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| caption = Marketplace in the Sambor's Jewish neighbourhood of Blich, photographed in July 1942.
| caption = Marketplace in the Sambor's Jewish neighbourhood of Blich, photographed in July 1942.
| image_map = {{location mark|float=center|image= WW2-Holocaust-Poland.PNG | width = 250 | x% = 63 | y% = 78.5 |label={{small|'''Sambor'''}} |position=right |mark_width=6}}
| image_map = {{location mark|float=center|image= WW2-Holocaust-Poland.PNG | width = 250 | x% = 63 | y% = 78.5 |label={{small|'''Sambor'''}} |position=right |mark_width=6}}
| map_caption = Sambor location during [[the Holocaust in Poland]]
| map_caption = Sambor location during [[the Holocaust in
| location = [[Sambir]], Western [[Ukraine]]
| location = [[Sambir]], Western [[Ukraine]]
| incident_type = Imprisonment, [[Forced labour under German rule during World War II|forced labor]], starvation, mass killings, deportations to [[death camps]], extortion
| incident_type = Imprisonment, labor, mass killings, deportations to [[death camps]], extortion
| organizations = [[SS]]; [[Schutzmannschaften]]
| organizations = [[SS]]; [[Schutzmannschaften]]
| camp = [[Belzec]] (see map)
| camp = [[Belzec]] (see map)
| victims = Over 10,000 Jews<ref name="ARC/Belzec"/>
| victims = Over 10,000 Jews<ref name="ARC/Belzec"/>
}}
}}
'''Sambor Ghetto''' ({{lang-pl|getto w Samborze}}) was a [[Jewish ghettos in German-occupied Poland|Jewish World War II ghetto]] established in March 1942 by the [[SS]] in [[Sambir]], Western [[Ukraine]]. In the interwar period, the town (Sambor) was part of the [[Second Polish Republic]] in the south-eastern region of [[Kresy]].<ref name="statistics"/> In 1939 Sambor was briefly occupied by Germany prior to being handed over to the Soviet Union. In 1941, the Germans captured the town at the beginning of [[Operation Barbarossa]].<ref name="petr">{{cite web |publisher=Faina Petryakova Scientific Center for Judaica and Jewish Art |author=Meylakh Sheykhet |url=http://www.jewishheritage.org.ua/en/1912/sambir.html |title=Sambir (Sambor) |location=Ukraine}}<sup>&nbsp;[''sources not&nbsp;listed'']</sup></ref> Before the war, Sambor was a [[Powiat|county]] seat in the [[Lwów Voivodeship]] of the [[Second Polish Republic]]. The invading Germans handed the town over to the Soviets in accordance with the [[Nazi-Soviet Pact]] against Poland. Sambor was annexed to the [[USSR|Ukrainian SSR]] along with the entire region in the atmosphere of intimidation, and the [[NKVD prisoner massacres|NKVD terror]].<ref name="Wegner-74">{{cite book |author=Bernd Wegner |year=1997 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=aESBIpIm6UcC&pg=PA74 |title=From peace to war: Germany, Soviet Russia, and the world, 1939–1941 |publisher=Berghahn Books |page=74 |isbn=1-57181-882-0}}</ref> In 1941, the city was overrun again by the Wehrmacht in [[Operation Barbarossa]], the invasion of the Soviet Union, and incorporated it into ''[[Distrikt Galizien]]''.<ref name="distrikt">{{cite book |authorlink=Andrzej Paczkowski |last=Paczkowski |first=Andrzej |others=Translated by Jane Cave |title=The Spring Will Be Ours: Poland and the Poles from Occupation to Freedom |year=2003 |publisher=[[Penn State]] Press |isbn=0-271-02308-2 |url=https://books.google.com/?id=WoKQWem2yl4C&pg=PA54&lpg=PA54 |pages=54– |via=Google Books}}</ref><ref name="NR/WK"/> According to the [[Polish census of 1931]], Jews constituted nearly 29 percent of the town's inhabitants,<ref name="cens">{{cite journal |author=[[Polish census of 1931]], [[Lwów Voivodeship]] (volume 68) |at=pp. 44–45 (75–76 in PDF download) |title=Sambor population, total |quote=The city of Sambor: 21,923 inhabitants, with 13,575 ethnic Poles, and 6,274 Jews, as well as 1,338 ethnic Ukrainians and 1,564 ethnic Ruthenians (i.e. Rusyns) determined by mother tongue (Yiddish: 4,942 and Hebrew: 383). Sambor county ([[powiat]]): population 133,814 in 1931 (urban and rural) with 11,258 Jews. |url=https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/1/1e/Woj.lwowskie-Polska_spis_powszechny_1931.pdf |publisher=[[Central Statistical Office (Poland)|Main Bureau of Statistics]]}} ''For the current population numbers within Ukraine see:'' {{cite journal |title=Population of Ukraine as of January 1, 2016 |work=Statistical Collected Book Available |publisher=State Statistics Service of Ukraine; Institute for Demography and Social Studies |format=PDF |url=http://database.ukrcensus.gov.ua/PXWEB2007/ukr/publ_new1/2016/zb_nas_15.pdf |pages=55, 52 |quote=м. Самбір: 35,026 – м. Старий Самбір: 6,648.}}</ref> most of whom were killed during [[The Holocaust in Poland|the Holocaust]]. Sambor (Sambir) is not to be confused with the much smaller Old Sambor (Stary Sambor, now [[Staryi Sambir]]) located close-by, although their Jewish history is inextricably linked together.<ref name="gen">{{cite web |title=Liquidation of the Jewish Community of Stari-Sambor; June and August 1942 deportations |url=http://www.jewishgen.org/yizkor/sambor/SamXIX.html#Page37 |work=The Book of Sambor and Stari Sambor, History of the Cities |publisher=JewishGen Inc. Yizkor Book Project |author=Alexander Manor |translator=Sara Mages}}</ref>
'''Sambor Ghetto''' ({{lang-pl|getto w Samborze}}) was a [[ ghetto]] established in March 1942 by the [[SS]] in [[Sambir]], Western [[Ukraine]]. In the interwar period, the town (Sambor) was part of the [[Second Polish Republic]]. In 1941, the Germans captured the town at the beginning of [[Operation Barbarossa]]. According to the [[Polish census of 1931]], Jews constituted nearly 29 percent of the town's inhabitants,<ref name="cens">{{cite journal |author=[[Polish census of 1931]], [[Lwów Voivodeship]] (volume 68) |at=pp. 44–45 (75–76 in PDF download) |title=Sambor population, total |quote=The city of Sambor: 21,923 inhabitants, with 13,575 ethnic Poles, and 6,274 Jews, as well as 1,338 ethnic Ukrainians and 1,564 ethnic Ruthenians (i.e. Rusyns) determined by mother tongue (Yiddish: 4,942 and Hebrew: 383). Sambor county ([[powiat]]): population 133,814 in 1931 (urban and rural) with 11,258 Jews. |url=https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/1/1e/Woj.lwowskie-Polska_spis_powszechny_1931.pdf |publisher=[[Central Statistical Office (Poland)|Main Bureau of Statistics]]}} ''For the current population numbers within Ukraine see:'' {{cite journal |title=Population of Ukraine as of January 1, 2016 |work=Statistical Collected Book Available |publisher=State Statistics Service of Ukraine; Institute for Demography and Social Studies |format=PDF |url=http://database.ukrcensus.gov.ua/PXWEB2007/ukr/publ_new1/2016/zb_nas_15.pdf |pages=55, 52 |quote=м. Самбір: 35,026 – м. Старий Самбір: 6,648.}}</ref> most of whom were killed during [[The Holocaust in Poland|the Holocaust]]. Sambor (Sambir) is not to be confused with the much smaller Old Sambor (Stary Sambor, now [[Staryi Sambir]]) located close-by, although their Jewish history is inextricably linked together.<ref name="gen">{{cite web |title=Liquidation of the Jewish Community of Stari-Sambor; June and August 1942 deportations |url=http://www.jewishgen.org/yizkor/sambor/SamXIX.html#Page37 |work=The Book of Sambor and Stari Sambor, History of the Cities |publisher=JewishGen Inc. Yizkor Book Project |author=Alexander Manor |translator=Sara Mages}}</ref>


