Lubartów Ghetto
Nazi ghetto in occupied Poland / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Lubartów Ghetto was established by Nazi Germany in occupied Poland during World War II, and existed officially from 1941 until October 1942. The Polish Jews of the town of Lubartów were confined there initially. The ghetto inmates also included Jews deported from other cities in the vicinity including Lublin and Ciechanów and the rest of German-occupied Europe for the total of 3,500 Jews in its initial stages including 2,000 Jews from Slovakia.[1] In May 1942 additional transport from Slovakia with 2,421 Jews arrived.[1]
The Lubartów Ghetto | |
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Location | Lubartów, German-occupied Poland 51.28°N 22.36°E / 51.28; 22.36 |
Incident type | Imprisonment, forced labor, starvation, transit to extermination camps |
Organizations | Schutzstaffel (SS) |
Camp | Auschwitz |
Victims | 4,500 Polish Jews |
The Lubartów Ghetto was one of hundreds of such ghettos established in the course of the Holocaust in occupied Poland. The maximum number of prisoners at any one time was 4,500 according to Virtual Shtetl.[2] The ghetto was dissolved when all its prisoners – men, women, and children – were sent to the Belzec extermination camp among other secretive killing centres established by the SS, to be murdered under the guise of "resettlement".[3]