Ethnic cleansing of Zamojszczyzna by Nazi Germany

Ethnic cleansing of Polish Zamojszczyzna

Kidnapping of Polish children during the Nazi-German "resettlement" operation in the Zamość county
Mass kidnappings and expulsions
Period November 1942 – March 1943 [1]
Territory General Government, Kresy macroregion
Victims 116,000 Polish men and women including 30,000 children [2]
Destinations Forced labour and concentration camps as well as Auschwitz, Majdanek, and Bełżec extermination camps [3]

The ethnic cleansing of Zamojszczyzna by Nazi Germany (German: Aktion Zamosc,[4] also: Operation Himmlerstadt)[5] during World War II was carried out as part of a greater plan of forcible removal of the entire Polish populations from targeted regions of occupied Poland in preparation for the state-sponsored settlement of the ethnic German Volksdeutsche. The operation of mass expulsions from Zamojszczyzna region around the city of Zamość (now in Lublin Voivodeship, Poland) was carried out between November 1942 and March 1943 on direct order from Heinrich Himmler.[6] It was preplanned by both, Globocnik from Action Reinhard and Himmler, as the first stage of the eventual murderous ethnic cleansing ahead of projected Germanization of the entire General Government territory.[7]

In Polish historiography,[8] the events surrounding the Nazi German roundups are often named alternatively as the Children of Zamojszczyzna to emphasize the simultaneous apprehension of around 30,000 children at that time, snatched away from their parents transported from Zamojszczyzna to concentration camps and slave labour in Nazi Germany.[9] According to historical sources the German police and military expelled 116,000 Polish men and women in just a few months during Action Zamość.[10]

Genesis

Czesława Kwoka – one of many Polish Children of Zamojszczyzna murdered in Auschwitz by Nazi Germans

Wartime fate of the Polish children from Zamojszczyzna was closely related to the German plans for the expansion of their own so-called "living space in the East", part of a broader Nazi policy called the Generalplan Ost. The plans for "ethnically cleansing the land" of its inhabitants were created in the fall of 1941 in Berlin and were closely connected with the idea of the new great consolidation of German nationhood. Country-wide actions dubbed Heim ins Reich ("Home to the Reich") were conducted across all of Central and Eastern Europe (see Action Saybusch in Polish Silesia). Their main purpose was to transplant colonists of the German origin from Russia, Romania, and other countries, to occupied Poland. At the beginning of war, the programme was mainly realised in western parts of Poland, including Wielkopolska, Silesia and Pomerania already controlled by Nazi Germany; but after Operation Barbarossa, it was continued throughout the General Government.[10]

In order to prepare the land for the new German settlers, both German military and all branches of police including Sonderdienst, aided by the Ukrainian Auxiliary Police battalions,[1] conducted mass deportations of native Polish inhabitants using Holocaust trains as well as lorries and even horse-drawn wagons. Zamojszczyzna was recognized as one of the core German settlement areas in Distrikt Galizien, and according to the order of Reichsführer-SS Heinrich Himmler became the first intervention target in the region.[9] People of Ukrainian blood, subjects of parallel transfer called Heim ins Reich Ukraineraktion (pl), were also to be resettled there.[10]

The forcible depopulation of Zamojszczyzna

Expulsions of Poles from the Zamość region in December 1942

The German Wehrmacht attacked the Soviet forces in eastern Poland on June 22, 1941, and in the euphoric atmosphere surrounding their initial victories, the Aktion Zamosc was first outlined by Himmler together with Governor Hans Frank who initially requested that the programme be delayed until complete victory, but was convinced otherwise.[1] In accordance with the General Plan East, the first forcible removal of the 2,000 inhabitants from selected villages was conducted between 6th and 25 of November 1941, while the general deportation programme began a year later on the night of 27–28 November 1942 in Skierbieszów and its vicinity. By then, the murderous Operation Reinhard was already in full swing.[1]

The expulsions encompassed the districts of Hrubieszów, Tomaszów Lubelski, Zamość and Biłgoraj, and were completed in March 1943. In total 297 Polish villages were depopulated.[6] A concentration camp was created in Zamość around the streets of Piłsudskiego and Okrzei. Initially, it was a transit camp for Soviet POWs, rebuilt and expanded with 15 new barracks added for the imprisonment of rounded up families. SS-Unterscharführer Artur Schütz was appointed the camp's commandant.[1] From there, transports of children no older than 14 years of age – whose names have already been Germanized – were sent elsewhere.[6] Historians estimate that 116,000 people in total were forcibly removed from Zamojszczyzna, among them 30,000 children.[10]

Deportations to concentration camps

Roll-call for boys at the main children's concentration camp in Łódź, to which KZ Dzierżązna for Polish girls as young as eight, belonged to as a sub-camp