==Background==
==Background==
{{details|Jewish ghettos in German-occupied Poland}}
{{details|Jewish ghettos in German-occupied Poland}}
Following the rebirth of [[Second Polish Republic|sovereign Poland]] in 1918, both Sambor and Stary Sambor became seats of separate [[gmina]]s. In April 1932 the counties were joined as one administrative area.<ref name="bieszczadzki"/> The Jewish population grew steadily. Brand new schools including Jewish gymnasium and [[Bais Yaakov]] for girls were established, as well as new industrial plants, unions, Jewish relief organizations, and several Zionist parties such as [[World Agudath Israel]]. Jews engaged in trade, crafts, carter, agriculture, and professional activities. Jewish cultural institutions included a large library and a sports club.<ref name="trans"/> On 8–11 September 1939 Sambor was overrun by the [[1st Mountain Division (Wehrmacht)|1st Mountain Division]] of the Wehrmacht during the Polish [[Battle of Lwów (1939)|Battle of Lwów]].<ref name="Zaloga">{{cite book |author=Steve J. Zaloga |year=2002 |title=Poland 1939: The Birth of Blitzkrieg |url=https://books.google.com/?id=IXshAQAAIAAJ&q=Sambor |location=Oxford |publisher=Osprey Publishing / Praeger |isbn=0275982785 |page=79 }} ''Also in:'' {{cite web |title=Sambor |publisher=Polska Niepodległa |author=Marcin Hałaś |url=http://polskaniepodlegla.pl/magazyn-patriotyczny/item/2964-miasta-utracone-sambor?tmpl=component&print=1 |via=Internet Archive |at=Source: Stanisław Sławomir Nicieja (2014), ''Kresowa Atlantyda. Historia i mitologia miast kresowych.'' Volume V, Wydawnictwo MS, Opole |deadurl=bot: unknown |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20160827154523/http://polskaniepodlegla.pl/magazyn-patriotyczny/item/2964-miasta-utracone-sambor?tmpl=component&print=1 |archivedate=27 August 2016 |df=dmy-all }}</ref> It was transferred to the [[Soviets]] in accordance with the [[German-Soviet Frontier Treaty]] signed with Joseph Stalin on 28 September 1939.<ref name="Zaloga"/>
the [[Second Polish Republic]] in 1918, both Sambor and Stary Sambor became seats of separate [[gmina]]s. In 1932 the counties were joined as one administrative area.<ref name="bieszczadzki"/> The Jewish population grew steadily. Brand new schools including Jewish gymnasium and [[Bais Yaakov]] for girls were established, as well as new industrial plants, unions, Jewish relief organizations, and several Zionist parties such as [[World Agudath Israel]]. Jews engaged in trade, crafts, carter, agriculture, and professional activities. Jewish cultural institutions included a large library and a sports club.<ref name="trans"/> On 8–11 September 1939 Sambor was overrun by the [[1st Mountain Division (Wehrmacht)|1st Mountain Division]] of the Wehrmacht during the Polish [[Battle of Lwów (1939)|Battle of Lwów]].<ref name="Zaloga">{{cite book |author=Steve J. Zaloga |year=2002 |title=Poland 1939: The Birth of Blitzkrieg |url=https://books.google.com/?id=IXshAQAAIAAJ&q=Sambor |location=Oxford |publisher=Osprey Publishing / Praeger |isbn=0275982785 |page=79 }} ''Also in:'' {{cite web |title=Sambor |publisher=Polska Niepodległa |author=Marcin Hałaś |url=http://polskaniepodlegla.pl/magazyn-patriotyczny/item/2964-miasta-utracone-sambor?tmpl=component&print=1 |via=Internet Archive |at=Source: Stanisław Sławomir Nicieja (2014), ''Kresowa Atlantyda. Historia i mitologia miast kresowych.'' Volume V, Wydawnictwo MS, Opole |deadurl=bot: unknown |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20160827154523/http://polskaniepodlegla.pl/magazyn-patriotyczny/item/2964-miasta-utracone-sambor?tmpl=component&print=1 |archivedate=27 August 2016 |df=dmy-all }}</ref> It was transferred to the [[]] in accordance with the [[German-Soviet Frontier Treaty]] signed on 28 September 1939.<ref name="Zaloga"/>


[[File:Sambor, Kresy, September 1939; German & Russian soldiers stroll.jpg|thumb|260px|left|German and Russian soldiers stroll around Sambor after the 1939 [[invasion of Poland]].]]
[[File:Sambor, Kresy, September 1939; German & Russian soldiers stroll.jpg|thumb|left|German and soldiers Sambor after the 1939 [[invasion of Poland]].]]


After the Soviet takeover, the wealthy and middle class Polish Jews were arrested by the [[NKVD]] and sentenced for deportation to Siberia [[Sybirak|along with the Polish intelligentsia]]. Some pro-Soviet Jews were given government jobs.<ref name="petr"/> The economy was nationalized; hundreds of citizens were executed out of sight by the secret police as "[[Enemy of the people#Soviet Union|enemies of the people]]".<ref name="petr"/><ref name="записка"/> Sambor became part of the brand new [[Drohobych Oblast]] on 4 December 1939.<ref name="bieszczadzki">{{cite web |title=Miasto Stary Sambor |trans-title=The city of Old Sambor |publisher=Powiat Bieszczadzki |work=Sister cities |url=http://www.bieszczadzki.pl/strona-2109-miasto_stary_sambor.html |author=Starostwo Powiatowe w Ustrzykach Dolnych |location=[[Ustrzyki Dolne]]}}</ref>
After the Soviet takeover, the wealthy and middle class Polish Jews were arrested by the [[NKVD]] and sentenced for deportation to Siberia [[Sybirak|along with the Polish intelligentsia]]. Some pro-Soviet Jews were given government jobs.<ref name="petr"/> The economy was nationalized; hundreds of citizens were executed out of sight by the secret police as "[[Enemy of the people#Soviet Union|enemies of the people]]".<ref name="petr"/><ref name="записка"/> Sambor became part of the [[Drohobych Oblast]] on 4 December 1939.<ref name="bieszczadzki">{{cite web |title=Miasto Stary Sambor |trans-title=The city of Old Sambor |publisher=Powiat Bieszczadzki |work=Sister cities |url=http://www.bieszczadzki.pl/strona-2109-miasto_stary_sambor.html |author=Starostwo Powiatowe w Ustrzykach Dolnych |location=[[Ustrzyki Dolne]]}}</ref>


Two years after their joint [[invasion of Poland]], the German army attacked the [[Territories of Poland annexed by the Soviet Union|Soviet forces in occupied territories]] by launching [[Operation Barbarossa]] of 22 June 1941. During the hasty evacuation of the political prison in Sambor the [[NKVD]] shot in cold blood 600 prisoners;<ref name=RMo>{{cite book |title=The Devils' Alliance: Hitler's Pact with Stalin, 1939–1941 |author=Roger Moorhouse |publisher=Basic Books |year=2014 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Nz_RAwAAQBAJ&q=Sambor |ISBN=0465054927 |page=176}}</ref> 80 corpses were left unburied due to the lack of time.<ref name="записка">{{cite journal |author=Тов. Сергиенко |location=Киев |title=Доповідна записка наркому Сергієнко про розстріли та евакуацію в’язнів із тюрем Західної України 5 липня1941 р. |trans-title=Shooting and evacuating prisoners from prisons in Western Ukraine Report by Commissar Serhiyenko |work=Народному комиссару внутренних дел УССР старшему майору государственной безопасности |at=Page 171 in PDF document |via=direct download |quote=В двух тюрьмах в городе Самбор и Стрий (сведений о тюрьме в гор. Перемышль не имеем) – содержалось 2242 заключенных. Во время эвакуации расстреляно по обеим тюрьмам 1101 заключенных, освобождено – 250 человек, этапировано 637 и оставлено в тюрьмах – 304 заключенных. 27 июня при эвакуации в тюрьме гор. Самбор осталось – 80 незарытых трупов, на просьбы начальника тюрьмы к руководству Горотдела НКГБ и НКВД оказать ему помощь в зарытии трупов – они ответили категорическим отказом. |url=http://history.org.ua/LiberUA/978-966-7779-25-2/978-966-7779-25-2.pdf}}</ref> Sambor was taken over by the Wehrmacht on 29 June.<ref name="Shnaider"/> The city became one of a dozen administrative units of ''[[Distrikt Galizien]]'', the fifth district of the [[General Government#Administrative districts|General Government]] with the capital in [[Lemberg]].<ref name="NR/WK">{{cite book |title=Global Perspectives on the Holocaust: History |publisher=Cambridge Scholars Publishing |year=2015 |isbn=1443884243 |pages=368–369 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Y5nWCgAAQBAJ&q=Sambor+Distrikt+Galizien |authors=Nancy E. Rupprecht, Wendy Koenig |quote=Kreishauptmannschaften in Distrikt Galizien.}}</ref>
, the Soviet Union in [[Operation Barbarossa]]. During the hasty evacuation of the political prison in Sambor the [[NKVD]] shot 600 prisoners;<ref name=RMo>{{cite book |title=The Devils' Alliance: Hitler's Pact with Stalin, 1939–1941 |author=Roger Moorhouse |publisher=Basic Books |year=2014 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Nz_RAwAAQBAJ&q=Sambor |ISBN=0465054927 |page=176}}</ref> 80 corpses were left unburied lack of time.<ref name="записка">{{cite journal |author=Тов. Сергиенко |location=Киев |title=Доповідна записка наркому Сергієнко про розстріли та евакуацію в’язнів із тюрем Західної України 5 липня1941 р. |trans-title=Shooting and evacuating prisoners from prisons in Western Ukraine Report by Commissar Serhiyenko |work=Народному комиссару внутренних дел УССР старшему майору государственной безопасности |at=Page 171 in PDF document |via=direct download |quote=В двух тюрьмах в городе Самбор и Стрий (сведений о тюрьме в гор. Перемышль не имеем) – содержалось 2242 заключенных. Во время эвакуации расстреляно по обеим тюрьмам 1101 заключенных, освобождено – 250 человек, этапировано 637 и оставлено в тюрьмах – 304 заключенных. 27 июня при эвакуации в тюрьме гор. Самбор осталось – 80 незарытых трупов, на просьбы начальника тюрьмы к руководству Горотдела НКГБ и НКВД оказать ему помощь в зарытии трупов – они ответили категорическим отказом. |url=http://history.org.ua/LiberUA/978-966-7779-25-2/978-966-7779-25-2.pdf}}</ref> Sambor was taken over by the Wehrmacht on 29 June.<ref name="Shnaider"/> The city became one of a dozen administrative units of [[ ]], the fifth district of the [[General Government#Administrative districts|General Government]] with the capital in [[Lemberg]].<ref name="NR/WK">{{cite book |title=Global Perspectives on the Holocaust: History |publisher=Cambridge Scholars Publishing |year=2015 |isbn=1443884243 |pages=368–369 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Y5nWCgAAQBAJ&q=Sambor+Distrikt+Galizien |authors=Nancy E. Rupprecht, Wendy Koenig |quote=Kreishauptmannschaften in Distrikt Galizien.}}</ref>


