International Holocaust Remembrance Day
Today is International
Remembrance Day: 2023 is the 78th Anniversary of the liberation of the German
Concentration and Death Camps by the Allies and the end of the Holocaust.
Between March 1933 and May 1945
the Germans ran around 42,500 Concentration, Labor, POW and Death Camps and
Ghettos throughout occupied Europe. Between 15-20 Million Men, Women and Children
were imprisoned and/or died at these sites.
That number includes:
8 Death Camps (in German-Occupied
Poland: Auschwitz, Chełmno, Bełżec, Sobibór, Treblinka, Majdanek, Maly
Trostenets in German-Occupied-Belarus) and Sajmiste in German-Occupied Serbia)
980 Concentration Camps
30,000 Camp Slave Labor Camps
1,150 Jewish Ghettos
500 Brothels filled with Sex
Slaves
8 Disabled Killing Centers
(Am Spiegelgrund Clinic in Austria, Bernburg Euthanasia Centre in Germany,
Brandenburg Euthanasia Centre in Germany, Grafeneck Euthanasia Centre in
Germany, Hadamar Euthanasia Centre in Germany,
Hartheim Euthanasia Centre in Germany, Soldau Concentration Camp in
German-Occupied Poland and Sonnenstein Euthanasia Centrein Germany)
1,000 POW camps
Targeted Groups Murdered By
Nazi Germany: 1933-1945
Jews: 6 Million Men, Women and Children.
Soviet Prisoners of War:
3.3 Million Soldiers (including 50,000 Jewish Soldiers.)
Non-Jewish Polish Civilians:
3 Million Men, Women and Children.
Serb Civilians (on the
territory of Croatia, Bosnia and Herzegovina): 600,000 Men, Women and Children.
People with Disabilities:
270,000 Men, Women and Children (doesn’t include the 375,000 Disabled who were
Forcibly Sterilized.)
Roma and Sinti (Gypsies):
500,000 Men, Women and Children.
Jehovah's Witnesses: 5,000 Men, Women and Children.
Homosexuals: 9,000 Men in Concentration Camps (Doesn’t
include the 50,000 Men held in Regular Prisons.)
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