Jules Schelvis Recounts his Journey and Arrival at to Sobibor Death Camp Recounts his Journey and Arrival at to Sobibor Death Camp Jules Schelvis & his wife Rachel in 1941Jules Schelvis, his wife Rachel, whom he married on the 18 December 1941, were deported from Westerbork, transit camp in Holland to the Sobibor death camp in Poland on the 1st June 1943. Rachel’s family included as the head of the family, her father David Borzykowski who was born in Janow, Poland on the 13 February 18... Read Full Story
Richard Glucks
As described by Rudolf Höss
Richard Glucks Biography
Richard Glucks
Richard Glucks was born on the 22 April 1889 and he served as an officer in World War One and joined the Nazi Party relatively late. Nevertheless, he was an SS Brigadier General before the start of the Second World War, and was appointed Inspector of Concentration Camps in autumn 1939.
From 1942 on, the Concentration Camps Inspectorate formed one of the four large divisions of ... Read Full Story
Holocaust RemembranceA time to memorialize, debate, debunk or debauch? Guest Publication by Dr. Martin Friedhaus[photos added to enhance the text] [Please note that editorials posted in this section are the sole viewpoints of the individual author and do not necessarily represent any collective opinion of the Holocaust Education & Archive Research Team, or the University of Northampton] Tourists look at individually-painted dominoes along the former route of the Berlin Wall at the Branden... Read Full Story
The Allied Reaction Regarding the Holocaust During 1942
"What the Allies Knew"
Gen. Wladyslaw Sikorski
The following letters, reports, telegrams indicate the Nazis brutal persecution of the Jews in Poland, and the extent to which the Allies knew what was happening in Poland.
General Sikorski’s broadcast to Poland of June 9 1942:
The wave of terror in Poland has assumed such vast dimensions in the spring of this year after Himmler’s visit that the Polish Government ha... Read Full Story
www.DeathCamps.org The Genuine ARC websitewww.DeathCamps.orgARC list of banned denial sites and hate blogs: CODOH http://www.codoh.com VHO http://www.vho.org/Holocaust Controversies Blog http://holocaustcontroversies.blogspot.com/ Institute for Historical Review http://www.ihr.org/jhr/v11/v11p251_Butz.htmlZundelsite http://www.zundelsite.org These sites have been identified as Holocaust Denial or Controversy sites that offer no value other than to promote hatred, bigotry, lies, and pseudo deb... Read Full Story
Documents & Photos Related to the Prague Ghetto & Theresienstadt Concentration Camp Anton Thumann Arrest photoAX Transport List Transport list BO 1909 Welfare payment demand for 5200K [dated 1940] Welfare payment demand for 5200K [dated 1940] (second part)Welfare payment demand for 10.360K [dated 1942] Welfare payment demand for 10.360K [dated 1943] Source Robert Wolf 2nd Welfare payment demand for 10.360K [dated 1943] Source Robert Wolf Terezin to Sobibor transport document Terez... Read Full Story
Holocaust Remembrance
A time to memorialize, debate, debunk or debauch?
Guest Publication by
Dr. Martin Friedhaus
[photos added to enhance the text]
[Please note that editorials posted in this section are the sole viewpoints of the individual author and do not necessarily
represent any collective opinion of the Holocaust Education & Archive Research Team, or the University of Northampton]
Tourists look at individually-painted dominoes along the former route ... Read Full Story
Jules Schelvis
Recounts his Journey and Arrival at to Sobibor Death Camp Recounts his Journey and Arrival at to Sobibor Death Camp
Jules Schelvis & his wife Rachel in 1941
Jules Schelvis, his wife Rachel, whom he married on the 18 December 1941, were deported from Westerbork, transit camp in Holland to the Sobibor death camp in Poland on the 1st June 1943. Rachel’s family included as the head of the family, her father David Borzykowski wh... Read Full Story
The Minsk Ghetto Jewish MinskMinsk, capital of the Belorussian SSR, in 1926 the Jewish population of Minsk was 53,686, by June 1941 the number had grown to 80,000, constituting one- third of the city’s population. Only a small fraction of the Jews managed to escape from the city in the six days between the German invasion of the Soviet Union and the conquest of Minsk on 28 June 1941. German parachutists who had been dropped east of the city intercepted thousands of Jews who were trying to fl... Read Full Story