Addition

Auschwitz or Warsaw?

An interpretation of the possible fate of Levie Wennek and his brother Leendert Samuël Wennik.

Early October 1943, a month after the arrival of the transport of 7 September 1943 from Westerbork with in total 987 deportees in Auschwitz, a group of 187 Dutch prisoners was formed who were deported to Warschau to clear the area of rubble of the devastated ghetto. Originally there was a group of 264 men, younger than 50 years, of whom 77 were killed in the gas chamber.

It had previously been decided to transfer the contingent of men, that had arrived from Westerbork on 9 September 1943 in Auschwitz, in their entirety to Warsaw. According to a subsequent finding by the Red Cross, all men between the age of 16 and 51 years, who had been deported to Poland with the transport of 7 September, arrived  in Warsaw via Auschwitz on 8 October 1943, where they have died before 31 March 1944.

Wielek describes in his book “De oorlog die Hitler won” on pagd 381 that the cleaning of the rubble of the devastated ghetto lasted until 28 July 1944 under the most humiliating and beastly conditions. When the Russians stood before the city, the crematorium under construction was not ready and 600 sick prisoners, who could no longer walk, were shot to death and the rest had to march 120 km up to Kutno, from where they were transported to Dachau with 90 men per cattle car.

And an American historian, Gerald Reitlinger writes that when approaching Russian troops, the survivors of the camp were sent to concentration camp Dachau via Kutno. According to Reitlinger, of the mentioned transport of 7 October 1943 from Auschwitz to Warsaw, there were only 15 survivors.

It has also been established that many prisoners of this Jewish camp in Warsaw died during a severe typhoid epidemic in early 1944. Among them were also many Jews from the Netherlands.

Interpretation based on a study, reports and testimonies as described in the book “Etty Hillesum in perspective”, edited by K.A.D. Smelik, Ria van den Brandt and Meins G. Coetsier. (pages 149-151). Editors: Academia Press, Ghent, Belgium

See also: "De oorlog die Hitler won" by H. Wielek, 1947 - Amsterdamse Boek- en Courantmij N.V. Amsterdam, pages 381 and 382.

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