Brzesko Ghetto
Brzesko Ghetto was a Nazi ghetto during World War II in occupied Poland. The ghetto was created by the Third Reich in 1941 in the Polish town of Brzesko located in the Kraków District about 40 miles from Kraków. The ghetto was open when it was first created. In 1942, walls were put up and the ghetto became a closed ghetto. An estimated 4,000 Jewish people lived there but another 2,000 moved there by 1942, many arriving from Kraków and the surrounding area. The Jewish people living within Brzesko were sent to the Bełżec extermination camp and Auschwitz extermination camp. After the exterminations, the camp was closed end of 1942.
Brzesko Ghetto | |
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Location of Brzesko Ghetto within Poland | |
Location | German-occupied Poland 49°58′00″N 20°37′00″E |
Date | fall 1941 (open ghetto)/ mid July 1942 (closed ghetto) to 17 September 1942 |
Participants | blue police |
Organizations | Nazi SS |
Camp | Belzec extermination camp , Auschwitz concentration camp |
Victims | 6000 |
Survivors | 200 |
Witnesses | Dov Landau |
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