Along with the German troops arrived the Ukrainian task forces (''pokhidny hrupy''), thoroughly indoctrinated at the German training bases in the General Government.<ref name="Getter">{{cite journal |publisher=Kantor Program Papers |others=Roni Stauber, Beryl Belsky |date=June 2012 |title=Honoring the Collaborators – The Ukrainian Case |author=Irena Cantorovich |url=http://kantorcenter.tau.ac.il/sites/default/files/ukraine-collaborators_3.pdf |quote=When the Soviets occupied eastern Galicia, some 30,000 Ukrainian nationalists fled to the General Government. In 1940 the Germans began to set up military training units of Ukrainians, and in the spring of 1941 Ukrainian units were established by the Wehrmacht. }} ''See also:'' {{cite web |url=https://www.scribd.com/doc/150069634/Marek-Getter-1996-Policja-Polska-w-Generalnym-Gubernatorstwie-1939-1945-Przegl%C4%85d-Policyjny-nr-1-2-Wydawnictwo-Wy%C5%BCszej-Szko%C5%82y-Policji-w-Szczytni |title=Policja Polska w Generalnym Gubernatorstwie 1939–1945 |publisher=Przegląd Policyjny nr 1-2. Wydawnictwo Wyższej Szkoły Policji w Szczytnie |work=Polish Police in the General Government 1939–1945 |year=1996 |author=Marek Getter |pages=1–22 |format=WebCite cache |quote=Reprint, with extensive statistical data, at [https://www.webcitation.org/6Hb52gr1x?url=http://policjapanstwowa.pl/index.php/pl/strona-glowna/2-podstrony?start=28 Policja Państwowa webpage.] |deadurl=yes |archiveurl=https://www.webcitation.org/6Hen2CZJW?url=http://www.scribd.com/doc/150069634/Marek-Getter-1996-Policja-Polska-w-Generalnym-Gubernatorstwie-1939-1945-Przegl%C4%85d-Policyjny-nr-1-2-Wydawnictwo-Wy%C5%BCszej-Szko%C5%82y-Policji-w-Szczytni |archivedate=26 June 2013 |df=dmy-all }}</ref> The OUN followers (''[[Anwärter]]s'' included) mobilized Ukrainian militants in some 30 locations at once,<ref name="Шляхтич">{{cite journal |author=Р. П. Шляхтич |title=ОУН в 1941 році: документи: В 2-х частинах Ін-т історії України НАН України |trans-title=OUN in 1941: Documents in 2 volumes |publisher=Institute of History of Ukraine |location=Kiev: Ukraine National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine |url=http://history.org.ua/LiberUA/Book/oun41/text.pdf |year=2006 |pages=426–428 |isbn=966-02-2535-0 |quote=[http://journals.hnpu.edu.ua/ojs/hisgeo/article/view/1868 Abstract.] Listed locations included [[Lwów Ghetto|Lviv]], [[Tarnopol Ghetto|Ternopil]], [[Stanisławów Ghetto|Stanislavov]], [[Łuck Ghetto|Lutsk]], Rivne, [[Yavoriv]], [[Kamenetz-Podolsk]], [[Drohobycz Ghetto|Drohobych]], Borislav, [[Dubno]], Sambor, [[Kostopol]], [[Sarny]], Kozovyi, [[Zolochiv]], [[Berezhany]], [[Pidhaytsi]], [[Kolomyya]], [[Rava-Ruska]], Obroshyno, [[Radekhiv]], Gorodok, Kosovo, [[Terebovlia]], Vyshnivtsi, [[Zbarazh]], [[Zhytomyr]] and [[Fastov]].}} ''See also:'' {{cite journal |title=The Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists and Its Attitude toward Germans and Jews |authors=Karel C. Berkhoff; Marco Carynnyk |publisher=Harvard Ukrainian Studies |date=23 December 1999 |volume=3/4 |work=Research Library |url=https://www.researchgate.net/publication/283606261_The_Organization_of_Ukrainian_Nationalists_and_Its_Attitude_toward_Germans_and_Jews_Iaroslav_Stets'ko's_1941_Zhyttiepys |pages=149–150}}</ref> including in Sambor; and in accordance with the Nazi theory of [[Judeo-Bolshevism]] launched retaliatory pogroms against the [[Polish Jews]]. The [[Lviv pogroms|deadliest of them]], overseen by ''SS-Brigadeführer'' [[Otto Rasch]], took place in [[Lwów Ghetto|Lwów]] (74 kilometres distance) beginning 30 June 1941.<ref name="Piotrowski">{{cite book |title=Poland's Holocaust: Ethnic Strife, Collaboration with Occupying Forces and Genocide in the Second Republic, 1918–1947 |author=Tadeusz Piotrowski |publisher=McFarland |year=1998 |isbn=0786403713 |pages=207–211 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=hC0-dk7vpM8C&q=Melnyk+Bandera+Dr.+Rasch |via=Google Books |authorlink=Tadeusz Piotrowski (sociologist)}}</ref> On 1 July 1941 the Ukrainian nationalists killed approximately 50–100 Polish Jews in Sambor,<ref name="trans"/><ref name="Shnaider">{{cite web |author=Eugene Shnaider |title=Самбор, Львовская область |location=Самбор |year=2015 |work=Еврейские местечки Украины |quote=29 июня 1941 Самбор оккупировали части вермахта. 1 июля 1941 местные украинцы устроили погром, в ходе которого было убито 50 евреев. |url=http://www.myshtetl.org/lvovskaja/sambor.html}}</ref><ref name="PLo"/> but similar pogroms affected other Polish provincial capitals as far as [[Tarnopol Ghetto|Tarnopol]], [[Stanisławów Ghetto|Stanisławów]] and [[Łuck Ghetto|Łuck]].<ref name="USHMM-Symposium">{{cite web|url=http://www.ushmm.org/research/center/publications/occasional/2005-10/paper.pdf |title=The Holocaust and [German] Colonialism in Ukraine: A Case Study |publisher=The Center for Advanced Holocaust Studies of the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum |work=The Holocaust in the Soviet Union |date=September 2005 |accessdate=7 December 2014 |author=Symposium Presentations |pages=15, 18–19, 20 in current document of 1/154 |format=PDF file, direct download 1.63 MB |deadurl=unfit |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20120816044021/http://www.ushmm.org/research/center/publications/occasional/2005-10/paper.pdf |archivedate=16 August 2012 }} ''See also:'' {{cite book |author=Ronald Headland |year=1992 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Mue8a5Rwyi0C&q=Luck%2C+Sonderkommando |title=Messages of Murder: A Study of the Reports of the Einsatzgruppen of the Security Police and the Security Service, 1941–1943 |publisher=Fairleigh Dickinson Univ. Press |pages=79, 125–126 |isbn=0838634184}}</ref>
Along with the German troops arrived the Ukrainian task forces (''pokhidny hrupy''), thoroughly indoctrinated at the German training bases in the General Government.<ref name="Getter">{{cite journal |publisher=Kantor Program Papers |others=Roni Stauber, Beryl Belsky |date=June 2012 |title=Honoring the Collaborators – The Ukrainian Case |author=Irena Cantorovich |url=http://kantorcenter.tau.ac.il/sites/default/files/ukraine-collaborators_3.pdf |quote=When the Soviets occupied eastern Galicia, some 30,000 Ukrainian nationalists fled to the General Government. In 1940 the Germans began to set up military training units of Ukrainians, and in the spring of 1941 Ukrainian units were established by the Wehrmacht. }} ''See also:'' {{cite web |url=https://www.scribd.com/doc/150069634/Marek-Getter-1996-Policja-Polska-w-Generalnym-Gubernatorstwie-1939-1945-Przegl%C4%85d-Policyjny-nr-1-2-Wydawnictwo-Wy%C5%BCszej-Szko%C5%82y-Policji-w-Szczytni |title=Policja Polska w Generalnym Gubernatorstwie 1939–1945 |publisher=Przegląd Policyjny nr 1-2. Wydawnictwo Wyższej Szkoły Policji w Szczytnie |work=Polish Police in the General Government 1939–1945 |year=1996 |author=Marek Getter |pages=1–22 |format=WebCite cache |quote=Reprint, with extensive statistical data, at [https://www.webcitation.org/6Hb52gr1x?url=http://policjapanstwowa.pl/index.php/pl/strona-glowna/2-podstrony?start=28 Policja Państwowa webpage.] |deadurl=yes |archiveurl=https://www.webcitation.org/6Hen2CZJW?url=http://www.scribd.com/doc/150069634/Marek-Getter-1996-Policja-Polska-w-Generalnym-Gubernatorstwie-1939-1945-Przegl%C4%85d-Policyjny-nr-1-2-Wydawnictwo-Wy%C5%BCszej-Szko%C5%82y-Policji-w-Szczytni |archivedate=26 June 2013 |df=dmy-all }}</ref> The OUN followers (''[[Anwärter]]s'' included) mobilized Ukrainian militants in some 30 locations at once,<ref name="Шляхтич">{{cite journal |author=Р. П. Шляхтич |title=ОУН в 1941 році: документи: В 2-х частинах Ін-т історії України НАН України |trans-title=OUN in 1941: Documents in 2 volumes |publisher=Institute of History of Ukraine |location=Kiev: Ukraine National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine |url=http://history.org.ua/LiberUA/Book/oun41/text.pdf |year=2006 |pages=426–428 |isbn=966-02-2535-0 |quote=[http://journals.hnpu.edu.ua/ojs/hisgeo/article/view/1868 Abstract.] Listed locations included [[Lwów Ghetto|Lviv]], [[Tarnopol Ghetto|Ternopil]], [[Stanisławów Ghetto|Stanislavov]], [[Łuck Ghetto|Lutsk]], Rivne, [[Yavoriv]], [[Kamenetz-Podolsk]], [[Drohobycz Ghetto|Drohobych]], Borislav, [[Dubno]], Sambor, [[Kostopol]], [[Sarny]], Kozovyi, [[Zolochiv]], [[Berezhany]], [[Pidhaytsi]], [[Kolomyya]], [[Rava-Ruska]], Obroshyno, [[Radekhiv]], Gorodok, Kosovo, [[Terebovlia]], Vyshnivtsi, [[Zbarazh]], [[Zhytomyr]] and [[Fastov]].}} ''See also:'' {{cite journal |title=The Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists and Its Attitude toward Germans and Jews |authors=Karel C. Berkhoff; Marco Carynnyk |publisher=Harvard Ukrainian Studies |date=23 December 1999 |volume=3/4 |work=Research Library |url=https://www.researchgate.net/publication/283606261_The_Organization_of_Ukrainian_Nationalists_and_Its_Attitude_toward_Germans_and_Jews_Iaroslav_Stets'ko's_1941_Zhyttiepys |pages=149–150}}</ref> including in Sambor; and in accordance with the Nazi theory of [[Judeo-Bolshevism]] launched retaliatory pogroms against the [[Polish Jews]]. The [[Lviv pogroms|deadliest of them]], overseen by ''SS-Brigadeführer'' [[Otto Rasch]], took place in [[Lwów Ghetto|Lwów]] (74 kilometres distance) beginning 30 June 1941.<ref name="Piotrowski">{{cite book |title=Poland's Holocaust: Ethnic Strife, Collaboration with Occupying Forces and Genocide in the Second Republic, 1918–1947 |author=Tadeusz Piotrowski |publisher=McFarland |year=1998 |isbn=0786403713 |pages=207–211 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=hC0-dk7vpM8C&q=Melnyk+Bandera+Dr.+Rasch |via=Google Books |authorlink=Tadeusz Piotrowski (sociologist)}}</ref> On 1 July 1941 the Ukrainian nationalists killed approximately 50–100 Polish Jews in Sambor,<ref name="trans"/><ref name="Shnaider">{{cite web |author=Eugene Shnaider |title=Самбор, Львовская область |location=Самбор |year=2015 |work=Еврейские местечки Украины |quote=29 июня 1941 Самбор оккупировали части вермахта. 1 июля 1941 местные украинцы устроили погром, в ходе которого было убито 50 евреев. |url=http://www.myshtetl.org/lvovskaja/sambor.html}}</ref><ref name="PLo"/> but similar pogroms affected other Polish provincial capitals as far as [[Tarnopol Ghetto|Tarnopol]], [[Stanisławów Ghetto|Stanisławów]] and [[Łuck Ghetto|Łuck]].<ref name="USHMM-Symposium">{{cite web|url=http://www.ushmm.org/research/center/publications/occasional/2005-10/paper.pdf |title=The Holocaust and [German] Colonialism in Ukraine: A Case Study |publisher=The Center for Advanced Holocaust Studies of the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum |work=The Holocaust in the Soviet Union |date=September 2005 |accessdate=7 December 2014 |author=Symposium Presentations |pages=15, 18–19, 20 in current document of 1/154 |format=PDF file, direct download 1.63 MB |deadurl=unfit |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20120816044021/http://www.ushmm.org/research/center/publications/occasional/2005-10/paper.pdf |archivedate=16 August 2012 }} ''See also:'' {{cite book |author=Ronald Headland |year=1992 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Mue8a5Rwyi0C&q=Luck%2C+Sonderkommando |title=Messages of Murder: A Study of the Reports of the Einsatzgruppen of the Security Police and the Security Service, 1941–1943 |publisher=Fairleigh Dickinson Univ. Press |pages=79, 125–126 |isbn=0838634184}}</ref>


