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The deportation

and mass transfer


of Jewish people
to Poland
Macwise Ingabire
Deportations
In the months subsequent to the Wannsee conference, the Nazi government proceeded to undertake their preparations
for the "Final Solution.” Jewish people were repatriated by trains or trucks to six camps, which were all based in
oppressed Poland: “Chelmno, Treblinka, Sobibor, Belzec, Auschwitz-Birkenau, and Majdanek-Lublin.” The
Nazis named these killing centers "extermination camps.” The majority of the expellees were Jewish people who
were promptly killed in massive numbers at once by lethal gas. The Germans proceeded to kill Jewish people in
discharges in large numbers of people as well, particularly in areas that they captured from the Soviet Union. The
murder camps were located in remote areas, adequately concealed from most people.
Deportations(continued) and Key Dates
The murder camps were located in remote areas, adequately concealed from most people. The murder camps were close to
significant railway lines, permitting trains to transfer numerous amount of people to the murdering locations. A great number of
the people who died were taken from nearby ghettos. The transportations demanded the assistance of a great number of people
and all the subdivisions of the German authorities. The people who died in Poland were thus far confined in ghettos and fully
bound by German regulation. Starting on July 15, 1942, the Germans transport almost 100,000 Jewish people from Westerbork.
Within July 22 and mid-September 1942, more than 300,000 people are transported from the Warsaw ghetto. German military
oppress Hungary on March 19, 1944. In April 1944, all Jewish people excluding those in Budapest are arranged into ghettos.
Organized transportations from the ghettos in Hungary to Auschwitz Birkenau start the following month.
Deportations to killing centers
1941, The Nazi government declared the execution of the  "Final Solution,” the organized mass killing of European Jewish
people. The Nazi government used rail transport as one the ways to aggressively Adjust the racial structure of eastern Europe
within the structure of WW2. The Nazi government used rail networks through Europe to transfer Jewish people from their
house to mainly eastern Europe. After they had started to meticulously murder in uniquely assembled murdering camps, German
administration transported Jewish people to these buildings using train, or if trains were not accessible or the lengths were not
long, using truck or walking.
Inside the Railcars and the victims
German railway administration used both cargo and traveler cars for the transportations. The German government
normally didn’t provide the expellees with food or water for the route, in spite of the fact that they had to stand by for
days on railroad spurs for other trains to proceed. The most casualties at Belzec were Jewish people from southern and
southeastern Poland, but also Jewish people transported from the professed “Greater German Reich” to District Lublin
within October 1941 and the closing stages of summer 1942. There were many more victims that came from different
places and were transported to the murdering camps.
Credits
 https://encyclopedia.ushmm.org/content/en/article/deportations
 https://annefrank.freetls.fastly.net/media/filer_public_thumbnails/filer_public/9e/cd/9ecd5292-d8e4-45a7-aac0-a4562ef1
5e95/westerbork_netherlands_jews_boarding_a_deportation_train_to_auschwitz.jpg__2160x895_q85_crop_subsamplin
g-2_upscale.jpg
 https://www.yadvashem.org/sites/default/files/styles/main_image_1block/public/29_57.jpg?itok=H5rLrG7n
 https://encyclopedia.ushmm.org/content/en/article/deportations
 https://encyclopedia.ushmm.org/images/large/c5cb69a5-2676-40d0-b838-834ab0a38477.jpg
 https://encyclopedia.ushmm.org/content/en/article/deportations-to-killing-centers

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