UMSCHLAGPLATZ in Warsaw
UMSCHLAGPLATZ in Warsaw

PLAC BRONI SQUARE

The pioneer settlers had mastered the attempts to assimilate the modern crossing of the Stawki and Dzika streets as far back as the XVI century. It will take another two hundred years to pass before the date when the swamp-like area in the north part of Warsaw would witness the erection of the earliest residential structures. At the earliest in 1874, the new-made iteration of the city map of Warsaw was geographically accompanied by a new ‘STAWKI’ street, with ‘the ponds’ as word-for-word meaning in Polish. The pint-sized pieces of water would be featured on the site as late as the 1890s. So far as the epilogue of the Napoleonic wars in Europe resulted in the actual loss of the independence of Poland in favor of the Russian Empire, the supervision over the so-called ‘Królestwo Polskie’ (Congress Poland) had been entrusted to Grand Duke of Konstantin Pavlovich. Of all others, this very ruler, later the failed pretender to the regalias of Emperor and a man to be kicked out of powers at the height of the ‘November Uprising’ in Poland, approved the build-up of open ground within the borderlands of Stawki, Dzika and Pokorna streets in Warsaw as late as in 1824.

Warsaw map, 1831
Warsaw map, 1831. The square in the middle is the ‘Plac Broni’

The newly-made ‘PLAC BRONI’ (The square of armament) was not merely the open ground for the military exercises of the Polish army, but also the largest square in Warsaw at the time with 420 meters on each side. Relatedly, the open ground had been initially endowed with pure military appropriation. The square-cut area was fenced with a wooden enclosure and made inaccessible for the locals. Following on from the results of the 1830-1831 ‘November Uprising’ (also known as the ‘Russian-Polish war), the Polish parliament (Seim) was abolished, as well as the Polish army. From a narrower perspective, the former military grounds to the north of the city center (Plac Broni) were delegated to the occupational forces with the preservation of the initial designation. At that moment in time, the area also included the army barracks, which had been erected as far back as 1829, a year before the uprising. It will take another two decades for the administration to maintain repair works within the ‘Plac Broni’. By the middle of the XIX century, the former military grounds were in use on a more and more seldom basis by designation and more often as an area for storage. 

Warsaw, map 1879
Warsaw, 1879. The ‘Vistula Railroad’ already exists in the North

Within the years of the last decade of the XIX century, the ‘Plac Broni’ was destined to be subjected to a new meaningful makeover. The western part of the former open ground was designated for the erection of the storage facilities as well as the expansion of the railway line to the north, a transport derivation of the ‘Droga Żelazna Nadwiślańska’ (generally regarded in English as the ‘Vistula River Railroad’). The ‘Plac Broni’ also was destined to witness another transformation within its southwest part. As early as 1895 the crossroad of the Stawki and Dzika streets (next to the modern UMSCHLAGPLATZ monument) was built with a wooden home shelter for the homeless, an erection, that will outlast the years until the Second World War. 

The new home shelter and the renovated storage and railway facilities were not the only means of the transformation of the area at the threshold of the XX century. Based on the decree, which had previously approved the elimination and moving of the local market within Walowa Street nearby, the southern part of the former military grounds was assigned to give space for a new merchant area to come. As early as 1901, a large wooden pavilion with two erections of the same assignation was built up next to the home shelter. The relatively reasonable rental charges generated a demand for these new market facilities to the extent, that up to 80% of the merchant area was soon leased. Along with that, the nearby area along Stawki Street was also leased on a subsidy basis, thus expanding the merchant facilities. At the time, the Jewish population prevailed among the residents of the district. 

The shelter for the homeless on the corner od Dzika and Stawki streets, Warsaw
The shelter for the homeless on the corner of Dzika and Stawki streets

The interwar years, initially celebrated with the acquisition of Independence by Poland (based on the dramatic results of the Great War), witnessed a new wave of reconstruction for the area along Stawki Street. As late as 1921, ‘Dom Składowy Miejskich Zakładów Zaopatrywania Warszawy’ (Warsaw Municipal Supply Center) occupied some premises of the old market at Stawki 4/6. Virtually, it was the local administrative body, established with the sanction of the Warsaw City Council to coordinate and maintain the modernization of the supply and merchant procedures. The new administrative formation agreed upon the reconstruction and expansion of an old railway affiliation, which had been carved into the military facilities back in the 1890s. The renovation of the freight terminal, in actual terms the affiliate of the WARSAW GDAŃSKA station to the east, will take another decade to be performed within the major part of the former ‘Plac Broni’ site. During this period, new railroad tracks, as well as five large warehouses, were built. 

