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The Sobibor uprising was a revolt of about 600 prisoners that occurred on 14 October 1943, during World War II and the Holocaust at the Sobibor extermination camp in occupied Poland. It was the second uprising in an extermination camp, partly successful, by Jewish prisoners against the SS forces, following the revolt in Treblinka .
A highly fictionalized version of the Sobibor revolt was depicted in the 1978 American TV miniseries Holocaust. The revolt was dramatized in the 1987 British TV film Escape from Sobibor, directed by Jack Gold and adapted from the book by Richard Rashke. The film's consultants included survivors Thomas Blatt, Shlomo Szmajzner, and Esther Raab.
The majority of the survivors among Sobibor's Arbeitshäftlinge survived as a result of their camp-wide revolt on October 14, 1943. Dutch historian Jules Schelvis estimated that 158 inmates perished in the revolt, killed by the guards and the minefield surrounding the camp, and that a further 107 were re-captured and murdered by the SS ...
This list is as complete as current records allow. There were 58 known Sobibor survivors: 48 male and 10 female. Except where noted, the survivors were Arbeitshäftlinge, inmates who performed slave-labour for the daily operation of the camp, who escaped during the camp-wide revolt on October 14, 1943.
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Sergeant, killed in the revolt [6] [8] Anton Getzinger: SS-Oberscharführer: Staff sergeant, killed in an accident with a hand grenade in September 1943, several weeks before the revolt [6] Hubert Gomerski: SS-Unterscharführer: Corporal [5] [6] Siegfried Graetschus: SS-Oberscharführer: Staff sergeant, Head of Ukrainian Guard (2/2), killed in ...
Escape from Sobibor is a 1987 British television film which aired on ITV and CBS. [1] It is the story of the mass escape from the Nazi extermination camp at Sobibor , the most successful uprising by Jewish prisoners of German extermination camps (uprisings also took place at Auschwitz-Birkenau and Treblinka ).
Simjon Rosenfeld [1] (October 1, 1922 [2] – June 3, 2019 [3]) was a survivor of the Sobibor death camp and a participant in the prisoner revolt which took place in that camp. [4] Born in Baranowicze, Poland (now Belarus), in 1940 he was recruited to the Red Army. [5] In 1941, the Germans captured him and sent him to build a labor camp in Minsk.