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CHELMNO

Family members say goodbye to a child through a fence at the ghetto's central prison where children, the sick,
and the elderly were held before deportation to Chelmno during the "Gehsperre" action. Lodz, Poland,
September 1942.

The village of Chelmno (Ger.: Kulmhof) is located about 30 miles northwest of Lodz along the Ner
River, a tributary of the Warta River in todays west central Poland. Under German occupation
inWorld War II, Chelmno was located in the Warthelandadministrative unit (seat Poznan/Posen). SS
and police authorities established the Chelmno killing center in order to annihilate the Jewish
population of the Wartheland, including the inhabitants of the Lodz ghetto. It was the first stationary
facility wherepoison gas was used for mass murder of Jews.

The killing center consisted of an unused manorial estate in the town of Chelmno itself and a large
forest clearing approximately 2.5 miles northwest of Chelmno off the east side of the road to Kolo

and abutting the village of Rzuchow to the south. These sites were known respectively as the
Schlosslager (manor-house camp) and the Waldlager (forest camp). On the grounds of the estate
was a large manor house, which contained the reception offices, including rooms for undressing and
for relinquishing valuables. The SS and police staff and guards were housed in other buildings in the
town. The manor house and the grounds were encircled by a high wooden fence. The clearing in the
forest camp, which contained space for mass graves, was likewise fenced off.

The SS and police carried out killing operations at Chelmno on the authority of the Higher SS and
Police Leader for Wartheland District, SS General Wilhelm Koppe. Koppe entrusted the leadership of
the special detachment deployed at Chelmno to SS Captain Herbert Lange of the Commander of
Security Police and SD station in Poznan. Lange was replaced in April 1942 by SS-Captain Hans
Bothmann. Lange and some of his fellow officers had had experience in mass murder of
institutionalized Poles with disabilities in 1940. Under the leadership of Security Police and SD
officers, the rank and file of the so-called Special Detachment (Sonderkommando) Langelater
called the SS Special Detachment Bothmannwas made up of Gestapo, Criminal Police, and Order
Police personnel. The maximum strength of the Special Detachment was just under 100, of whom
around 80 belonged to the Order Police.

The SS and police began killing operations at Chelmno on December 8, 1941. During the first five
weeks, the victims were Jewish residents of nearby areas in Wartheland District. The SS and police
transported them from the places in which they lived by truck to the grounds of the castle in
Chelmno. Guarded by members of the Special Detachment, the victims disembarked one truck at a
time in the courtyard of the manor house. SS officials, often wearing white coats to create the
impression that they were physicians, explained to the deportees that they would go to Germany as
laborers, but first had to bathe and have their clothes disinfected. The Jews then entered the manor
house. Once inside they were led to a back room where they undressed and handed over their
valuables against receipts to a Polish civilian, who was employed by the special detachment. SS and
police personnel led the naked prisoners to the cellar, where they had to walk down a ramp sloping
into the back of a large paneled truck that could hold 5070 persons. When the back of the van was
full, the doors were closed and sealed. The mechanic on duty attached a tube to the vans exhaust
pipe and then started the engine, pumping carbon monoxide gas into the space where the prisoners
were crowded, killing them by asphyxiation. After the victims were dead, the tube was detached from

the exhaust pipe, and the van, now full of corpses, was driven to the forest camp, where the bodies
were transferred into previously excavated mass graves. Any victims found to be still alive as the
corpses were being unloaded were shot by SS and police officials on duty at the forest camp.

On January 16, 1942, the SS and police began deportations from the Lodz ghetto. German officials
transported the Jews from Lodz by train to Kolo, six miles northwest of Chelmno. There SS and
police officials supervised the transfer of the Jews from the freight trains to a train running on a
narrow-gauge track, which took them to the Powiercie station, three miles northwest of Chelmno.
Then the Jews were transported by truck from Powiercie to the manor-house camp, where they were
forced to enter into the killing process.

