On the Borders - Bulletin No. 3
Extent and Medium
1 electronic resource (16 pages)
Creator(s)
- קאמיטעט צו זאמלען מאטעריאלן וועגן יידישן חורבן אין פוילן 1939
- Committee for collecting material about the destruction of the Jews in Poland, 1939
Scope and Content
This bulletin was intended to publish the work of the Committee for collecting material about the destruction of the Jews in Poland, describing the conditions around and at the borders. The bulletin collects fragments of testimonies from several cities and towns that found themselves on the border between the German and Russian occupied territories. Among them Sierpc, Ostrów Mazowiecka, Wysokie Mazowieckie and Brok. They bulletin mentions eviction proclamations to Jewish populations living around the border, as well as perilous illegal crossing of the border to the Russian side. Testimonies mention also arrests and deportations to refugee camps, and masses of refugees in general. The Germans extorted the refugees for their valuables. German soldiers also shot refugees, including women, if they were Jews. Bulletin No. 3 is an extract from a volume of protocols /statements provided by a group of Polish-Jewish refugee writers and journalists who fled to Vilnius, Lithuania. In 1939 they formed a committee to collect evidence on the condition of the Jews in Poland under Nazi occupation.
Conditions Governing Access
Access may be restricted to TAU community via Automatic Proxy
Physical Characteristics and Technical Requirements
Mode of access: WWW
Note(s)
Electronic access only
Electronic text and image data. Jerusalem : Yad Vashem 2015
Title viewed 16.1.18
Subjects
- Jews--Persecutions--Poland--Sierpc
- Jews--Persecutions--Poland--Brok.
- Jews--Persecutions--Poland--Wysokie Mazowieckie.
- World War, 1939-1945--Atrocities--Poland--Ostrów Mazowiecka (Powiat)--History.
- World War, 1939-1945--Poland.
- World War, 1939-1945--Campaigns--Poland
- Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945)--Archival resources
- Jewish refugees--Lithuania.
Places
- Poland--History--Occupation, 1939-1945.