1935 / 2020 COMPARISON:

Stawki map 1935 Umschlagplatz WarszawaStawki map 2019SLIDE me

On the date of putting into service, the new freight depot happened to become the largest of such kind in Poland with a carrying capacity of 170 000 tonnes of goods transhipped annually. In the pre-WW2 years, the freight terminal was increasingly used as ‘Plac Przeładunkowy’ or ‘transshipment site’ in English or later ‘Umschlagplatz’ in German, the sadly known euphemism for mass deportations from the Warsaw ghetto to come. Looking further forward, the less part of the former transport depot would be used by the Germans to maintain the mass deportations in 1942. The greater part of the freight terminal continued to receive and store the goods. In 1944 at the height of the ‘Warsaw Uprising’ the fighters of the ‘Home Army’ stormed into the station and took some supplies, still stored within the spacious warehouses. The railroad tracks were demolished within the after-war years and the warehouses of the former freight depot (the eastern part of the former ‘Plac Broni’ had been preserved until the 1970s when the area was cleared to give space to a new residential district, present up today. Some remains of the former transport facilities (the eastern part, beyond the territory of the Umschlagplatz ‘transshipment area’) survived until the 2000s before the final demolition. 

The remaining storage facilities inthe 1970
The remaining storage facilities in the Eastern part of the former freight depot, the 1970s.
The former storage facilities, Umschlagplatz, Warsaw 1970s
The former storage facilities of the freight terminal to the East of the ‘deportation area’. The 1970s

One more and never-fulfilled construction plan for the remaining area of the former ‘Plac Broni’ included the build-up of a new bus terminal with the first day of work scheduled for September 1, 1939. History had other plans and the bus depot, drafted on paper with the spacious waiting room, a lunchroom, a multi-window ticket office, and even a washroom, was never to be fulfilled. The project implicated a budget of no less than 150,000 PLN at that time. A new transport terminal was assigned to have a passenger platform of 120 meters long with the capacity to manage up to 12 buses at once, thus being the largest transport depot of such kind in Warsaw. The outbreak of the Second World War, the German air bombardments, the seizure of Warsaw, and later the occupation draw the line with the ambitious plans of the further transformation of the area of the former ‘Plac Broni’. The place for a never-built transport terminal was to be turned into the site of mass exodus during the Holocaust. 

Umschlagplatz train station Warsaw
People are being loaded onto trains at Umschlagplatz: the photo was made from the Aryan side. In the background, are the houses on Dzika Street, maybe the intersection with Szczęśliwa
Jews from Warsaw Ghetto loading onto trains at the Umschlagplatz in German-occupied Warsaw. Photo taken during so-called Großaktion Warschau in summer 1942
Jews from Warsaw Ghetto loaded onto trains at the Umschlagplatz. The photo was taken during the so-called ‘Großaktion Warschau’ in the summer of 1942
The SS soldiers at the Umschlagplatz Warsaw
This photograph was taken by an SS officer Franz Konrad, an administrative manager for the acquisition of Jewish property and chattels in the Warsaw Ghetto, responsible for the requisition, sorting, and routing of Jewish assets, funds, equipment, and machinery.
The deportation from Warsaw during the Holocaust
A rare photograph of the deportation area inside the perimeter of Umschlagplatz

Though the freight terminal to the north of Stawki Street would become a site of the forced exodus and the tragedy of the Warsaw ghetto, the maternal ‘Warsaw Gdanska’ station was left by the Germans to maintain its operation with the intended purpose of transport terminal. Distanced 800 meters to the northeast from the ‘Umschlagplatz’ memorial, the station, historically regarded as the ‘Vistula station’, was opened as far as 1877 as a transport point for a new ‘Droga Żelazna Nadwiślańska’ (Vistula River Road). It took almost two decades before the 1930s and since the station had been burned during the First World War to maintain repair works. In the years of the occupation, the Germans renamed the station ‘Warsaw Danziger Bahnhof’ with the preserved functions of one of the intermediary stations of the railroad system. The pre-war terminal was later demolished and the year 1958 witnessed the opening of a new transport station with the generally known ‘Warsaw Gdanska’ notion.