==The Ghetto==
==The Ghetto==
The German authorities forced all adult Jews to wear the [[Yellow badge|Star of David]]. In July 1941, the Jewish ''[[Judenrat]]'' was formed in Sambor on German orders, with Dr. Shimshon (Samson) Schneidscher as its Chairman.<ref name="memorial"/> In the following months, Jews were being deported to the open-type ghetto in Sambor from the entire county.<ref name="Shnaider"/> On 17 July, [[Heinrich Himmler]] decreed the formation of the ''[[Schutzmannschaften]]'' from among the local Ukrainians,<ref name="USHMM-Symposium"/> owing to good relations with the local Ukrainian ''Hilfsverwaltung''.<ref name="Eikel">{{cite book |author=Markus Eikel |chapter=The local administration under German occupation in central and eastern Ukraine, 1941–1944 |at=Pages 110–122 in PDF |title=The Holocaust in Ukraine: New Sources and Perspectives |quote=Ukraine differs from other parts of the German-occupied Soviet Union, whereas the local administrators have formed the ''Hilfsverwaltung'' in support of extermination policies in 1941 and 1942, and in providing assistance for the deportations to camps in Germany, mainly in 1942 and 1943. |publisher=Center for Advanced Holocaust Studies, [[United States Holocaust Memorial Museum]] |year=2013 |url=http://www.ushmm.org/m/pdfs/20130500-holocaust-in-ukraine.pdf}}</ref> By 7 August 1941 in most areas conquered by the Wehrmacht,<ref name="Шляхтич"/> the units of the [[Ukrainian People's Militia]] have already participated in a series of so-called "self-purification" actions, closely followed by the killings carried out by the ''[[Einsatzgruppe C]]''.<ref name="PLo">{{cite book |title=Holocaust: The Nazi Persecution and Murder of the Jews |author=[[Peter Longerich]] |publisher=OUP Oxford |year=2010 |isbn=0192804367 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=cxYqYIn73SgC&q=Einsatzgruppe+C+Rasch |pages=195, 199–200}}</ref> The [[OUN-B]] militia spearheaded a day-long pogrom in Stary Sambor.<ref name="gen"/> Thirty-two prominent Jews were dragged by the nationalists to the cemetery and bludgeoned. Surviving eyewitnesses, Mrs. Levitski and Mr. Eidman, reported cases of dismemberment and decapitation of the victims.<ref name="gen"/> Afterwards, a [[Jewish Ghetto Police]] was set up, headed by Hermann Stahl.<ref name="trans"/> Jews were ordered to hand–over their furs, radios, silver and gold.<ref name="memorial"/>
The German authorities forced all adult Jews to wear the [[Yellow badge]]. In July 1941, ''[[Judenrat]]'' was formed in Sambor on German orders, with Dr. Shimshon (Samson) Schneidscher as its .<ref name="memorial"/> In the following months, Jews were being deported to the open-type ghetto in Sambor from the entire county.<ref name="Shnaider"/> On 17 July, [[Heinrich Himmler]] decreed the formation of the ''[[Schutzmannschaften]]'' from among the local Ukrainians,<ref name="USHMM-Symposium"/> owing to good relations with the local Ukrainian ''Hilfsverwaltung''.<ref name="Eikel">{{cite book |author=Markus Eikel |chapter=The local administration under German occupation in central and eastern Ukraine, 1941–1944 |at=Pages 110–122 in PDF |title=The Holocaust in Ukraine: New Sources and Perspectives |quote=Ukraine differs from other parts of the German-occupied Soviet Union, whereas the local administrators have formed the ''Hilfsverwaltung'' in support of extermination policies in 1941 and 1942, and in providing assistance for the deportations to camps in Germany, mainly in 1942 and 1943. |publisher=Center for Advanced Holocaust Studies, [[United States Holocaust Memorial Museum]] |year=2013 |url=http://www.ushmm.org/m/pdfs/20130500-holocaust-in-ukraine.pdf}}</ref> By 7 August 1941 in most areas conquered by the Wehrmacht,<ref name="Шляхтич"/> the units of the [[Ukrainian People's Militia]] have already participated in a series of so-called "self-purification" actions, closely followed by the killings carried out by the ''[[Einsatzgruppe C]]''.<ref name="PLo">{{cite book |title=Holocaust: The Nazi Persecution and Murder of the Jews |author=[[Peter Longerich]] |publisher=OUP Oxford |year=2010 |isbn=0192804367 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=cxYqYIn73SgC&q=Einsatzgruppe+C+Rasch |pages=195, 199–200}}</ref> The [[OUN-B]] militia spearheaded a day-long pogrom in Stary Sambor.<ref name="gen"/> Thirty-two prominent Jews were dragged by the nationalists to the cemetery and bludgeoned. Surviving eyewitnesses, Mrs. Levitski and Mr. Eidman, reported cases of dismemberment and decapitation of the victims.<ref name="gen"/> Afterwards, a [[Jewish Ghetto Police]] was set up, headed by Hermann Stahl.<ref name="trans"/> Jews were ordered to hand–over their furs, radios, silver and gold.<ref name="memorial"/>
[[File:Самбор. Улица Ткацкая, 1939.jpg|thumb|Tkacka Street in Sambor before [[the Holocaust in occupied Poland]], {{circa}} 1939]]
[[File:Самбор. Улица Ткацкая, 1939.jpg|thumb|Tkacka Street in Sambor before [[the Holocaust in occupied Poland]], {{circa}} 1939]]


Among the people trapped in the Sambor Ghetto were thousands of refugees who arrived there in an attempt to escape the German occupation of western Poland, and possibly cross the border to Romania,<ref name="trans">{{cite journal |author=Encyclopedia of the Ghettos |title=סמבּוֹר (Sambor) המכון הבין-לאומי לחקר השואה – יד ושם: |publisher=[[Yad Vashem]]. The International Institute for Holocaust Research |url=http://www.yadvashem.org/yv/he/research/ghettos_encyclopedia/ghetto_details.asp?cid=732 |year=2016}}</ref> and Hungary.<ref name="Plewa"/> Confined to the Blich neighbourhood of Sambor – the ghetto was officially sealed from the outside on 12 January 1942,<ref name="memorial">{{cite web |work=The Book of Sambor and Stari Sambor; a Memorial to the Jewish Communities |at=Chapter 8 |title=The Annihilation of the City |url=http://www.jewishgen.org/yizkor/sambor/Sam203.html#Page205 |authors=Alexander Manor, Toni Nacht, Dolek Frei |year=1980 |translator=Susan Rosin}}</ref><ref name="Brayer">{{cite book |title=Hiding In Death's Shadow |author=Allen Brayer |publisher=iUniverse |year=2010 |isbn=1450263836 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=ykivs9hBOakC&q=Sambor+Ghetto+1942 |pages=71–72}}</ref> Jews from different parts of the city along with inhabitants of neighbouring communities,<ref name="Shnaider"/> including Stary Sambor, were transferred to the Ghetto by March 1942. A curfew was imposed, subject to on-sight shooting.<ref name="gen"/><ref name="trans"/>
Among the people trapped in the Sambor Ghetto were thousands of refugees who arrived there in an attempt to escape the German occupation of western Poland, and possibly cross the border to Romania,<ref name="trans">{{cite journal |author=Encyclopedia of the Ghettos |title=סמבּוֹר (Sambor) המכון הבין-לאומי לחקר השואה – יד ושם: |publisher=[[Yad Vashem]]. The International Institute for Holocaust Research |url=http://www.yadvashem.org/yv/he/research/ghettos_encyclopedia/ghetto_details.asp?cid=732 |year=2016}}</ref> and Hungary.<ref name="Plewa"/> Confined to the Blich neighbourhood of Sambor – the ghetto was sealed from the outside on 12 January 1942,<ref name="memorial">{{cite web |work=The Book of Sambor and Stari Sambor; a Memorial to the Jewish Communities |at=Chapter 8 |title=The Annihilation of the City |url=http://www.jewishgen.org/yizkor/sambor/Sam203.html#Page205 |authors=Alexander Manor, Toni Nacht, Dolek Frei |year=1980 |translator=Susan Rosin}}</ref><ref name="Brayer">{{cite book |title=Hiding In Death's Shadow |author=Allen Brayer |publisher=iUniverse |year=2010 |isbn=1450263836 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=ykivs9hBOakC&q=Sambor+Ghetto+1942 |pages=71–72}}</ref> Jews from different parts of the city along with inhabitants of neighbouring communities,<ref name="Shnaider"/> including Stary Sambor, were transferred to the Ghetto by March 1942. A curfew was imposed, subject to on-sight shooting.<ref name="gen"/><ref name="trans"/>