The camp in Zamość (pl), located on S. Okrzei street, served as the transit point for selections and further deportations. In the first month of Action Zamość the camp processed 7,055 Polish inhabitants of 62 villages.[1] People were divided into four main categories with the following code letters: "WE" (re-Germanization), "AA" (transport to the Reich), "RD" (farm-work for the settlers), "KI" (Kindertransport), "AG" (work in the General Government); and finally, "KL" (concentration camp).[11] Those expelled from Zamojszczyzna to perform slave labour in Germany were loaded onto trains departing for temporary displacement camps governed by main resettlement HQ in Łodź. People from the last group were sent to the Nazi concentration camps at Auschwitz and Majdanek.[1]

The camp in Zamość processed 31,536 Poles according to Germany's own records,[1] or 41,000 based on postwar estimates.[9] Dispossessed Polish families were sent to other transit camps as well including Zwierzyniec in the Zamość County, which processed 20,000-24,000 Poles (12,000 between July and August 1943).[12] Transit camps existed in Budzyń,[11] Frampol, Lublin (on Krochmalna street), Stary Majdan, Biłgoraj County, Tarnogród, Wola Derezieńska, Old Wedan, Biłgoraj and also in Puszcza Solska.[13] Race selections based on forcible abduction of children from their parents were conducted in all of them.[13] The term "Children of Zamojszczyzna" originates from the multitude of those locations.[1]

I have seen with my own eyes how the Germans took children away from their mothers. The act of their forcible separation shook me terribly... The Germans beat them with whips until the blood flew in case of slightest opposition, mothers and children alike. One could hear moaning and crying throughout the entire camp on those occasions... I have also seen small children being killed by the Germans. – Leonard Szpuga, farmer expelled from Topólcza [14]
Polish girls at a Nazi-German camp in Dzierżązna near Zgierz. Among the prisoners were children resettled from Zamojszczyzna (1942-1943)

Children suffered the most in those camps. The average stay lasted several months.[11] Starvation, cold, disease were fatal for them a lot more often than for adults. Separated from their parents, children were transported in cattle wagons (100 up to 150 children in one wagon) to other destinations. Many of them were sent to the concentration camp for children run side-by-side with the Łódź Ghetto. Kinder KZ processed up to 13,000 children. News about enormous drama of children from Zamojszczyzna quickly spread through entire country. Polish railwayman were forwarding messages about transports to inhabitants of the cities where transports were stopping by. There were several stations where ordinary people took a chance and risked rescuing the children, like in Sobolew, Żelechów, Siedlce, Garwolin, Pilawa and Warsaw. Another deportation action, called Operation Werwolf,[1] was conducted during the summer of 1944 ahead of the Soviet advance. Many of the inhabitants were forced to evacuate after being previously transferred into these areas by Germany as early as 1939.[11] Entire families ended up in concentration camps at Majdanek (up to 15,000 prisoners of Action Zamość) and Oświęcim, before deportation to forced labour in the Reich. At Majdanek, due to severe overcrowding, entire train-loads were kept in open fields numbered from III to V.[1]

Germanization

There was also a portion of children designated for germanisation. Those, in which German anthropologists confirmed the presence of desirable racial traits, were supposed to go through transition by being placed in German families or German orphanages. Out of several thousand of children taken to Germany only 800 were successfully reclaimed.

Zamojszczyzna in the lower part of the Lublin District (light brown)

After the World War II this atrocity was investigated in Nuremberg. From Polish side statements came from Zygmunt Klukowski – a doctor from Szczebrzeszyn, who knew well conditions of camps in Zwierzyniec and Biłgoraj, and from three of the returned children.

