew as the (), was the genocide of History of the Jews in Europe, European Jews during World War II. From 1941 to 1945, Nazi Germany and Collaboration with Nazi Germany and Fascist Italy ...
at the
Sobibor extermination camp Sobibor ( ; ) was an extermination camp built and operated by Nazi Germany as part of Operation Reinhard. It was located in the forest near the village of Żłobek Duży in the General Government region of Occupation of Poland (1939–1945), ...
in
occupied Poland ' (Norwegian language, Norwegian: ') is a Norwegian political thriller TV series that premiered on TV 2 (Norway), TV2 on 5 October 2015. Based on an original idea by Jo Nesbø, the series is co-created with Karianne Lund and Erik Skjoldbjærg. ...
. It was the second uprising in an extermination camp, partly successful, by Jewish prisoners against the SS forces, following the revolt in
Treblinka Treblinka () was the second-deadliest extermination camp to be built and operated by Nazi Germany in Occupation of Poland (1939–1945), occupied Poland during World War II. It was in a forest north-east of Warsaw, south of the Treblinka, ...
. SS soldiers executed up to 250,000 Jews using gas at the Sobibor extermination camp. Most of the victims were from Poland, about 33,000 were from the Netherlands, and several thousand were from Germany. After this uprising, the SS no longer used the death camp. The Nazis destroyed the camp down to its foundations and levelled the camp area. To cover up the crimes committed at the site, they established an inconspicuous farm in its place and planted a pine forest over the remnants of the camp.


Previous escape attempts

Attempts by prisoners to escape from the Sobibor extermination camp occurred throughout its existence. These were sporadic attempts. Most failed, and the prisoners were caught and immediately killed, or brought back to the camp and executed along with other prisoners. These escape attempts occurred before the uprising. Among the 47 camp survivors whose names are known, there were five members of the 'Forest Commando' who managed to escape during a previous attempt. In June 1943, a minefield was laid around the camp to prevent escapes. Near the main gate opposite the camp headquarters and the parade ground of Camp No. 1, there were no mines to avoid endangering the SS personnel.


The resistance group

In the spring of 1943, when fewer Jewish transports arrived at the Sobibor camp, the prisoners realized that the camp's liquidation was approaching, which meant their execution. As a result, the prisoners formed a resistance group of ten to twelve inmates led by Leon Felhendler.Distel: Sobibór. S. 393–395 (siehe Literatur). In the resistance group, several ideas were proposed, including poisoning the SS officers, setting the camp on fire, or digging several escape tunnels. In the summer of 1943, prisoners in Camp No. 3 began to dig an escape tunnel. When the tunnel was discovered and the prisoners were confined, the SS officers executed the diggers by shooting them in the head and killing all the other prisoners in that camp. On 23 September 1943, a group of 80 Soviet prisoners of war arrived at the camp, including
Alexander Pechersky Alexander "Sasha" Aronovich Pechersky (; 22 February 1909 – 19 January 1990), also known as Oleksandr Aronovych Pecherskyi (), was a Jewish-Soviet officer. He is one of the organizers, and the leader, of the most successful uprising and mass-es ...
, who was a lieutenant in the
Red Army The Workers' and Peasants' Red Army, often shortened to the Red Army, was the army and air force of the Russian Soviet Republic and, from 1922, the Soviet Union. The army was established in January 1918 by a decree of the Council of People ...
, in a transport that included about 2,000 Jews. The battle-hardened soldiers, skilled in tactical operations, managed to plan precise military actions and execute them exactly as planned. Felhendler and Pechersky established contact and formed an "underground committee" consisting of four Soviet prisoners of war and four of Felhendler’s men. The committee met continuously, shared information, and devised escape plans.Schelvis: Vernichtungslager Sobibór. S. 180. They were forced to abandon the initial mass escape plan through an escape tunnel due to high water levels and the location of the minefield. Subsequently, Pechersky planned the escape of all prisoners. For this, he planned to secretly kill the SS officers and then execute a mass breakout of all prisoners from the camp. The escape date was postponed several times for various reasons. Finally, the designated day of escape was set due to the camp commander’s absence. The idea was to lure the SS officers to traps prepared in the carpentry workshop and the clothing warehouse, under the pretext of issuing special and beautiful clothes and shoes for their wives, and to murder them there quietly and secretly an hour before the mass escape. To cover up the disappearance of the murdered SS officers, some of the Soviet prisoners were supposed to wear SS uniforms. The carpenters in camp number 4 had axes, hammers, and other carpentry tools for their work. The prisoners in the metal shop prepared knives from sheet metal. The handguns of the murdered SS officers were supposed to be handed over to the Soviet prisoners experienced in operating weapons.