==Deportations to death camps==
==Deportations to death camps==
The fate of [[Jewish ghettos in German-occupied Poland|ghettoised Jews across occupied Poland]] was sealed at [[Wannsee Conference|Wannsee]], where the most deadly phase of the [[Final Solution]] was set in motion.<ref name="Brayer"/> In July 1942, the first [[Extermination camp|killing centre]] of [[Operation Reinhard]] built by the SS at [[Bełżec extermination camp|Bełżec]] (just over 100 kilometres away) began its second phase of extermination, with brand new gas chambers built of brick and mortar.<ref name="bay/kola">{{cite book |author=Andrzej Kola |orig-year=2000 |year=2015 |title=Belzec. The Nazi Camp for Jews in the Light of Archaeological Sources |others=Translated from Polish by Ewa Józefowicz and Mateusz Józefowicz |location=Warsaw-Washington |publisher=The Council for the Protection of Memory of Combat and Martyrdom – The United States Holocaust Memorial Museum |url=https://books.google.com/?id=JdkWAQAAIAAJ&q=wax-fat}} ''Also in:'' Archeologists reveal new secrets of Holocaust, ''Reuters News'', 21 July 1998.</ref> Sambor Jews were rounded up in stages. A terror operation was conducted in the ghetto on 2–4 August 1942 ahead of the first deportation action.<ref name="Brayer"/> The 'resettlement' rail transports to [[Bełżec extermination camp|Bełżec]] left Sambor on 4–6 August 1942 under heavy guard, with 6,000 men, women, and children crammed into [[Holocaust train]]s without food or water.<ref name="ARC/Belzec"/> About 600 Jews were sent to [[Janowska concentration camp]] nearby.<ref name="Shnaider"/> The second set of trains with 3,000–4,000 Jews departed on 17–18 and 22 October 1942.<ref name="ARC/Belzec">{{cite web |title=Holocaust Transports |work=Deportations of Jews from [[District Galicia]] to Death Camp in Belzec |author=ARC |year=2004 |url=http://www.deathcamps.org/belzec/galiciatransportlist.html}}</ref><ref name="statistics">{{cite web |title=Ghetto List |author=Michael Peters |url=http://www.deathcamps.org/occupation/ghettolist.htm |via=Internet Archive |year=2016 |orig-year=2004 |publisher=ARC |deadurl=bot: unknown |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20160303230810/http://www.deathcamps.org/occupation/ghettolist.htm |archivedate=3 March 2016 |df=dmy-all }} {{cite web |url=http://www.sztetl.org.pl/en/selectcity/ |title=Glossary of 2,077 Jewish towns in Poland |author=[[Virtual Shtetl]] |publisher=[[Museum of the History of the Polish Jews]] |year=2016 |deadurl=yes |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20160208215116/http://www.sztetl.org.pl/en/selectcity/ |archivedate=8 February 2016 |df=dmy-all }} {{cite web |url=http://www.izrael.badacz.org/historia/szoa_getto.html |title=Getta Żydowskie |author=Gedeon |via=Internet Archive |year=2012 |orig-year=2004 |at=Sampol |publisher=Izrael. Badacz.org |deadurl=bot: unknown |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20121122064635/http://www.izrael.badacz.org/historia/szoa_getto.html |archivedate=22 November 2012 |df=dmy-all }} ''See also:'' {{cite book |title=Belzec, Sobibor, Treblinka: The Operation Reinhard Death Camps |publisher=Indiana University Press |author=Yitzhak Arad |year=1987 |isbn=0253342937 |url=https://books.google.com/?id=YglnAAAAMAAJ&q=Sambor |quote=Deportations to Belzec from Sambor, 4–6 August 1942: 4,000 Jews; 17–18 October: 2,000 and 22 October 1942: 2,000 Jews. Stary Sambor deportation, 5–6 August: 1,500. }}</ref> On 17 November 1942 the already depopulated ghetto was filled with expellees from [[Turka, Lviv Oblast|Turka]] and [[Ilnyk|Ilnik]]. Some Jews escaped to the forest. The town of Turka was declared ''[[Judenfrei]]'' on 1 December 1942.<ref name="ABr"/> Irrespective of deportations, mass shootings of Jews were also carried out.<ref name="petr"/><ref name="O'Neil">{{cite web |author=Robin O'Neil |title=Extermination of Jews in General Government 1943 Following Closure of Belzec |work=A Reassessment: Resettlement Transports to Belzec |publisher=JewishGen Yizkor Book Project |url=http://www.jewishgen.org/Yizkor/belzec/bel005.html |quote=Sambor, March 1943: 900<sup>[372]</sup> April 1943: 1000<sup>[390]</sup> June 1943: 100s<sup>[422]</sup>}}</ref> In January 1943 the Germans along with the [[Ukrainian Auxiliary Police]] rounded up 1,500 Jews deemed '[[Life unworthy of life|incapable of working]]'. They were trucked to the woods near Radlowicz (Radłowicze, Radlovitze; now Ralivka) and shot one by one.<ref name="ABr"/> Among those still alive in the ghetto death by starvation and typhus raged.<ref name="ABr">{{cite book |title=Hiding In Death's Shadow: How I Survived The Holocaust |work=Second Edition |author=Allen Brayer |publisher=iUniverse |year=2010 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=ykivs9hBOakC&q=Radlowicz |isbn=1450263836 |pages=72, 73}}</ref>
In July 1942, the first [[Extermination camp|killing centre]] of [[Operation Reinhard]] built by the SS at [[Bełżec extermination camp|]] (just over 100 kilometres away) began its second phase of extermination, with brand new gas chambers built of brick.<ref name="bay/kola">{{cite book |author=Andrzej Kola |orig-year=2000 |year=2015 |title=Belzec. The Nazi Camp for Jews in the Light of Archaeological Sources |others=Translated from Polish by Ewa Józefowicz and Mateusz Józefowicz |location=Warsaw-Washington |publisher=The Council for the Protection of Memory of Combat and Martyrdom – The United States Holocaust Memorial Museum |url=https://books.google.com/?id=JdkWAQAAIAAJ&q=wax-fat}} ''Also in:'' Archeologists reveal new secrets of Holocaust, ''Reuters News'', 21 July 1998.</ref> Sambor Jews were rounded up in stages. A terror operation was conducted in the ghetto on 2–4 August 1942 ahead of the first deportation action.<ref name="Brayer"/> The 'resettlement' rail transports to left Sambor on 4–6 August 1942 under heavy guard, with 6,000 men, women, and children crammed into [[Holocaust train]]s without food or water.<ref name="ARC/Belzec"/> About 600 Jews were sent to [[Janowska concentration camp]] nearby.<ref name="Shnaider"/> The second set of trains with 3,000–4,000 Jews departed on 17–18 and 22 October 1942.<ref name="ARC/Belzec">{{cite web |title=Holocaust Transports |work=Deportations of Jews from [[District Galicia]] to Death Camp in Belzec |author=ARC |year=2004 |url=http://www.deathcamps.org/belzec/galiciatransportlist.html}}</ref><ref name="statistics">{{cite web |title=Ghetto List |author=Michael Peters |url=http://www.deathcamps.org/occupation/ghettolist.htm |via=Internet Archive |year=2016 |orig-year=2004 |publisher=ARC |deadurl=bot: unknown |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20160303230810/http://www.deathcamps.org/occupation/ghettolist.htm |archivedate=3 March 2016 |df=dmy-all }} {{cite web |url=http://www.sztetl.org.pl/en/selectcity/ |title=Glossary of 2,077 Jewish towns in Poland |author=[[Virtual Shtetl]] |publisher=[[Museum of the History of the Polish Jews]] |year=2016 |deadurl=yes |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20160208215116/http://www.sztetl.org.pl/en/selectcity/ |archivedate=8 February 2016 |df=dmy-all }} {{cite web |url=http://www.izrael.badacz.org/historia/szoa_getto.html |title=Getta Żydowskie |author=Gedeon |via=Internet Archive |year=2012 |orig-year=2004 |at=Sampol |publisher=Izrael. Badacz.org |deadurl=bot: unknown |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20121122064635/http://www.izrael.badacz.org/historia/szoa_getto.html |archivedate=22 November 2012 |df=dmy-all }} ''See also:'' {{cite book |title=Belzec, Sobibor, Treblinka: The Operation Reinhard Death Camps |publisher=Indiana University Press |author=Yitzhak Arad |year=1987 |isbn=0253342937 |url=https://books.google.com/?id=YglnAAAAMAAJ&q=Sambor |quote=Deportations to Belzec from Sambor, 4–6 August 1942: 4,000 Jews; 17–18 October: 2,000 and 22 October 1942: 2,000 Jews. Stary Sambor deportation, 5–6 August: 1,500. }}</ref> On 17 November 1942 the already depopulated ghetto was filled with expellees from [[Turka, Lviv Oblast|Turka]] and [[Ilnyk|Ilnik]]. Some Jews escaped to the forest. The town of Turka was declared ''[[Judenfrei]]'' on 1 December 1942.<ref name="ABr"/> Irrespective of deportations, mass shootings of Jews were also carried out.<ref name="petr"/><ref name="O'Neil">{{cite web |author=Robin O'Neil |title=Extermination of Jews in General Government 1943 Following Closure of Belzec |work=A Reassessment: Resettlement Transports to Belzec |publisher=JewishGen Yizkor Book Project |url=http://www.jewishgen.org/Yizkor/belzec/bel005.html |quote=Sambor, March 1943: 900<sup>[372]</sup> April 1943: 1000<sup>[390]</sup> June 1943: 100s<sup>[422]</sup>}}</ref> In January 1943 the Germans along with the [[Ukrainian Auxiliary Police]] rounded up 1,500 Jews deemed '[[Life unworthy of life|incapable of working]]'. They were trucked to the woods near Radlowicz (Radłowicze, Radlovitze; now Ralivka) and shot one by one.<ref name="ABr"/> Among those still alive in the ghetto death by starvation and typhus raged.<ref name="ABr">{{cite book |title=Hiding In Death's Shadow: How I Survived The Holocaust |work=Second Edition |author=Allen Brayer |publisher=iUniverse |year=2010 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=ykivs9hBOakC&q=Radlowicz |isbn=1450263836 |pages=72, 73}}</ref>