See also

Notes and references

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 Agnieszka Jaczyńska (2012). Aktion Zamosc (PDF). Pamięć.pl Nr 8/2012. OBEP IPN, Lublin: Institute of National Remembrance. 30-35 (1-5 in PDF). Retrieved 19 August 2015.
  2. Julian Grudzień (May 2004). "Polacy wypędzeni" (PDF). Dzieci Zamojszczyzny. Biuletyn Instytutu Pamięci Narodowej, Pamięć.pl. 5 (40): 18–22 (16–20/24 in PDF). ... to co, się działo na Zamojszczyźnie, szczególnie w pierwszym rzucie wysiedleń, począwszy od listopada 1942 r. i zimą, do lutego 1943 r., to była sprawa wręcz nie do opowiedzenia. Starsi ludzie pamiętają, mróz sięgał trzydziestu stopni i poniżej. I w takich warunkach rozpoczęły się transporty kolejowe z obozu zamojskiego (od 10 listopada 1942 r.) w okolice Siedlec.
  3. "Polacy wypędzeni" 2003, p. 18 (16/24 in PDF).
  4. Tenhumberg (2015). "Aktion Zamosc". Familie Tenhumberg. TenhumbergReinhard.de. Retrieved 17 August 2015. Die Vertreibung der polnischen Bevölkerung und die Neuansiedlung führte nicht nur zum Anwachsen der Widerstandsbewegung, sondern auch zu geringerer Produktion von Lebensmitteln und damit zu geringeren Ablieferungen an die Besatzungsbehörden. Das Ostheer der Wehrmacht wurde aus dem Generalgouvernement versorgt. Frank und der Gouverneur von Lublin, Ernst Emil Zörner, kritisierten die Ansiedlungen, konnten sich jedoch nicht gegen Himmler und Globocnik durchsetzen.
  5. Jost Rebentisch (2008). Operation Himmlerstadt (PDF). Der Bundesverband Information & Beratung für NS-Verfolgte e.V. und das Stowarzyszenie Zamojskie Centrum Wolontariatu. Überleben. Retrieved 17 August 2015. Als Deutschland 1939 Polen überfiel, hat Heinrich Himmler, dem Reichsführer-SS, die Stadt und die Gegend so gut gefallen, dass er dieses Gebiet zur Kernzelle der in Polen durchzuführenden Germanisierung machen wollte - Zamosc sollte dann nach dem Abschluss der Operation Himmlerstadt heißen.
  6. 1 2 3 Grzegorz Motyka, Zygmunt Mańkowski, Tadeusz Pieronek, Andrzej Friszke, Thomas Urban (2003). "Polacy wypędzeni" [The Expulsion of Poles]. Wojenne dzieciństwo. Losy dzieci polskich pod okupacją hitlerowską” OBEP IPN Łódź. Zamość: Institute of National Remembrance, Biuro Edukacji Publicznej: 1–24. Retrieved 17 August 2015. Source: Bulletin of IPN issue 05/2004.
  7. Robin O'Neil (2014). Hitler's man in the East: Odilo Globocnik. Belzec: Stepping Stone to Genocide; Hitler's answer to the Jewish Question. JewishGen. Chapter 3. Retrieved 17 August 2015. Lublin District – which included Zamojszczyzna, the area around the town of Zamosc - became the focal point of Generalplan Ost. It was envisaged by Himmler's planners that over a period of some 25 years Ukrainians and a large proportion of the Baltic peoples would be resettled [there].
  8. B. Wróblewski (1982), "Losy dzieci Zamojszczyzny w okresie okupacji hitlerowskiej", in: Czesław Pilichowski, Dzieci i młodzież w latach drugiej wojny światowej, Warszawa: Państw. Wydawn. Nauk.; OCLC 251891000
      Julia Rodzik (2012), Wojenne losy dzieci Zamojszczyzny (świadectwa), Zamość: Zakład Poligraficzny, 2007; pp. 163. ISBN 83-906562-2-1.
      Beata Kozaczyńska (2011), Losy dzieci z zamojszczyzny wysiedlonych do powiatu siedleckiego. Główne założenia Generalnego Planu Wschodniego (Generalplan Ost) i jego odniesienia do Zamojszczyzny. Siedlce: Wydawnictwo Stowarzyszenie TutajTeraz, ISBN 9788363307127.
      Józef Wnuk (1969), "Tragedia dzieci polskich na Zamojszczyźnie", in: Zeszyty Majdanka, vol. 3, pp. 212-. OCLC 224538637
  9. 1 2 3 Dzieci Zamojszczyzny (Children of Zamojszczyzna) on YouTube produced by Telewizja Polska S.A., Lublin, Dział Form Dokumentalnych, for Program 2, TVP S.A., 1999 (42 min. in colour and black-and-white).
  10. 1 2 3 4 Tadeusz Piotrowski (1998). Poland's Holocaust. McFarland. p. 299. ISBN 0786403713. Retrieved 18 August 2015.
  11. 1 2 3 4 Monika Wach, WSRP w Siedlcach (2012). "Historia Dzieci Zamojszczyzny". Historia (in Polish). Stowarzyszenie Domu Dziecka - Pomnika im. Dzieci Zamojszczyzny w Siedlcach. Retrieved 20 August 2015.
  12. Jaczyńska 2012, p. 33 (4 / 5 in PDF).
  13. 1 2 Bolesław Szymanik, Zarząd Stowarzyszenia Dzieci Zamojszczyzny w Biłgoraju (2015-08-17). "72. rocznica likwidacji obozu przesiedleńczego w Zwierzyńcu". Dzieci zamojszczyzny. Bilgoraj.com. Retrieved 21 August 2015.
  14. Roman Hrabar, Zofia Tokarz, Jacek E. Wilczur, Czas niewoli czas śmierci, Interpress, Warszawa 1979, p. 46. OCLC 69560199

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