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  1. Sobibor was one of four extermination camps established as part of Operation Reinhard, the deadliest phase of the Holocaust. [2] The extermination of Europe's Jews did not originate as a single top-down decision, but was rather a patchwork of decisions made regarding particular occupied areas. [3]

  2. Oct 2, 2020 · German SS and police authorities constructed Sobibor in the spring of 1942. It was the second of three killing centers established as part of Operation Reinhard (also known as Aktion Reinhard or Einsatz Reinhard). Operation Reinhard was the plan to murder the Jews of the General Government (Generalgouvernement).

  3. Sobibor, Nazi German extermination camp located in a forest near the village of Sobibór in the present-day Polish province of Lublin. Built in March 1942, it operated from May 1942 until October 1943, and its gas chambers killed a total of about 250,000 Jews, mostly from Poland and occupied areas.

  4. Jan 28, 2020 · Previously unseen photos from the Sobibor death camp in Nazi-occupied Poland have been unveiled, including two purported to show notorious guard John Demjanjuk.

  5. Jan 27, 2020 · BERLIN — Historians in Germany have unearthed hundreds of photos of the notorious Sobibor death camp and other key sites in the Nazi extermination machine, stashed for decades in albums ...

  6. Aug 24, 2019 · Imagno/Getty Images Countless Polish Jews gathered before being executed on the death camp site believed to be Sobibór. Unlike Dachau and Auschwitz, Sobibór was never a political prison or a concentration camp for forced labor on a mass scale. It existed, from its moment of creation, solely to kill human beings.

  7. Jan 5, 2024 · Four transports of Jews from the transit camp in Drancy reached Sobibor, a total of about 4,000 people. Mostly stateless persons or those who had obtained citizenship a little earlier, including a significant percentage of French Jews, were brought in to the facility.