Plan

To ensure secrecy, only 30 to 40 prisoners, who were supposed to form combat groups, were involved in the plans. The dates 13 or 14 October were chosen for the escape day. This was because the prisoners knew that the camp commander,
Franz Reichleitner Franz Karl Reichleitner (2 December 1906 – 3 January 1944) was an Austrian member in the SS of Nazi Germany who participated in Operation Reinhard during the Holocaust. Reichleitner served as the second and last commandant of Sobibór extermi ...
, his deputy
Gustav Wagner Gustav Franz Wagner (18 July 1911 – 3 October 1980) was an Austrian member of the '' SS'' with the rank of Master Sergeant (''Hauptscharführer''). Wagner was a deputy commander of Sobibor extermination camp in German-occupied Poland, where 2 ...
, who was considered particularly dangerous and cruel, and other SS officers would not be in the camp on that day. Karl Frenzel, one of the inner camp commanders at Sobibor and considered the most cruel SS man in the camp, was to be lured to the carpentry shed on the day of the rebellion where Semyon Rosenfeld was to stab him to death.Schelvis: Vernichtungslager Sobibór. S. 179/180.Schlevis: Vernichtungslager Sobibór. S. 181. The operation was to begin at 16:00, and the escape was planned for 17:00 near sunset. The telephone connection to the outside was supposed to be cut off at the start of the rebellion. After the killing of the SS officers, all prisoners were to assemble at 17:00 as usual in the parade ground. There, they were to inform the prisoners who were not among the initiators of the plan about the escape from the camp. In the next stage, the prisoners were supposed to march in orderly rows to the main gate, which was not mined. Soviet soldiers in SS uniforms were supposed to accompany the marching captives as a disguise and command them in German. In the nearby forest, there were initial hiding places as darkness fell. If the route through the main gate was not feasible, the prisoners were instructed to detonate the mines by throwing stones to create an alternative escape path. In this case, the Soviet POWs were to run to open the wire fences in groups and defend against the remaining SS officers and guards using the weapons they had captured. The prisoners distributed money and valuables among themselves to use during the escape. The camp's guard included 25 to 30 German SS officers, with at least 18 always present in the camp. In addition to them, there were about 90 to 120 Ukrainian guards, from the Trawniki men. Their behaviour was the main element of uncertainty in the plan. The "underground committee" hoped that if the Soviet soldiers, dressed in SS uniforms, gave orders in German to the marching camp prisoners, the Trawniki guards would not suspect anything.Distel: Sobibór. S. 398. The mass escape was originally planned for 13 October 1943. However, since another SS team arrived at the Sobibor extermination camp on that day, the underground committee was forced to postpone the operation by one day.


Uprising

On 14 October 1943, at 4:00 PM (15 Tishrei 5704, during the festival of
Sukkot Sukkot, also known as the Feast of Tabernacles or Feast of Booths, is a Torah-commanded Jewish holiday celebrated for seven days, beginning on the 15th day of the month of Tishrei. It is one of the Three Pilgrimage Festivals on which Israelite ...
), close to sunset, the rebellion began as planned. It was led by Pechersky in Camp Number 1, and Felhendler was in Camp Number 2. The killing of the SS personnel was first.
Johann Niemann Johann Niemann (4 August 1913 – 14 October 1943) was a German SS officer and Holocaust perpetrator who was deputy commandant of Sobibor extermination camp during Operation Reinhard. He also served as a ''Leichenverbrenner'' (corpse cremat ...
, the deputy camp commander, was the highest-ranking SS officer on duty that day and the first person the rebels planned to assassinate. Niemann was killed in the tailor’s shed, struck twice in the head with a hatchet by Alexander Shubayev while trying on a leather coat. Josef Wolf, an SS squad commander, was killed by a hatchet blow while he was trying on a leather coat in the sorting shed. Yehuda Lerner, a 17-year-old, and Arkadi Vaispapir, a Soviet POW, killed the Ukrainian commander Siegfried Gratzhus and the Ukrainian Oberman Ray Klat using hatchets. Gratzhus and Niemann were the two SS officers with command authority in the camp that evening. Stanislaw "Shlomo" Szmajzner was part of a group of four prisoners who killed the camp's chief Kapo. To arm his team in his workshop, Szmajzner stole and hid several carpentry hatchets that were sent for sharpening. In addition, he also stole three rifles from the armoury after convincing the Ukrainian Trawniki volunteer that he was sent to take the rifles for repairs. He gave two rifles to the Soviet POWs and insisted on keeping the third for himself. In the chaos of the escape, Szmajzner shot a guard who was in the watchtower. At this stage, the telephone lines for external communication were also cut. SS man Werner Dubois was shot and severely wounded by a hatchet. Camp prisoner Chaim Engel and the Kapo Puzhitsky stabbed the commanders of Camp Number 2, SS man
Rudolf Beckmann Rudolf Beckmann (20 February 1910Ernst Klee: ''Das Kulturlexikon zum Dritten Reich. Wer war was vor und nach 1945''. S. Fischer, Frankfurt am Main 2007, , p. 37. – 14 October 1943) was a German '' SS-Oberscharführer'' in the Sobibor exterm ...
and squad commander Thomas Stepple. Squad commanders of the SS, Fritz Konrad and Josef Vallaster, were killed alone in the workshop, and the commander of the SS squad, Friedrich Gaustelitz, was killed by a hatchet blow in Shlomo Leitman’s carpentry shop. SS man Walter Ryba died in the workshop. Additionally, SS men Novak, Max Brü and Ernst Stengl were killed by the prisoners. By the evening, twelve SS men were killed and Dubois was severely injured; 12 out of 29 SS men who were part of the camp guard on the day of the rebellion were not present that day. Two Trawniki men were also killed: an unidentified Ukrainian guard and Klatt (the only Trawniki man who did not beat prisoners in the Sobibor extermination camp).


