From Untold Stories of The Holocaust’s Facebook:
Simon (Shimon, Szymon) Srebnik
(10 April 1930 — 16 August 2006) was a Polish Jew who was one of only two or
three Survivors of the Nazi Death Camp known as Chełmno Extermination Camp.
CAMP LIFE
Srebnik witnessed his Father
killed in the Lodz Ghetto. Simon was thirteen years old when he was taken to
the Chelmno Extermination Camp. His Mother was murdered in a Gas Van at the Camp.
Simon, however, was assigned by the Camp SS to a Jewish work detail which
maintained the Camp.
During his time in the Camp,
Srebnik participated in the disposal of bodies by gathering bones that had not
been burned and then rowing a flat-bottomed boat down the river every day to
dump sacks of crushed bone into the Narew River. While rowing, Srebnik
entertained the Nazi SS guards by singing Prussian military songs that the
guards had taught him. Some of the bones were those of people who had been
gassed. Srebnik also won jumping contests and speed races which the SS
organized and forced the chained Prisoners of Chelmno to participate in (those
who lost these contests were usually killed).
On January 18, 1945, two days
before Soviet troops arrived and liberated the Camp, all Prisoners who remained
in the camp were executed by being shot in the head. Srebnik was shot but
somehow survived. Srebnik was seriously wounded by Nazi gunfire during the
liquidation of the Camp, but managed to escape and find refuge with a Polish Farmer.
The Germans offered a large cash reward for turning Srebnik in, but the Poles,
who already feared the approaching Russians more than the Germans, did not
betray him.
POST-HOLOCAUST YEARS
After the Holocaust, Srebnik
settled in Ness Ziona, Israel. He was interviewed by French filmmaker Claude
Lanzmann in 1985 for the documentary "Shoah". According to the
Jerusalem Post, Srebnik died in 2006 at age 76.
He was a Witness in the Adolf
Eichmann Trial (session 66-68)
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