HOLOCAUST HOME
   OVERVIEW
   ISSUES
   PEOPLE
   HEADLINES
   RESOURCES


Belzec: The Forgotten Camp_
by Rabbi Shaul Rosenblatt
Not much is known about Belzec Concentration Camp, where as many as one million Jews perished. No one survived to tell its stories.

    Email this Print this

I wanted to go to Belzec (pronounced Biwzhets) because no one really does. I felt that as many as a million Jews died there in the space of nine months - and hardly anyone even knows about it. It was a pilgrimage to a holy site: the second largest (after Treblinka) Jewish graveyard in history.

Mike Tregenza was my guide. He is a non-Jewish, English historian who lectures at Lublin university. According to Sir Martin Gilbert, he is the world expert on Belzec.

It is a sleepy little hamlet in southeast Poland. A few thousand people live there. All seem to be related in some way. We stopped for a drink in a bar and the natives seemed unfriendly enough. All in all, it's a pretty innocuous place. One would never guess that of the million Jews who arrived there in 1942, only two survived.

Mike told me that he interviewed the station-master who worked at Belzec during the war. On every cattle car that arrived, there was written a number; the number of "pieces" (as the Germans would say) contained therein. He kept a tally. When he reached seven figures, he could no longer continue.

Belzec was a part of "Operation Reinhardt." Its purpose, which was accomplished, was to destroy the Jewish communities of Eastern Poland - specifically the main centers of Warsaw, Lublin, Cracow and Lvov.

Operation Reinhardt began in March 1942 with the construction of Belzec and ended in August 1943 with the destruction of Treblinka. It utilised three camps: Treblinka in the north, Sobibor and Belzec in the south. It was masterminded by Sturmbahnfuhrer Christian Wirth and Belzec was his prototype " his baby.

Of all the camps in the Holocaust, Belzec was the most deadly. If a person went there, he was not coming back. There are Auschwitz survivors, Mathausen survivors, even Treblinka and Sobibor survivors. One will never meet a Belzec survivor. As such, relatively little is known of what went on inside the camp. Mike, though, with extensive research, can piece together a picture.

Three thousand human beings to ashes turnover time was about 2-3 hours. It took a little more time to sort the clothes and valuables, clean the trains and send them back loaded with goodies. Six thousand a day was probably its maximum capacity.

As Mike explained, once a person arrived in Belzec, he would have wished he was in Dante's inferno. Guns and dogs, undress, run naked up a steep hill flanked by Ukranians with whips, sticks and swords, pushed into a small chamber by the weight of people behind, doors closed, gas.............

That was if he was lucky.

In many instances, the engines, which produced the gas, broke down. There were times when people waited hours upon hours cramped like sardines into a gas chamber until the engines could be fixed and they could be gassed. Even Rudolf Hoess (the erstwhile criminal who became kommondant of Auschwitz) was horrified by the methods used. It was, in his words, "inhumane."

Mike told me that twelve SS men and some Ukranian auxiliaries staffed Belzec. It was a shocking and horrifying thought: twelve SS men could murder a million Jews.

The Germans destroyed Belzec when they left and planted a forest instead. They wanted to cover up what had happened and, unfortunately, they did an excellent job. To the undiscerning eye, absolutely nothing remains. It is a broken railroad track that ends in a road up to a forest. There is a small, dilapidated memorial containing some bones and ashes (which is regularly vandalised by Poles searching for "Jewish gold"). It is overgrown and unkempt.

On the surface, there is nothing to indicate what happened here less than 60 years ago.

But then Mike bent down and picked up some small white and black fragments from the ground. I thought them to be small stones. I looked more closely and was again horrified: they were human bones. Once we reached the mass burial pits, the fragments were everywhere. When I started to search, I found many complete bones, some from adults and some, quite clearly, from children. I found a whole set of teeth " with holes where the fillings had been.

Auschwitz/Birkenau is a major tourist attraction. Treblikna has a heart-wrenching memorial. But at Belzec, there are only bones. It's a quiet spot, in a pretty forest. And if you spent a few years there, you might just be able to pick them all up. But what touched me most deeply about Belzec, and continues to do so, was its loneliness. It is a forgotten camp. So few people visit. The first tragedy is that so many died here. But the more immediate tragedy is that nobody really seems to care.

Related by Rabbi Shaul Rosenblatt, Aish HaTorah

Published: Monday, April 18, 2005

Top of article Submit comment Email this Print this


VISITORS COMMENTS: 33

(1) hicksonlj 3/26/2008 2:54:00 PM

very good story made me cry


(2) Charles Chotkowski 2/1/2008 2:34:00 PM
Belzec information outdated
The article is out of date. Following from American Jewish Committee web site, www.ajc.org

"Belzec Memorial Dedication
The Belzec Memorial and Museum was dedicated on at the site of the notorious Nazi death camp in Poland on June 3, 2004. The Belzec Memorial Project, a joint initiative of AJC and the government of Poland, with support from the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum, is the first effort in 60 years to preserve and protect the long ignored death camp and establish a permanent memorial to the hundreds of thousands of Jews who perished there during the Holocaust."


(3) David Fainman 12/8/2007 2:30:00 PM
2 men survived Belzec
2 men survived Belzec.Rudolf Reder left an account in Polish.He died in 1954.Chaim Hirszman was lynched by anti - Semites in 1946 in Poland after giving evidence at a trial of former Belzec guards.



About the author:

Rabbi Shaul Rosenblatt
Shaul grew up in Liverpool. He studied for his smicha at Aish Hatorah in Jerusalem where he met his first wife Elana a"h who passed away in 2001 after a long struggle with cancer. They had four children together and Shaul has a further two with his second wife Chana, who he married in 2003. Shaul has written a book, 'Finding Light in the Darkness', published by Targum Press, dealing with the issue of facing hardship in a positive way. Shaul founded Aish UK in 1993 and Tikun UK in 2006 along with Dean Kaye. He enjoys most things in life.


Like what you read? As a non-profit organization, Aish.com relies on support from readers like you to enable us to provide inspiring and relevant articles. Click here to support Aish.com.



If you would like to receive "Aish Weekly Update" or other features via e-mail, please enter you email address here:



Our Privacy Guarantee: Your information is private. Your transactions are secure.
Aish.com, One Western Wall Plaza, POB 14149, Old City, Jerusalem 91141, ISRAEL
phone: (972-2) 628-5666 fax: (972-2) 627-3172 email: webmaster@aish.com

Judaism