1945 / 2020 COMPARISON

The 1945 of UmschlagplatzStawki map 2019SLIDE me

 

STAWKI 4/6 (MODERN 10)

FORMER PUBLIC SCHOOLS № 112, 120, 122 AND OFFICES

By the early XX century, Stawki Street in Warsaw was already notable for the multiformity of its housing development. Since the year 1895, the crossroad with Dzika Street had been occupied by the wooden shelter for the homeless as well as new spacious merchant pavilions accompanying the area five years later. The district was not kept away from the construction of educational institutions as well. As far back as 1902 the purchased ground at Stawki 34/36 was developed (at the request of the Association of Mutual Assistance to Trade Workers of the Mosaic Confession) with a new Craft School, built for the comfort of 250 students simultaneously. As history went to the 1920s, three one-story schools (№ 120, 122, and 175) were built on a plot of ground at Stawki 21/23/25 respectively. At that moment the part of the old market on the opposite side of the road had been already granted to ‘Dom Składowy Miejskich Zakładów Zaopatrywania Warszawy’ (Warsaw Municipal Supply Center), an administrative body initiated in 1921. 

As far back as the 1930s, at the time of the epilogue of the reconstruction of an old freight depot to the north of Stawki Street, the local authorities issued the built-up some new erections, including a hard-wall building at Stawki 4/6. This new structure was assigned to perform the final steps in the makeover of the former merchant area. The building-up of a new monumental four-story erection was finally completed as early as 1935. Aside from a new office for the former ‘Warsaw Municipal Supply Center’, some premises were assigned to store the municipal archive. These prescriptions were no more than a drop in an ocean as the better part of the building was prescribed to host three schools at once: № 112, 120, and 122. Consequently, schools № 120 and 122, which had been previously operated on the opposite side of Stawki Street since the 1920s, were now granted new accommodation. 

UMSCHLAGPLATZ. Stawki 4/6 building
One of the infamous photos of the UMSCHLAGPLATZ. Stawki 4/6 building is on the left
Stawki 4/6 building, Umschlagplatz, Warsaw 1942
Stawki 4/6 building is far left, 1942
Jews captured during the Warsaw ghetto uprising, April-May 1943
Jews captured and assembled at the ‘Umschlagplatz’ during the Warsaw ghetto uprising
Jews captured by the SS are interrogated by the ghetto wall in Warsa ghetto
The Warsaw Jews captured by the SS are interrogated before being taken to the Umschlagplatz

The majority of the sadly remembered photos of the Umschlagplatz deportation area during the occupation of the city and the mass expulsion of the residents of the Warsaw ghetto in the summer of 1942, depicted the open area just in front of the Stawki 4/6 building (generally far left). The area behind the building (in fact the inner courtyard of the neighboring school at Stawki 8) was used by the Germans as a detention area, the waiting point for the doomed people, such as Janusz Korchak and his orphans on their way to the Treblinka extermination camp. Today, one can observe the wall of red brick Apr. 70 meters long and 2 meters high. In factual contrast with the general assumptions and assertions of some guides, that the wall is no less than an authentically preserved relict of the former Umschlagplatz ‘transshipment area’ since 1942, the well-known aerial photo of the area, taken in 1945, as well as the attestation of the recognized polish historians, lives poor authenticity to that version. In defiance of its look and the metal particles on the top of the wall, it was built after the war, likely out of the remains of one of the pre-war erections. As late as 2014 part of the wall was demolished to be later reconstructed. Since 1958 the building has been home to Zespół Szkół Licealnych I Ekonomicznych nr 1 Im. Mikołaja Kopernika (Complex No. 1 of the High School and Economics named after Nicolaus Copernicus). In 2002 another Warsaw location was facilitated to depict the Umschlagplatz site in the appraised ‘Pianist’ movie by Roman Polanski. 

Stawki 4/6 building in Warsaw today
Modern Stawki 10: a home for the High School and Economics Named after Nicolaus Copernicus
The wall behind the modern Stawki 10 building
The wall behind the modern Stawki 10 building

 

STAWKI 21 (MODERN 5/7) 

FORMER PUBLIC SCHOOLS № 153 AND 175

The second building, which occupied the area as far back as the mid-1930s and is sadly remembered within the period of the mass deportations, is the municipal building, initially assigned with the Stawki 21 address. Back in the 1920s, three one-story schools were built on a spot of land opposite the home shelter and the old market. The grand plan for the modernization of the area included new premises for these three educational institutions. As early as 1935 two of them: 120 and 122 were moved to a new building at Stawki 4/6 on the opposite side of the street. The second-in-a-row building was built before the year 1937 and occupied the greater part of the territory nearby. The remaining school №175 was later moved here as well as another Warsaw school №153. The remaining erections of the former old schools would be completely demolished before World War Two. 

