A Year In Treblinka

· Pickle Partners Publishing
4.6
111 reviews
eBook
62
Pages
Eligible

About this eBook

An Inmate Who Escaped Tells The Day-To-Day Facts Of One Year Of His Torturous Experiences.

Jankiel Wiernik was a Jewish property manager in Warsaw when the Nazis invaded Poland and was forced into the ghetto in 1940. Despite surviving the horrors of the ghetto at the advanced age of 52, he was sent to a fate worse than death at the notorious death camp at Treblinka, which he immortalized in his memoirs.

“On his arrival at Treblinka aboard the Holocaust train from Warsaw, Wiernik was selected to work rather than be immediately killed. Wiernik’s first job with the Sonderkommando required him to drag corpses from the gas chambers to mass graves. Wienik was traumatized by his experiences. He later wrote in his book: “It often happened that an arm or a leg fell off when we tied straps around them in order to drag the bodies away.” He remembered the horrors of the enormous pyres, where “10,000 to 12,000 corpses were cremated at one time.” He wrote: “The bodies of women were used for kindling” while Germans “toasted the scene with brandy and with the choicest liqueurs, ate, caroused and had a great time warming themselves by the fire.” Wiernik described small children awaiting so long in the cold for their turn in the gas chambers that “their feet froze and stuck to the icy ground” and noted one guard who would “frequently snatch a child from the woman’s arms and either tear the child in half or grab it by the legs, smash its head against a wall and throw the body away.” At other times “children were snatched from their mothers’ arms and tossed into the flames alive.”

“Wiernik escaped Treblinka during the revolt of the prisoners on “a sizzling hot day” of August 2, 1943. A shot fired into the air signalled that the revolt was on. Wiernik wrote that he “grabbed some guns” and, after spotting an opportunity to make a break for the woods, an axe...”

Ratings and reviews

4.6
111 reviews
sue hawnt
18 June 2019
I did not love it ,it was very harrowing to read it was inhumane, the way these poor people were treated, words can not explain how I feel about the captors.It's just so unbelievable, human beings can treat other humans this way especially the children. To the person who wrote this book.Your very brave .And I'm so sorry you at to live, and suffer the rest of your life with these memories .I would give it 100 stars if I could.God rest there souls.
4 people found this review helpful
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Ricardo Carrasco
24 October 2016
As a combat veteran of two wars I just can't grasp how any soldier could bring himself to killing so indiscriminately so many defenseless non-combatans. These Germans, their guards and officers, including Hitler, were not soldiers, they were just evil animals. The world should never let this chapter in history be forgotten. Today we need to be concerned of Donald Trump who blames a the ills of the country on all races except the Aryan race; just like Hitler did when he took over Germany.
16 people found this review helpful
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Moma Monks
8 April 2020
Treblinka can now heal it's wounds from the horror of the German sadistic few This book will carry on reminding future generations of the horror
2 people found this review helpful
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