After the long winter, new terror operations in the ghetto took place in March,<ref name="ABr"/> or April 1943.<ref name="gen"/> The Gestapo utilized Wehrmacht units transiting through Sambor to round up Jews. All houses, cellars and even chimneys were searched.<ref name="gen"/> The 1,500 captives were split in groups of 100 each.<ref name="ABr"/> They were escorted to the cemetery,<ref name="NWe"/> where the strong Jewish men were forced to dig their own mass graves.<ref name="UNUM">{{cite media |publisher=YAHAD-IN UNUM |title=Execution of Jews in Sambir |work=Interview |location=Sambir |date=13 January 2009 |author=Yaroslav G., witness N°750 |url=http://yahadmap.org/#village/sambir-lviv-ukraine.254 |id=Exhibit 5}}</ref> The liquidation of the ghetto was approaching. In June, deputy to the ''Judenrat'' chairman, Dr. Zausner, gave a speech full of hope because the Gestapo office [[Drohobycz Ghetto|in Drohobicz]] agreed to save a group of labourers in exchange for a huge ransom. Nevertheless, on the night of 8 June 1943 the Ukrainian ''Hilfspolizei'' set the ghetto houses on fire. In the morning, all Jewish slave labour were escorted to prison, loaded onto [[Lorry|lorries]] and trucked to the killing fields at Radłowicze.<ref name="gen"/> The ghetto was no more; the city was declared "''[[Judenrein]]''". The Soviet Red Army rolled into Sambor a year later amid heavy fighting with the retreating Germans, around 7 August 1944.<ref name="gen"/><ref>{{cite journal |title=Wojska I-go frontu ukrainskiego 7 VIII szturmem zajely miasto Sambor |publisher=''Rzeczpospolita, Organ Polskiego Komitetu Wyzwolenia Narodowego'' |location=Lublin |date=8 August 1944 |url=http://dlibra.umcs.lublin.pl/dlibra/plain-content?id=10937 |author=[[PKWN]]}}</ref>
After the long winter, new terror operations in the ghetto took place in March,<ref name="ABr"/> or April 1943.<ref name="gen"/> The Gestapo utilized Wehrmacht units transiting through Sambor to round up Jews. All houses, cellars and even chimneys were searched.<ref name="gen"/> The 1,500 captives were split in groups of 100 each.<ref name="ABr"/> They were escorted to the cemetery,<ref name="NWe"/> where Jewish men were forced to dig mass graves.<ref name="UNUM">{{cite media |publisher=YAHAD-IN UNUM |title=Execution of Jews in Sambir |work=Interview |location=Sambir |date=13 January 2009 |author=Yaroslav G., witness N°750 |url=http://yahadmap.org/#village/sambir-lviv-ukraine.254 |id=Exhibit 5}}</ref> The liquidation of the ghetto was approaching. In June, deputy to the ''Judenrat'' chairman, Dr. Zausner, gave a speech full of hope because the Gestapo office [[Drohobycz Ghetto|in Drohobicz]] agreed to save a group of labourers in exchange for a huge ransom. Nevertheless, on the night of 8 June 1943 the Ukrainian ''Hilfspolizei'' set the ghetto houses on fire. In the morning, all Jewish slave labour were escorted to prison, loaded onto lorries and trucked to the killing fields at Radłowicze.<ref name="gen"/> The ghetto was no more; the city was declared "''[[Judenrein]]''". The Soviet Red Army Sambor a year later amid heavy fighting with the retreating Germans, around 7 August 1944.<ref name="gen"/><ref>{{cite journal |title=Wojska I-go frontu ukrainskiego 7 VIII szturmem zajely miasto Sambor |publisher=''Rzeczpospolita, Organ Polskiego Komitetu Wyzwolenia Narodowego'' |location=Lublin |date=8 August 1944 |url=http://dlibra.umcs.lublin.pl/dlibra/plain-content?id=10937 |author=[[PKWN]]}}</ref>


Some Jews had managed to dig a tunnel leading to a sewer out of the ghetto and escaped to the partisans in the forest.<ref name="ABr"/> In 1943 the Nazi police executed at least 27 people in Sambor for attempting to hide Jews.<ref name="ИАА">{{cite journal |url=http://jhist.org/shoa/hfond_126.htm |author=И.А. Альтман |title=Холокост и еврейское сопротивление на оккупированной территории СССР |publisher=Центр и Фонд «Холокост» |year=2002 |isbn=5886360077}}</ref>
==Escape==
[[File:Alojzy & Feliks Plewa with Ruth (rescued) 1942.jpg|thumb|(L. to r.) [[Polish Righteous]] Alojzy Plewa, his brother Feliks, and Ruth Schwarz rescued from the Sambor Ghetto, 1942]]

Some Jews managed to dig a tunnel leading to a sewer out of the ghetto, and escaped to the partisans in the forest.<ref name="ABr"/> Guta Gripel Korngold with her husband Henryk Schwarz and two-year-old daughter Ruth ''[[née]]'' Schwarz survived thanks to help from Alojzy Plewa, a [[Polish Righteous]] from Sambor who never asked for anything in return.<ref name="PR-Plewa">{{cite web |title=The Plewa Family |publisher=Polish Righteous – Polscy Sprawiedliwi |work=Przywracanie Pamięci |url=http://www.sprawiedliwi.org.pl/en/family/643,the-plewa-family/ |date=May 2012 |author=Magdalena Stankowska |translator=Joanna Sliwa}}</ref> In late 1942 he brought them money and clothing to the ghetto from his Jewish friends in Silesia and on the way back smuggled their child ''(pictured)'' across the ghetto gate. His brother Feliks and both parents took care of the girl until the occupation ended. They gave her a Polish-sounding name Antośka for her safety,<ref name="PR-Plewa"/> while the Schwarz' couple with Ehiel hid with other rescuers. In the meantime, Alojzy Plewa extended assistance to other Jews, including Jan and Anna Dziula. After the war, the Schwarz family settled in Israel.<ref name="Plewa">{{cite media |title=Rescue Story: Plewa, Alojzy |publisher=[[Yad Vashem]] |url=http://db.yadvashem.org/righteous/family.html?language=en&itemId=4016950 |author=World Holocaust Remembrance Center |year=2016}}</ref> Plewa was recognized as the Righteous by [[Yad Vashem]] in November 1978.<ref name="Plewa"/>

Amalia Mudrycki, a Jewish woman hiding on the Aryan side of Sambor, approached Jan and Mieczysław Oczyński – father and son living next door – with the plea to rescue her closest friends from the [[Drohobycz Ghetto]]. Jan was a railway engineer, Mieczysław was a violinist fresh from the conservatory. They took in Dr. Maksymilian Getlinger with his wife Leontyna and their son-in-law Dr. Alfred Herzig, as well as their friend Rachela. Also, Mieczysław went to Drohobycz with an address from Amalia and smuggled from the ghetto a 10-year-old boy, Adam. Feeding them all became a challenge, but the living conditions were exceptionally good. Mieczysław worked in the fields of his uncle Mr. Ochowicz to earn the extra food they needed. While there, he met the Jewish sisters in hiding, Basia and Ewa Schreiber. Basia was seriously ill. Mieczysław took her to Sambor and put her under the care of Dr. Herzig hiding in his own home. Meanwhile, the circumstances forced Amalia Mudrycki to also accept Oczyńskis' hospitality. All Jews survived, and with time left their homeland for Israel and Brazil.<ref name="OczyńskiYV">{{cite web |publisher=The Righteous Among The Nations |title=Oczyński FAMILY; Oczyński Jan and Oczyński Mieczysław (1914 – ), SON |work=Rescue Story |issue=File 2678 |url=http://db.yadvashem.org/righteous/family.html?language=en&itemId=4039759 |author=Yad Vashem }}</ref> The Getlingers stayed in contact with the two Oczyńskis for many years. Jan and his son Mieczysław Oczyński were recognized as Righteous by Yad Vashem in September 1983.<ref name="OczyńskiYV"/> In 1943 the Nazi police executed at least 27 people in Sambor for attempting to hide Jews.<ref name="ИАА">{{cite journal |url=http://jhist.org/shoa/hfond_126.htm |author=И.А. Альтман |title=Холокост и еврейское сопротивление на оккупированной территории СССР |publisher=Центр и Фонд «Холокост» |year=2002 |isbn=5886360077}}</ref>