FORMER PUBLIC SCHOOLS № 153 AND 175 at Stawki
Three one-story public schools on the opposite side of Stawki Street, the 1920s
The wall of the former selection area in the Warsaw ghetto
The doomed victims from the Warsaw ghetto at the UMSCHLAGPLATZ. Stawki 21 is in the background beyond the wall
The Order police and the Germans at the Umschlagplatz, Warsaw
The Order police and the Germans at the Umschlagplatz, Stawki 21 again in the background

The building and two schools inside were destined to operate (for intended purposes) for a short period before the outbreak of the war. As the Germans occupied the city and later turned the area into the  Umschlagplatz (transshipment site), the former educational building was also occupied by the SS soldiers as well as the members of the local ‘police of order’, generally formed of non-polish citizens. One of the premises had also served as an office for the senior German officer, who would supervise the mass deportations nearby. The building at Stawki 21 (modern 5/7) was put into repair works years after the end of the war. As early as 1973 the Department of Psychology at the University of Warsaw moved into the premises of the renovated building. The modernization included the expansion of the wing to Andersa Street, which can be easily traced with the comparison of the photos. The repair works in the 1970s also revealed the scrabbled inscriptions on the walls in the basement, the former detention premise for some inmates. The modern front side of the building with a new address includes a memorial plaque with a piece of brief information on the dramatic history of the building during the Holocaust. 

The former educational building after the war in Warsaw
The former educational building after the war
Stawki 21 and the panorama over 'Umschlagplatz' Warsaw
Another panorama at the former ‘Umschlagplatz’. Stawki 21 is to the right
'Umschlagplatz' as it looks today
Today Department of Psychology at the University of Warsaw accommodates the building

 

STAWKI 8 (MODERN 10)

PUBLIC SCHOOL, PLANNED TO BE OPEN ON SEPTEMBER 1, 1939

Towards the end of the 1930s, two built buildings (Stawki 4/6 and Stawki 21) at Stawki Street in Warsaw already accommodated five public schools (112, 120, 122, 153, 175), three of which (120, 122, 175) had been previously located on the crossroad with Dzika street nearby. As late as 1939 the remaining storage facilities of the ‘Warsaw Municipal Supply Center’ were assigned for demolition to leave space for the erection of another educational building, another public school, scheduled to be open on September 1, 1939. The administrative and teaching staff was already complimented, as well as the list of pupils filled, and the educational schedule written. The outbreak of the armed aggression of the Third Reich cast a doomed shadow over the plans for a new school at Stawki Street and the further occupation and the liquidation of the Warsaw ghetto metamorphosed the area and the intended purpose of the building endlessly. Still, as of the date 1939, the new erection, facing Stawki Street, was neighboring Stawki 4/6 with three schools and administrative premises and with an old shelter for the homeless on the corner of Dzika Street (it is unknown in what year it had been closed). 

Panorama of the former 'Umschlagplatz' in 1945.
Panorama of the former ‘Umschlagplatz’ in 1945. The former Stawki 8 building could be clearly observed
Stawki 8 building Umschlaplatz
Stawki 8 is first from the bottom left

Summarizing the above, by the outbreak of the Second World War, the image of Stawki Street had already been transformed, not least due to a new building at Stawki 8, still with the smell of a whitewash. With the occupation to come, the German presence, and later with bleeding over the area into a site for mass deportation of the residents of the Warsaw ghetto, the designation of the never-opened school had been metamorphosed either. The Germans disposed of a minuscule hospital within one of the premises of the buildings. Along with that, the building at Stawki 8 has been recorded in history due to more dramatic occasions, apart from the very location next to the deportation area of Umschlagplatz Warsaw. Those desolated residents of the Warsaw ghetto, who were herded into the ‘detention area’ and were not put into cattle trucks the same day for one reason or another, were now engaged to spend day and night within the so-called ‘containment area’. When nightfall came, these people were taken from Stawki Street (the sad panorama from photos) into the inner courtyard of the planned school. This very courtyard next to the wing of Stawki 8 and behind Stawki 4/6 is topographically regarded by both buildings. 

