The first point that's worth mentioning is that the mainstream regards this as an Operation Reinhardt camp. I agree with that characterization, and so we should dispense with the false dichotomy that an "Operation Reinhardt" camp must be either a transit camp or an extermination camp. Since there were AR labor camps, we must consider the possibility, the likelihood, that other AR camps like Treblinka, were labor camps similar to other AR labor camps. Remember that Eberl actually calls the Treblinka camp under construction a Labor Camp, so there's direct documentary evidence for that conclusion. But this thread is about establishing the existence and nature of other AR labor camps, most specifically Trawniki.
Here's what USHMM has to say:
So it has been established that the category of "Operation Reinhardt" includes camps dedicated to labor as part of this economic operation, rather than a killing center OR a transit center. What kind of labor was performed at the Operation Reinhardt Trawniki Labor Camp?German staff and their auxiliaries, most of them trained at the Trawniki training camp, murdered approximately 1.5 million Jews and an undetermined number of Poles, Roma (Gypsies), and Soviet POWs in the Operation Reinhard killing centers...
Victims’ property was stored in depots in the city Lublin, at the Lublin-Majdanek concentration camp, and at the Trawniki and Poniatowa forced labor camps.
Other Operation Reinhard Camps
Also part of Operation Reinhard were several forced labor camps for Jews in the Lublin District. The camps included Poniatowa, Trawniki, Budzyn, and Krasnik....
Very interesting... so we have an Operation Reinhardt camp dedicated to sorting property, in which the property was confiscated from deportees. The closed wagons of the confiscated property (without the passengers) were sent to Trawniki to be sorted, washed, and repaired and the passengers themselves were deported to other transit camps like Sobibor.Forced-Labor Camp
During the summer of 1942 (my note: Same time as the opening what Eberl called the labor camp Treblinka), Trawniki also began to serve as a forced-labor camp for Jews (Zwangsarbeitslager für Juden). Under the auspices of Operation “Reinhard,” the SS and police constructed the labor camp adjacent to the training camp, separated only by the original stone wall that surrounded the abandoned sugar factory.
The appearance of a Jewish workforce at Trawniki coincided with the establishment of procedures for disposing of the property of the Jews murdered in Operation Reinhard. Globocnik selected Trawniki to be a storage depot for clothing flowing in from the killing centers. The so-called Clothing Depot (Bekleidungslager) was located just outside the fence of the training camp. In June 1942, three freight cars stocked with baggage taken from Viennese Jews bound for Sobibor were diverted to Trawniki. That same month the SS brought in a Jewish labor detachment of 20 to 40 women to sort, wash, and repair the clothing.
Although this thread is not about Treblinka it's notable that I am saying the function of the Treblinka camp was the same as this Operation Reinhardt Labor Camp Trawniki. Trawniki served as a pendant to the Sobibor transit camp, and in a similar way the Treblinka sorted camp served as a pendant to the deportations at and through the Malkinia/Siedlce lines. Both camps received shipments of confiscated property in closed goods wagons which had been detached from the deportation trains.
So we already have a lot of parallels between Trawniki and my suggestion for the main functionality of Treblinka:
- Constructed as labor camps for Jews (Zwangsarbeitslager für Jude)
- Opened at the same time
- Both camps received shipments of closed wagons, detached from the main deportation train, containing confiscated property to be sorted, washed, repaired, and stored as part of Operation Reinhardt
That does beg the question- was Trawniki the subject of similar errors in interpretation as my conclusions with respect to Treblinka? Yes it was. There was actually a fractal of errors in interpretation which was discussed at length in Mattogno, Kues, and Graf's work on The "Extermination Camps" of "Aktion Reinhardt" (please retain this text somewhere Germar there is a lot of good information here).
Try to follow the train of errors, as it gets somewhat convoluted:
- Thomas Kues wrote an article about an important discovery in an article published by the newspaper Dziennik Polski dated 11 July 1942:
“The Slaughter of the Jews The situation of the Jews presents itself even worse. The matter of the Warsaw ghetto is well known. Hunger, death and diseases continually and systematically threaten the Jewish population. In the area of Lublin on the night of 23-24 March [1942] the Jewish population was deported. The sick and disabled were killed on the spot. All children aged 2-3 years from the orphanage, who numbered 108, were sent away from the city along with their nurses and murdered. Altogether 2,500 people were murdered that night, while the remaining 26,000 were sent to camps in Bełżec and Tremblinka [wywieziono do obozów w Bełżcu i Tremblince]. From Izbica Kujawska 8,000 people were deported in an unknown direction. Reportedly in Bełżec and Tremblinka the killing is going on withthe help of poisonous gas
- By all accounts transports to Treblinka had not started by the time this was published, so this is an apocryphal accusation of a Treblinka extermination camp- before it even opened.
- However, Nick Terry supplies the following explanation for that article:
“As the official protocol of the cabinet meeting apparently says ‘Trawniki,’ the gambit – trying to stir up suspicion about a too-early referece to deportations to Treblinka – fails utterly. Somewhere along the chain of transmission from local underground organisation to London and thence to the Dziennik Polski journalist, the information became garbled – something which was clear from re-reading Stola’s article for this critique.”
- So Terry points out that the minutes of the cabinet meeting mentions TRAWNIKI and then -somehow- things "became garbled" and the article published was about Treblinka.
- Mattogno points out that both Trawniki and Treblinka were subject to these apocryphal "death camp" accusations, with a 10 July 1942 paper speaking of "Belzec and Trawniki":
“The […] mass-execution by poison gas of 26,000 Polish Jews […] was reported here today by the Polish vice-Premier Stanislaw Mikolajczyk on the basis of reliable information just received by the Polish Government here. […] The suffocating of the 26,000 Polish Jews by poison gas took place in the two ‘Jewish’ concentration camps which the Nazis have established at Belzec and Trawniki.” - The false reports of an Extermination Camp at Trawniki in July 1942 corresponds with the shipment of closed good wagons detached from deportation trains, which were sent there to be sorted and stored as part of Operation Reinhardt:
In June 1942, three freight cars stocked with baggage taken from Viennese Jews bound for Sobibor were diverted to Trawniki. That same month the SS brought in a Jewish labor detachment of 20 to 40 women to sort, wash, and repair the clothing.
Trawniki is also precedence for the general, and sensible, operation of shipping property directly to one camp and the deportees to another each dedicated for its purpose (Operation Reinhardt vs transit).
To summarize the similarity between Trawniki and Treblinka as camps of Operation Reinhardt:
- Both were constructed as labor camps for Jews (Zwangsarbeitslager für Jude), with the only documentary reference to the purpose of Treblinka also identifying it as a labor camp.
- Opened at a similar time around summer 1942
- Both camps received shipments of closed wagons, detached from the main transportation train, containing confiscated property to be sorted, washed, repaired, and stored as part of Operation Reinhardt
- Both camps, at the same time in summer of 1942, were accused in international reports to have been death camps where tens of thousands of Jews were shipped to be gassed.
- Nobody claims this any more, mainstream acknowledges that Trawniki was an economic camp, as a pendant to Sobibor, which received shipments of property that had been confiscated from deportees sent elsewhere.
- I am suggesting Treblinka was also a pendant to Malkinia, it had the same purpose as Trawniki and was subject to the same false misinterpretation of an extermination operation in the exact same way at the exact same time and for the same reasons.