== Post war ==
== Post war ==
"During the Soviet era – wrote Nadja Weck, the Sambor – Jewish cemetery lost its original function and was levelled. Plans were made to construct a sports field on the site."<ref name="NWe"/> Since 1991, Sambir (Самбір) is part of sovereign [[Ukraine]]. In 2000, an attempt to preserve the site of the mass shootings of Jews, for a Holocaust memorial park, was effectively stopped.<ref name="NWe">{{cite book |work=Global Perspectives on the Holocaust: History |publisher=Cambridge Scholars Publishing |year=2015 |isbn=1443884243 |page=367 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Y5nWCgAAQBAJ&q=Sambir+sports+field |title=Holocaust Memory in Western Ukraine |editors=Nancy E. Rupprecht, Wendy Koenig |author=Nadja Weck}}</ref>
"During the Soviet era – wrote Nadja Weck, the Sambor – Jewish cemetery lost its original function and was levelled. Plans were made to construct a sports field on the site."<ref name="NWe"/> Since 1991, Sambir (Самбір) is part of sovereign [[Ukraine]]. In 2000, an attempt to preserve the site of the mass shootings of Jews, for a Holocaust memorial park, was effectively stopped.<ref name="NWe">{{cite book |work=Global Perspectives on the Holocaust: History |publisher=Cambridge Scholars Publishing |year=2015 |isbn=1443884243 |page=367 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Y5nWCgAAQBAJ&q=Sambir+sports+field |title=Holocaust Memory in Western Ukraine |editors=Nancy E. Rupprecht, Wendy Koenig |author=Nadja Weck}}</ref>

==See also==
* [[Tarnopol Ghetto]] in a provincial capital of occupied eastern Poland
* [[Łuck Ghetto]], at another regional capital in the [[Kresy]] [[macroregion]]
* [[Stanisławów Ghetto]], likewise
* [[History of the Jews in Poland]]
* [[The Holocaust in Poland]]


==Citations==
==Citations==

Revision as of 14:40, 5 May 2019

Sambor Ghetto
Sambor, Jewish Blich
Marketplace in the Sambor's Jewish neighbourhood of Blich, photographed in July 1942.
Sambor
Sambor
Sambor location during the Holocaust in Eastern Europe
LocationSambir, Western Ukraine
Incident typeImprisonment, slave labor, mass killings, deportations to death camps, extortion
OrganizationsSS; Schutzmannschaften
CampBelzec (see map)
VictimsOver 10,000 Jews[1]

Sambor Ghetto (Polish: getto w Samborze) was a Nazi ghetto established in March 1942 by the SS in Sambir, Western Ukraine. In the interwar period, the town (Sambor) was part of the Second Polish Republic. In 1941, the Germans captured the town at the beginning of Operation Barbarossa. According to the Polish census of 1931, Jews constituted nearly 29 percent of the town's inhabitants,[2] most of whom were killed during the Holocaust. Sambor (Sambir) is not to be confused with the much smaller Old Sambor (Stary Sambor, now Staryi Sambir) located close-by, although their Jewish history is inextricably linked together.[3]

Background

When the Second Polish Republic was formed in 1918, both Sambor and Stary Sambor became seats of separate gminas. In 1932, the counties were joined as one administrative area.[4] The Jewish population grew steadily. Brand new schools including Jewish gymnasium and Bais Yaakov for girls were established, as well as new industrial plants, unions, Jewish relief organizations, and several Zionist parties such as World Agudath Israel. Jews engaged in trade, crafts, carter, agriculture, and professional activities. Jewish cultural institutions included a large library and a sports club.[5] On 8–11 September 1939, Sambor was overrun by the 1st Mountain Division of the Wehrmacht during the Polish Battle of Lwów.[6] It was transferred to the Soviet Union in accordance with the German-Soviet Frontier Treaty signed on 28 September 1939.[6]

German and Soviet soldiers in Sambor after the 1939 invasion of Poland.

After the Soviet takeover, the wealthy and middle class Polish Jews were arrested by the NKVD and sentenced for deportation to Siberia along with the Polish intelligentsia. Some pro-Soviet Jews were given government jobs.[7] The economy was nationalized; hundreds of citizens were executed out of sight by the secret police as "enemies of the people".[7][8] Sambor became part of the Drohobych Oblast on 4 December 1939.[4]

On June 22 June 1941, Germany invaded the Soviet Union in Operation Barbarossa. During the hasty evacuation of the political prison in Sambor, the NKVD shot 600 prisoners;[9] 80 corpses were left unburied for lack of time.[8] Sambor was taken over by the Wehrmacht on 29 June.[10] The city became one of a dozen administrative units of the District of Galicia, the fifth district of the General Government with the capital in Lemberg.[11]

Along with the German troops arrived the Ukrainian task forces (pokhidny hrupy), thoroughly indoctrinated at the German training bases in the General Government.[12] The OUN followers (Anwärters included) mobilized Ukrainian militants in some 30 locations at once,[13] including in Sambor; and in accordance with the Nazi theory of Judeo-Bolshevism launched retaliatory pogroms against the Polish Jews. The deadliest of them, overseen by SS-Brigadeführer Otto Rasch, took place in Lwów (74 kilometres distance) beginning 30 June 1941.[14] On 1 July 1941 the Ukrainian nationalists killed approximately 50–100 Polish Jews in Sambor,[5][10][15] but similar pogroms affected other Polish provincial capitals as far as Tarnopol, Stanisławów and Łuck.[16]

The Ghetto

The German authorities forced all adult Jews to wear the Yellow badge. In July 1941, a Judenrat was formed in Sambor on German orders, with Dr. Shimshon (Samson) Schneidscher as its chairman.[17] In the following months, Jews were being deported to the open-type ghetto in Sambor from the entire county.[10] On 17 July, Heinrich Himmler decreed the formation of the Schutzmannschaften from among the local Ukrainians,[16] owing to good relations with the local Ukrainian Hilfsverwaltung.[18] By 7 August 1941 in most areas conquered by the Wehrmacht,[13] the units of the Ukrainian People's Militia have already participated in a series of so-called "self-purification" actions, closely followed by the killings carried out by the Einsatzgruppe C.[15] The OUN-B militia spearheaded a day-long pogrom in Stary Sambor.[3] Thirty-two prominent Jews were dragged by the nationalists to the cemetery and bludgeoned. Surviving eyewitnesses, Mrs. Levitski and Mr. Eidman, reported cases of dismemberment and decapitation of the victims.[3] Afterwards, a Jewish Ghetto Police was set up, headed by Hermann Stahl.[5] Jews were ordered to hand–over their furs, radios, silver and gold.[17]

Tkacka Street in Sambor before the Holocaust in occupied Poland, c. 1939

Among the people trapped in the Sambor Ghetto were thousands of refugees who arrived there in an attempt to escape the German occupation of western Poland, and possibly cross the border to Romania,[5] and Hungary.[19] Confined to the Blich neighbourhood of Sambor – the ghetto was sealed from the outside on 12 January 1942,[17][20] Jews from different parts of the city along with inhabitants of neighbouring communities,[10] including Stary Sambor, were transferred to the Ghetto by March 1942. A curfew was imposed, subject to on-sight shooting.[3][5]

Deportations to death camps

In July 1942, the first killing centre of Operation Reinhard built by the SS at Belzec (just over 100 kilometres away) began its second phase of extermination, with brand new gas chambers built of brick.[21] Sambor Jews were rounded up in stages. A terror operation was conducted in the ghetto on 2–4 August 1942 ahead of the first deportation action.[20] The 'resettlement' rail transports to Belzec left Sambor on 4–6 August 1942 under heavy guard, with 6,000 men, women, and children crammed into Holocaust trains without food or water.[1] About 600 Jews were sent to Janowska concentration camp nearby.[10] The second set of trains with 3,000–4,000 Jews departed on 17–18 and 22 October 1942.[1][22] On 17 November 1942 the already depopulated ghetto was filled with expellees from Turka and Ilnik. Some Jews escaped to the forest. The town of Turka was declared Judenfrei on 1 December 1942.[23] Irrespective of deportations, mass shootings of Jews were also carried out.[7][24] In January 1943 the Germans along with the Ukrainian Auxiliary Police rounded up 1,500 Jews deemed 'incapable of working'. They were trucked to the woods near Radlowicz (Radłowicze, Radlovitze; now Ralivka) and shot one by one.[23] Among those still alive in the ghetto death by starvation and typhus raged.[23]

After the long winter, new terror operations in the ghetto took place in March,[23] or April 1943.[3] The Gestapo utilized Wehrmacht units transiting through Sambor to round up Jews. All houses, cellars and even chimneys were searched.[3] The 1,500 captives were split in groups of 100 each.[23] They were escorted to the cemetery,[25] where Jewish men were forced to dig mass graves.[26] The liquidation of the ghetto was approaching. In June, deputy to the Judenrat chairman, Dr. Zausner, gave a speech full of hope because the Gestapo office in Drohobicz agreed to save a group of labourers in exchange for a huge ransom. Nevertheless, on the night of 8 June 1943 the Ukrainian Hilfspolizei set the ghetto houses on fire. In the morning, all Jewish slave labour were escorted to prison, loaded onto lorries and trucked to the killing fields at Radłowicze.[3] The ghetto was no more; the city was declared "Judenrein". The Soviet Red Army liberated Sambor a year later amid heavy fighting with the retreating Germans, around 7 August 1944.[3][27]

Some Jews had managed to dig a tunnel leading to a sewer out of the ghetto and escaped to the partisans in the forest.[23] In 1943 the Nazi police executed at least 27 people in Sambor for attempting to hide Jews.[28]

Post war

"During the Soviet era – wrote Nadja Weck, the Sambor – Jewish cemetery lost its original function and was levelled. Plans were made to construct a sports field on the site."[25] Since 1991, Sambir (Самбір) is part of sovereign Ukraine. In 2000, an attempt to preserve the site of the mass shootings of Jews, for a Holocaust memorial park, was effectively stopped.[25]