Escape

The SS Oberscharführer Karl Frenzel did not arrive at the ambush spot planned for him in the carpentry shop, and SS trooper Walter Ryba unexpectedly encountered a rebel prisoner and was stabbed to death. This threatened the secrecy of the current phase of the rebellion and endangered the escape if the murdered man was discovered. Therefore, Pechersky decided to signal the evening command ten minutes earlier, causing unrest among the prisoners. They were upset because the signal for the command arrived prematurely and Frenzel, who was responsible for the roll calls, did not arrive at the command area in the parade ground. One of the Ukrainians trying to organize the prisoners standing in line was killed as a result. When SS mechanic Oberscharführer Erich Bauer arrived in a truck, he noticed a dead guard lying on the ground among the prisoners and immediately shot at the prisoners with a
pistol A pistol is a type of handgun, characterised by a gun barrel, barrel with an integral chamber (firearms), chamber. The word "pistol" derives from the Middle French ''pistolet'' (), meaning a small gun or knife, and first appeared in the Englis ...
.Schelvis: Vernichtungslager Sobibór. S. 191/192. Afterwards, chaos erupted and about 600 prisoners escaped without coordination. The panicked Ukrainian Travniki volunteers began firing from the watchtowers and Frenzel fired a machine gun at the detainees. 60 prisoners from Camp Number 4 were arrested by the guards on their way to the command area due to the gunfire, and were detained and shot. In the desperate attempts of the escaping prisoners to overcome the wire fences and minefields, they were caught in the guards’ crossfire, as they were stopped by wire fences and stepped on mines. About 365 people managed to escape from the extermination camp, but only 200 reached the nearby forest. About 150 prisoners remained in the camp. The organized escape plan failed to materialize. Leon Felhendler and Alexander Pechersky managed to urge the prisoners to escape while they still could in order to survive and tell the world about the extermination of the Jews in the camp.