The infamous 'containment area', 1942
The infamous ‘containment area’ within the courtyard during the mass deportations. Summer 1942

Apart from the disposal of people within the courtyard behind two educational buildings, Germans found themselves in a more controlled position to supervise the inmates inside the building. In a wider dramatic sense, the doomed residents of the ghetto, who had been prisoners for almost three years in inhuman conditions, were now taken to spend day and night under the guards before being taken to the Treblinka death camp for extermination. Access to the toilets inside the buildings was forbidden, there were no active water pipes and the herded people generally had no or poor amount of provision (evidently depicted in ‘Pianist’ movie by Roman Polanski). Depending on the density of people crowded within cramped rooms, some of them were to stand all night without answering the call of nature. Consequently, the conditions were not too different from the cattle wagons, a means to take the victims of the ‘final solution’ to death camps. Years after the war, the inscriptions were found on the walls of the building at Stawki 8, once made by people on their way to Treblinka. 

The remnants of the former Umschlagplatz area in Warsaw in 1945
A rare photograph of the inner courtyard of the building
Stawki 8 after the War
The panorama over the Stawki 8 building and the ‘Umschlagplatz’ memorial plates, 1964

Even two years after the mass deportations of the summer of 1942, Germans used to detent some captives within the buildings of the former ‘transshipment area’ (UMSCHLAGPLATZ). On August 1, 1944, a unit of the Polish members of the Home Army, led by Stanisław Janusz Sosabowski, attacked the Germans within the territory of the former ‘Umschlagplatz’. At the same time, they managed to take the supplies within the former freight depot, the rebels succeeded in storming Stawki 8 buildings with the release of 50 inmates, who turned out to be Jews from Hungary and Greece. It took decades for this building to be repaired after the war. The photo of 1964 depicted new windows, yet the general outwall was still very similar to the state, it was liberated back in 1945. The building accommodates “Muranów” Youth Culture Center (Młodzieżowy Dom Kultury “Muranów” im. C.K. Norwida), which moved here as early as 2009 after the years of reconstruction works. 

Stawki 8 today, Warsaw ghetto today
The youth Cultural Center nowadays accommodates the building which is the closest one to the memorial
Stawki 8, Warsaw Poland
The inner courtyard from some of the previous archival photos

 

DZIKA 4 / STAWKI 12

FORMER SHELTER FOR HOMELESS

In the late XIX century and despite the transformation of the former ‘Plac Broni’ area and the railway offshoot, the territory to the north of Stawki Street was mainly a wasteland and bare place. As recently as two decades before the end of the century, dozens of small ponds could be still recognized within the area to the west. As late as 1895 a new wooden building was erected on the crossroad of Stawki and Dzika Street with the intended purpose of becoming ‘DOM NOCLEGOWY DLA BEZDOMNYCH’, a shelter for the homeless. The property was run by the ‘Albertine Brothers’, a Catholic congregation, that had been initiated in the Polish city of Krakow back in 1888. The institution was also granted partial financing on behalf of the local authorities and the city budget of Warsaw. At the time Dzika Street had much more space within the city map of Warsaw and a home shelter was entitled to Dzika 64 address. 

FORMER SHELTER FOR HOMELESS in Warsaw
This photo was taken at the intersection of Stawki and Dzika streets Apr. 30 meters from the Umshclaplatz memorial

At the outset of the ‘Great War’ (First World War), the mission of the shelter was shifted to become a refuge for escapees from the Russian Empire. The inter-war years of now independent Poland and painfully poor standards of life once again affected the wooden one-story building at Dzika Street. The building was slightly renovated and reopened in 1924 with a new address of Dzika 4 with the initial mission as a shelter for the homeless. At that moment in history, the institution had already gained a vicious reputation with the dialect designation as ‘the circus’. There were rumors that such a title came into general use due to a local police inspector, who was depressed with the poor conditions of the shelter and with its population and proclaimed, that the place was more like a circus or a ‘wild beast show’. In a factual sense, his exaggeration was close to the truth.  