Citations

  1. ^ a b c ARC (2004). "Holocaust Transports". Deportations of Jews from District Galicia to Death Camp in Belzec.
  2. ^ Polish census of 1931, Lwów Voivodeship (volume 68). "Sambor population, total" (PDF). Main Bureau of Statistics. pp. 44–45 (75–76 in PDF download). The city of Sambor: 21,923 inhabitants, with 13,575 ethnic Poles, and 6,274 Jews, as well as 1,338 ethnic Ukrainians and 1,564 ethnic Ruthenians (i.e. Rusyns) determined by mother tongue (Yiddish: 4,942 and Hebrew: 383). Sambor county (powiat): population 133,814 in 1931 (urban and rural) with 11,258 Jews. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) For the current population numbers within Ukraine see: "Population of Ukraine as of January 1, 2016" (PDF). Statistical Collected Book Available. State Statistics Service of Ukraine; Institute for Demography and Social Studies: 55, 52. м. Самбір: 35,026 – м. Старий Самбір: 6,648.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h Alexander Manor. "Liquidation of the Jewish Community of Stari-Sambor; June and August 1942 deportations". The Book of Sambor and Stari Sambor, History of the Cities. Translated by Sara Mages. JewishGen Inc. Yizkor Book Project.
  4. ^ a b Starostwo Powiatowe w Ustrzykach Dolnych. "Miasto Stary Sambor" [The city of Old Sambor]. Sister cities. Ustrzyki Dolne: Powiat Bieszczadzki.
  5. ^ a b c d e Encyclopedia of the Ghettos (2016). "סמבּוֹר (Sambor) המכון הבין-לאומי לחקר השואה – יד ושם:". Yad Vashem. The International Institute for Holocaust Research. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  6. ^ a b Steve J. Zaloga (2002). Poland 1939: The Birth of Blitzkrieg. Oxford: Osprey Publishing / Praeger. p. 79. ISBN 0275982785. Also in: Marcin Hałaś. "Sambor". Polska Niepodległa. Source: Stanisław Sławomir Nicieja (2014), Kresowa Atlantyda. Historia i mitologia miast kresowych. Volume V, Wydawnictwo MS, Opole. Archived from the original on 27 August 2016 – via Internet Archive. {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |deadurl= ignored (|url-status= suggested) (help)
  7. ^ a b c Cite error: The named reference petr was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
  8. ^ a b Тов. Сергиенко. "Доповідна записка наркому Сергієнко про розстріли та евакуацію в'язнів із тюрем Західної України 5 липня1941 р." [Shooting and evacuating prisoners from prisons in Western Ukraine Report by Commissar Serhiyenko] (PDF). Народному комиссару внутренних дел УССР старшему майору государственной безопасности. Киев. Page 171 in PDF document – via direct download. В двух тюрьмах в городе Самбор и Стрий (сведений о тюрьме в гор. Перемышль не имеем) – содержалось 2242 заключенных. Во время эвакуации расстреляно по обеим тюрьмам 1101 заключенных, освобождено – 250 человек, этапировано 637 и оставлено в тюрьмах – 304 заключенных. 27 июня при эвакуации в тюрьме гор. Самбор осталось – 80 незарытых трупов, на просьбы начальника тюрьмы к руководству Горотдела НКГБ и НКВД оказать ему помощь в зарытии трупов – они ответили категорическим отказом.
  9. ^ Roger Moorhouse (2014). The Devils' Alliance: Hitler's Pact with Stalin, 1939–1941. Basic Books. p. 176. ISBN 0465054927.
  10. ^ a b c d e Eugene Shnaider (2015). "Самбор, Львовская область". Еврейские местечки Украины. Самбор. 29 июня 1941 Самбор оккупировали части вермахта. 1 июля 1941 местные украинцы устроили погром, в ходе которого было убито 50 евреев.
  11. ^ Global Perspectives on the Holocaust: History. Cambridge Scholars Publishing. 2015. pp. 368–369. ISBN 1443884243. Kreishauptmannschaften in Distrikt Galizien. {{cite book}}: Unknown parameter |authors= ignored (help)
  12. ^ Irena Cantorovich (June 2012). "Honoring the Collaborators – The Ukrainian Case" (PDF). Roni Stauber, Beryl Belsky. Kantor Program Papers. When the Soviets occupied eastern Galicia, some 30,000 Ukrainian nationalists fled to the General Government. In 1940 the Germans began to set up military training units of Ukrainians, and in the spring of 1941 Ukrainian units were established by the Wehrmacht. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help) See also: Marek Getter (1996). "Policja Polska w Generalnym Gubernatorstwie 1939–1945". Polish Police in the General Government 1939–1945. Przegląd Policyjny nr 1-2. Wydawnictwo Wyższej Szkoły Policji w Szczytnie. pp. 1–22. Archived from the original (WebCite cache) on 26 June 2013. Reprint, with extensive statistical data, at Policja Państwowa webpage. {{cite web}}: External link in |quote= (help); Unknown parameter |deadurl= ignored (|url-status= suggested) (help)
  13. ^ a b Р. П. Шляхтич (2006). "ОУН в 1941 році: документи: В 2-х частинах Ін-т історії України НАН України" [OUN in 1941: Documents in 2 volumes] (PDF). Kiev: Ukraine National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine: Institute of History of Ukraine: 426–428. ISBN 966-02-2535-0. Abstract. Listed locations included Lviv, Ternopil, Stanislavov, Lutsk, Rivne, Yavoriv, Kamenetz-Podolsk, Drohobych, Borislav, Dubno, Sambor, Kostopol, Sarny, Kozovyi, Zolochiv, Berezhany, Pidhaytsi, Kolomyya, Rava-Ruska, Obroshyno, Radekhiv, Gorodok, Kosovo, Terebovlia, Vyshnivtsi, Zbarazh, Zhytomyr and Fastov. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help); External link in |quote= (help) See also: "The Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists and Its Attitude toward Germans and Jews". Research Library. 3/4. Harvard Ukrainian Studies: 149–150. 23 December 1999. {{cite journal}}: Unknown parameter |authors= ignored (help)
  14. ^ Tadeusz Piotrowski (1998). Poland's Holocaust: Ethnic Strife, Collaboration with Occupying Forces and Genocide in the Second Republic, 1918–1947. McFarland. pp. 207–211. ISBN 0786403713 – via Google Books.
  15. ^ a b Peter Longerich (2010). Holocaust: The Nazi Persecution and Murder of the Jews. OUP Oxford. pp. 195, 199–200. ISBN 0192804367.
  16. ^ a b Symposium Presentations (September 2005). "The Holocaust and [German] Colonialism in Ukraine: A Case Study" (PDF). The Holocaust in the Soviet Union. The Center for Advanced Holocaust Studies of the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. pp. 15, 18–19, 20 in current document of 1/154. Archived from the original (PDF file, direct download 1.63 MB) on 16 August 2012. Retrieved 7 December 2014. {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |deadurl= ignored (|url-status= suggested) (help) See also: Ronald Headland (1992). Messages of Murder: A Study of the Reports of the Einsatzgruppen of the Security Police and the Security Service, 1941–1943. Fairleigh Dickinson Univ. Press. pp. 79, 125–126. ISBN 0838634184.
  17. ^ a b c "The Annihilation of the City". The Book of Sambor and Stari Sambor; a Memorial to the Jewish Communities. Translated by Susan Rosin. 1980. Chapter 8. {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |authors= ignored (help)
  18. ^ Markus Eikel (2013). "The local administration under German occupation in central and eastern Ukraine, 1941–1944". The Holocaust in Ukraine: New Sources and Perspectives (PDF). Center for Advanced Holocaust Studies, United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. Pages 110–122 in PDF. Ukraine differs from other parts of the German-occupied Soviet Union, whereas the local administrators have formed the Hilfsverwaltung in support of extermination policies in 1941 and 1942, and in providing assistance for the deportations to camps in Germany, mainly in 1942 and 1943.
  19. ^ Cite error: The named reference Plewa was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
  20. ^ a b Allen Brayer (2010). Hiding In Death's Shadow. iUniverse. pp. 71–72. ISBN 1450263836.
  21. ^ Andrzej Kola (2015) [2000]. Belzec. The Nazi Camp for Jews in the Light of Archaeological Sources. Translated from Polish by Ewa Józefowicz and Mateusz Józefowicz. Warsaw-Washington: The Council for the Protection of Memory of Combat and Martyrdom – The United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. Also in: Archeologists reveal new secrets of Holocaust, Reuters News, 21 July 1998.
  22. ^ Michael Peters (2016) [2004]. "Ghetto List". ARC. Archived from the original on 3 March 2016 – via Internet Archive. {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |deadurl= ignored (|url-status= suggested) (help) Virtual Shtetl (2016). "Glossary of 2,077 Jewish towns in Poland". Museum of the History of the Polish Jews. Archived from the original on 8 February 2016. {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |deadurl= ignored (|url-status= suggested) (help) Gedeon (2012) [2004]. "Getta Żydowskie". Izrael. Badacz.org. Sampol. Archived from the original on 22 November 2012 – via Internet Archive. {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |deadurl= ignored (|url-status= suggested) (help) See also: Yitzhak Arad (1987). Belzec, Sobibor, Treblinka: The Operation Reinhard Death Camps. Indiana University Press. ISBN 0253342937. Deportations to Belzec from Sambor, 4–6 August 1942: 4,000 Jews; 17–18 October: 2,000 and 22 October 1942: 2,000 Jews. Stary Sambor deportation, 5–6 August: 1,500.
  23. ^ a b c d e f Allen Brayer (2010). Hiding In Death's Shadow: How I Survived The Holocaust. iUniverse. pp. 72, 73. ISBN 1450263836. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)
  24. ^ Robin O'Neil. "Extermination of Jews in General Government 1943 Following Closure of Belzec". A Reassessment: Resettlement Transports to Belzec. JewishGen Yizkor Book Project. Sambor, March 1943: 900[372] April 1943: 1000[390] June 1943: 100s[422]
  25. ^ a b c Nadja Weck (2015). Holocaust Memory in Western Ukraine. Cambridge Scholars Publishing. p. 367. ISBN 1443884243. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help); Unknown parameter |editors= ignored (|editor= suggested) (help)
  26. ^ Yaroslav G., witness N°750 (13 January 2009). Execution of Jews in Sambir. Interview. Sambir: YAHAD-IN UNUM. Exhibit 5.{{cite AV media}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  27. ^ PKWN (8 August 1944). "Wojska I-go frontu ukrainskiego 7 VIII szturmem zajely miasto Sambor". Lublin: Rzeczpospolita, Organ Polskiego Komitetu Wyzwolenia Narodowego. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help); Italic or bold markup not allowed in: |publisher= (help)
  28. ^ И.А. Альтман (2002). "Холокост и еврейское сопротивление на оккупированной территории СССР". Центр и Фонд «Холокост». ISBN 5886360077. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)

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