Zasław concentration camp

Zaslaw
Concentration camp
Prisoners of Zwangsarbeitslager Zaslaw

Zasław location south-east of Plaszow (below Belzec) during World War II, map of Poland in 1939

Location of Zaslaw camp in modern Poland
Coordinates 49°31′N 22°16′E / 49.517°N 22.267°ECoordinates: 49°31′N 22°16′E / 49.517°N 22.267°E
Known for The Holocaust in Poland
Inmates mainly Jews

Zasław concentration camp (in German: Zwangsarbeitslager Zaslaw) was a World War II Nazi German concentration camp, established for ghettoised Jews in occupied Poland near the village of Zasław (now part of Zagórz in Poland).[1]

Operation

Zaslaw was a forced labor camp where the Polish Jews living in the city of Sanok and vicinity were deported for exploitation. Between 1940 and 1943 some 15,000 prisoners passed through it.[2]

In August 1939, 5,400 Jews lived in Sanok. Similarly as in other parts of Poland, also in Sanok the Jews were persecuted, had their property confiscated, were forced to work and systematically murdered. The murders took place at the Glinki cemetery in Sanok. Many Sanok Jews died of emaciation while working for [Nazi German] Kirchhof company [locally], which was wound up in 1942, with the employees transferred to Zasław camp. A tailoring, shoemaking and fur-making workshop were set up in the camp. Many Jews also worked building or repairing roads. By the end of 1943 the camp was liquidated. A thousand Jews were murdered in Zasław, with 5,000 more taken to Bełżec camp. The murdering of the Jews in Sanok took place at locations situated on the outskirts of the town, in the woods, so the victims could immediately be buried. The annihilation of Sanok Jews took place gradually rather than through a single act.
Małgorzata Stawiarska [3]

On January 15, 1943, the prisoners of Zaslaw were transported to the Belzec extermination camp, where they were killed in gas chambers.

Commemoration

A memorial to exterminated Jews was erected in Zasław by the employees of the bus company in Sanok. The memorial to victims of Nazism sits almost directly opposite the town cemetery in Zasław.[2]

Notes and references

  1. Virtual Shtetl (2013). "The labour camp in Zasław". Places of martyrology. Museum of the History of Polish Jews. Retrieved 25 December 2013.
  2. 2.0 2.1 Staff writer, Zasław Zabytki i Miejsca Pamieci Narodowej. Publisher: Gmina Zagórz.
  3. Małgorzata Stawiarska, Mass Killings of Jews in the Polish Town of Sanok during the World War II (Judenmorde in der polnischem Stadt Sanok waehrend des zweites Weltkrieges). Publication: Jewish History Quarterly (Kwartalnik Historii Żydow; 04/2005), Żydowski Instytut Historyczny. Retrieved December 25, 2013.