DZIKA 4 / STAWKI 12 in Warsaw before the War
This photo was taken by the cameraman standing on Dzika street

In the inter-war years, the shelter at Dzika 4, as well as the other institutions of such kind in Warsaw, were generally overpopulated with those, who strived to find a place to live with a free plate of soup. This social prelude indeed resulted in poor sanitary conditions and even epidemics among the residents. On the other hand, the population included criminal elements, marginal figures, troublemakers, and the periodic alcoholic debauches that led to police bust-ups. In local use, the phrase ‘circus man’ was now to be associated with characterized marginal elements, drunks, and criminals, in contrast with any efforts of the administration to maintain a sort of ‘selection’ of the residents. 

The former Homeless shelter in Warsaw, Poland
A unique photograph of this particular homeless shelter during its operation. You may the contingent yourself

It is still historically unidentified, the exact moment in history when the old shelter was closed and the wooden erection was demolished. The building could be easily observed within the aerial photos taken in 1935, yet within the occupation and the deportations, another construction was at the place. Taking into factual consideration the staged ‘refinement’ of the area in the 1930s: the liquidation of an old market, the build-up of three new municipal buildings for schools, and the upcoming plans of transformation of the remaining open area into a large bus depot, it’s likely that the shelter had been out of usage before the Second World War. While drawing comparisons with the modern outlook of the former ‘Umschlagplatz’ area, the wooden home shelter was once located on the very crossroad of Stawki and Dzika streets, Apr. 50 meters to the left of the memorial. 

The former homeless shelter at Swawki street
I made this compilation of the archival and my 2019 photo for a better understanding

I am very grateful to war archives, museums, libraries, private collections, and writers for the historical photos in this article. To the extent that some author or a copyright owner may not want some of the above black-and-white photos to be used for educational purposes here, please contact me for adding credits or deleting the pictures from the article. 

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11 коментарів Join the DiscussionUMSCHLAGPLATZ in Warsaw
  1. @Jack

    John C: In your comment, you ask, “At the site of the Warsaw Umschlagplatz is there anything left of the actual railway freight yard (train tracks etc)?” Whereas the buildings and railway tracks survived until, I believe, the early 1970s, then everything was dismantled/demolished and several apartment buildings were erected in 1974, called “Osiedle Stawki”. You can read about it on Wiki by typing ”Stawki_(Warszawa)”

  2. @Jack

    Hi Maxim,

    Thanks for doing the research and posting all the information and photos, fascinating!

    I just want to add two things:

    1) The photograph (“The Order police and the Germans at the Umschlagplatz, Stawki 21 again in the background”) shows SS-Gruppenführer Jürgen Stroop who led the suppression of the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising.

    2) Yakir-in your comment, you say, “I’m not sure where exactly the train station was for the victims from the Umschlagplatz.” Take a look at the deathcamps.org website. It has aerial photos of the whole area. In 1974 several apartment buildings were built at the site.

  3. @Yakir

    Great article!
    I’m not sure where exactly the train station was for the victims from the Umschlagplatz.
    Thanks

  4. @John C

    This looks like a well researched article. I have been to Auschwitz 1 and Auschwitz 2(Berkenau) and the former Krakow ghetto (virtually unaltered) and Oskar Schindler’s apartment near Wawel castle and all very interesting. At the site of the Warsaw Umschlagplatz is there anything left of the actual railway freight yard (train tracks etc) ?
    Another article than would be interesting would be on some of the surviving bunkers of Berlin and some of the surviving former Nazi government buildings. One prime example would be Bendlerblock where the 1944 coup against Hitler unfortunately failed.

  5. @Pawel

    It is a phenomenally inquisitive, historically accurate and literarily impeccable piece of writing. I am a tour guide of Warsaw and I am most impressed with how professional this is. Thank you.

  6. @Steve Bernhardt

    Fantastic!  Thank you for the time, effort, and passion you put into your site.

  7. @Bill DeLauder

    Excellent. absolutely excellent.

  8. @Barney Shelby

    bookmarked!!, I like your website!

  9. @Bezalel Lavi

    1) is it possible to display a map of warsaw in 1940-43?

    2) could you let me know whether there was in those years either a coal warehouse or any other spot connected to coal loading for the Warsaw east rail line?

    Thank you and I appreciate your detailed information.

     

     

  10. @Susan Kleiman

    Thanks for this do you have any information for Wolomin Poland?

  11. @Wendy Hodgden

    My father was a survivor of 5 camps.  He was never in Warsaw Ghetto but many of his family were.

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