Aftermath

Bauer and Frenzel managed to restore the external telephone lines and called for reinforcements only around 8:00 PM. All the prisoners who remained in the camp were murdered by the SS men. Those who reached the forest were later pursued by about 400 to 500 SS men and Ukrainian guards. About 100 escapees were killed in the pursuit. The surviving escapees joined partisans or went into hiding. The SS men who were killed in the camp were buried in a military cemetery in the nearby town of Chelm. After the rebellion, the SS brought about 100 Jewish prisoners from the Treblinka camp to dismantle the camp, destroy the camp buildings, and complete the extermination work and the burning of the bodies of the last Jews murdered in the camp. Subsequently, the Jews brought from Treblinka were executed after their work was completed. The Germans made sure to demolish the camp down to its foundations and levelled the area to cover up the crimes that had occurred in the extermination camp. In the place where the extermination camp stood, they established an innocuous-looking farm and planted a pine forest over the remnants of the camp. After
World War II World War II or the Second World War (1 September 1939 – 2 September 1945) was a World war, global conflict between two coalitions: the Allies of World War II, Allies and the Axis powers. World War II by country, Nearly all of the wo ...
, 47 prisoners from the Sobibor extermination camp survived, including 8 women. The survivor
Jules Schelvis Jules Schelvis (7 January 1921 – 3 April 2016) was a Dutch Jewish historian, writer, printer, and Holocaust survivor. Schelvis was the sole survivor of the 3,006 people that were on the 14th transport from Westerbork to Sobibor extermination ...
later wrote: "Without the uprising in Sobibor, there would have been no survivors who witnessed the mass murder there." The
Sobibor trial The Sobibor trial was a 1965–66 judicial trial in the West German prosecution of SS officers who had worked at Sobibor extermination camp; it was held in Hagen. It was one of a series of similar war crime trials held during the early and mid-196 ...
in the mid-1960s was a trial against 12 SS men from the Sobibor extermination camp, held in front of the regional court of Hagen. It was preceded by two Sobibor trials in Berlin and Frankfurt in 1950. Trials concerning the crimes committed at Sobibor continued in the 1970s and 1980s. On 3 June 2019,
Simjon Rosenfeld Simjon Rosenfeld (October 1, 1922 – June 3, 2019) was a survivor of the Sobibor extermination camp, Sobibor death camp and a participant in the prisoner revolt which took place in that camp. Born in Ternivka, Gaysin uezd, Podolia Governorate, Ukr ...
, one of the last survivors involved in the Sobibor uprising, died at the age of 96 at Kaplan Hospital and was buried in the cemetery in Bnei Aish.


Commemoration

On 14 October 2013, the 70th anniversary of the uprising, Sobibor survivors, including
Thomas Blatt Thomas "Toivi" Blatt (born Tomasz Blatt; April 15, 1927 – October 31, 2015) was a Holocaust survivor, writer of mémoires, and public speaker, who at the age of 16 escaped from the Sobibór extermination camp during the uprising staged by th ...
and
Philip Bialowitz Philip Bialowitz (December 25, 1925 in Izbica – August 6, 2016) was a Polish Holocaust survivor and resistance fighter. Life Bialowitz was transported to Sobibor in April 1943 and quickly heard that his sisters and niece had been murdered in ...
, family members, politicians, teenagers, and religious figures commemorated the victims of Sobibor. In the weekly Jüdische Allgemeine, historian and journalist Gabriela Leser criticized the fact that the Federal Republic of Germany had still not contributed funds to cover the costs and redesign of the Holocaust victims' memorial sites. The Polish Deputy Minister of Culture and National Heritage, Piotr Żuchowski, told the newspaper, "We do not expect the Germans, who built these death factories on Polish soil, to bear all the costs for the monuments, but we do expect them to bear some of them. He will send an official request to Berlin, as this is what our German partners want." German State Minister Cornelia Pieper, responsible for relations with Poland, explained that a few days earlier, Polish Secretary of State Waldemar Bartoszewski had clarified to the German ambassador in Poland "that Germany is not yet expected to support Sobibor at this time, he also noted that we are still prepared to support this project." The Jewish Museum in Moscow commemorates the Sobibor death camp and the rebellion with an event in which Soviet soldier POWs participated and were murdered.


References


Further reading

*
Philip Bialowitz Philip Bialowitz (December 25, 1925 in Izbica – August 6, 2016) was a Polish Holocaust survivor and resistance fighter. Life Bialowitz was transported to Sobibor in April 1943 and quickly heard that his sisters and niece had been murdered in ...
: A Promise at Sobibor: A Jewish Boy's Story of Revolt and Survival in Nazi-Occupied Poland. University of Wisconsin Press, 2010, . *
Thomas Toivi Blatt Thomas "Toivi" Blatt (born Tomasz Blatt; April 15, 1927 – October 31, 2015) was a Holocaust survivor, writer of mémoires, and public speaker, who at the age of 16 escaped from the Sobibór extermination camp during the uprising staged by the ...
: From the Ashes of Sobibor: A Story of Survival. Northwestern University Press, 1997, . *
Richard Rashke Richard L. Rashke (born 1936) is an American journalist, teacher and author, who has written non-fiction books, as well as plays and screenplays. He is especially known for his history, ''Escape from Sobibor,'' first published in 1982, an account ...
: Escape From Sobibor. Delphinium Books, 1995, . *
Jules Schelvis Jules Schelvis (7 January 1921 – 3 April 2016) was a Dutch Jewish historian, writer, printer, and Holocaust survivor. Schelvis was the sole survivor of the 3,006 people that were on the 14th transport from Westerbork to Sobibor extermination ...
: Sobibor: History of a Nazi Death Camp. Bloomsbury Publishing, 2014, {{ISBN, 978-1-4725-8906-4. Sobibor extermination camp Jewish resistance during the Holocaust Uprisings during World War II