A few Jewish prisoners were selected from incoming transports to form a forced-labor detachment
(Sonderkommando) of 50 to 60 men deployed at the forest camp. They removed corpses from the
gas vans and buried them in the mass graves. Because the graves quickly filled and the smell of
decomposing bodies began to permeate the surrounding area, including nearby villages, the SS and
police ordered in summer 1942 that in future the bodies be burned on open air ovens made of rail
track in the forest camp. Jewish Sonderkommando members were also responsible for exhuming the
graves and burning the previously interred bodies. In addition, they sorted the clothing of the victims
and cleaned the vans. Another small detachment of about 15 Jews worked at the manor house,
sorting and packing the belongings of the victims. Between eight and ten skilled handicraftsmen
produced or repaired goods for the SS special detachment. Periodically, SS and police officials would
kill the members of the Jewish special detachments and replace them with laborers selected off of
new transports.

DEPORTATIONS TO CHELMNO

The SS and police conducted killing operations in Chelmno from December 8, 1941, until March 1943
and then again for a brief period in June-July 1944 in the forest camp. From early December 1941
until mid-January 1942, the SS and police deported Jews by truck from nearby towns and villages;

the first transports included Jews from Kolo, Dabie, Sompolno, Klodowa, Babiak, and Kowale
Panskie.

From mid-January 1942, SS and police authorities deported Jews in crowded freight trains from the
Lodz ghetto to Chelmno. These transports included Jews deported to Lodz from Germany, Austria,
Bohemia and Moravia, and Luxemburg. Throughout 1942, the SS and police continued to deport
Jews from Wartheland district region to Chelmno and killed them there. Other victims murdered at
the Chelmno killing center included several hundred Poles and Soviet prisoners of war. Many of the
5,000 Roma (Gypsies) who had been deported from Austria to the Lodz ghetto in 1941 were also
among the first victims of Chelmno.

After having annihilated almost all Jews residing in Wartheland District (aside from those remaining
in the Lodz ghetto), the SS and police ceased transports to Chelmno in March 1943. Deploying
surviving members of the Jewish special detachment, the SS and police demolished the manor house
and the open air ovens in the forest camp and then shot the last Jewish forced laborers before
abandoning the site in April 1943. In June 1944, however, the Germans renewed deportations to
Chelmno to facilitate the liquidation of the Lodz ghetto. The SS Special Detachment Bothmann
returned to the forest camp and supervised renewed killing operations. After one night in the village
of Chelmno, the 1944 victims were driven to the forest camp, where the camp authorities had
constructed two reception huts and two open air ovens. SS and police officials guarded the Jewish
victims as they undressed and gave up valuables. Then they killed the Jews either by asphyxiation in
a gas van or by shooting. From mid-July 1944, the SS and police deported the remaining inhabitants
of the Lodz ghetto toAuschwitz-Birkenau.

Seven Jews are known to have escaped from Chelmno; all worked in the burial detachment.
Mordechai Podchlebnik, Milnak Meyer, Abraham Tauber, Abram Roj, and a mysterious "Szlamek,"
whose actual identity has never been fully established, escaped during the winter of 1942; Mordechai
Zurawski and Simon Srebnik escaped from the labor detail dismantling the killing center in January
1945. Podchebnik, Zurawski, Srebnik, and Roj survived the war. Though he did not survive,
"Szlamek" found refuge in the Warsaw ghetto and told of his experiences. The Jewish underground
movement smuggled Szlamek's account that the Germans were systematically killing Jews with

poison gas at Chelmno via the Polish underground to the West, where it appeared in a New York
Times article published on page six of the July 2, 1942 edition.

Beginning in September 1944, a group of Jewish prisoners, presumably brought from outside the
Wartheland District, was forced to exhume and cremate any remaining corpses from the mass graves
at Chelmno as part of Operation 1005 and to obliterate any other evidence of mass murder
operations. The SS and police shot about half of the 80-man detachment after this work was done in
November 1944. The Germans abandoned the Chelmno killing center on January 17, 1945, as the
Soviet army approached. The SS killed at least 152,000 people at Chelmno between December 1941
and March 1943 and in June/July 1944.

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