Vernichtungslager Sobibór
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Quelle: Wikipedia. Seiten: 161. Nicht dargestellt. Kapitel: Josef Vallaster, John Demjanjuk, Vernichtungslager Sobibor, Aufstand Von Sobibór, Alexander Petscherski, Friedrich-Wilhelm Krüger, Franz Suchomel, Thomas Blatt, Siegfried Graetschus, Franz Wolf, Hans-Heinz Schütt, Albert Rum, Erich Hermann Bauer, Erich Lachmann, Leon Feldhendler, Alfred Ittner, Arkadi Moissejewitsch Waispapir, Rudolf Beckmann, Walter Nowak, Johann Klier, Stanislaw Szmajzner, Chaim Engel, Josef Wolf, Richard Thomalla, Helga Deen, Gertrude Poppert, Fritz Konrad, Hela Felenbaum-Weiss, Yehuda Lerner, Thomas Steffl, Jules Schelvis, Itzhak Lichtman, Dov Freiberg, Schlomo Lajtman, Aktion Erntefest, Estera Raab, Regina Zielinski, Eda Lichtman, Johann Niemann, Zelda Metz-Kelbermann, Ernst Stengelin, Sobibor, 14. Oktober 1943, 16 Uhr, Samuel Lerer, Friedrich Gaulstich, Selma Wijnberg. Auszug: Helga Deen (Stettin, Germany, 6 April 1925 - Sobibor, 16 July 1943) was the author of a diary, discovered in 2004, which describes her stay in a Dutch prison camp, Kamp Vught, where she was brought during World War II at the age of 18. Deen was half-Dutch. Initially her father lived with his German GP wife in Germany, but moved back to the Netherlands as persecution increased. Her mother worked for a time as a doctor at a concentration camp at Vught. She was given leave to remain but chose to accompany her family to Sobibor, where she died. After her last diary entry, in early July 1943, Helga Deen was deported to Sobibór extermination camp and murdered. She was 18 years old. Deen wrote the diary for her boyfriend, Kees van den Berg, who kept it hidden after the war. After his death his son presented the diary to archivists in Tilburg. A memorial stone to Helga and her family has been placed by a member of the Dutch Sobibor Foundation on the pathway which used to lead to the gas chambers ('road to heaven'). A photo of the stone will soon be available on the Foundation's website.
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