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The combined concentration- and extermination camp Majdanek was built in August/September 1941.
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| Air Photo | 
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| 1942 Camp Map | 
Ordered by 
Heinrich Himmler, the camp was built by the 
Zentralbauleitung der SS und Polizei under the command of 
Odilo Globocnik, 
the 
SS- und Polizeiführer des Distrikts Lublin.
At first a concentration camp should be built near the cemetery at 
Lipowa Street. 
In summer 1941 Jewish
POWs from the 
Lipowa camp started to prepare the territory south west of the 
cemetery. Because the German
civil administration was against these plans, 
Globocnik decided to 
build the concentration camp outside 
Lublin, on the 
Dziesiata Fields. When the 
camp was already 
under construction, the name was changed into more popular "Majdanek" (from the name of the suburb 
Majdan Tatarski).
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| Postcard from Majdanek | 
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| Postcard to Majdanek | 
Until 1943 the camp was named "POW camp of the Waffen-SS Lublin" but already in November/December 1941 
first groups of prisoners (not only the Soviet POWs) were sent there, among them a group of 200 Jews 
from the 
Lublin ghetto, groups of Jews from the small towns around 
Lublin and Polish peasants from the 
Lublin 
district.
The next group (2,000 - 2,500 people) of the Jewish Lubliners was sent on 24 April 1942 from the small 
ghetto at 
Majdan Tatarski (this ghetto was established after the liquidation of 
the big ghetto and 
was located close to the 
old airfield). From this group only 120 - 200 young men 
were selected for work. 
All others (mostly women, children and old people) were executed at 
Krepiec Forest, 
11 km from Majdanek.
Here the Nazis carried out the mass executions of the Majdanek prisoners and Jews from 
Majdan Tatarski, 
until the construction of the gas chambers at the camp site was finished. From early 1943 the victims 
were cremated at 
Krepiec Forest on pyres.
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| Gas Chambers | 
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| Workshops in July 1942 | 
The camp was located only 3 km south of the 
Lublin centre. Today the camp 
site is part of the city, at the road to 
Zamosc.
With 2.7 square kilometers it was even larger than 
Auschwitz-Birkenau. 
Majdanek should become the largest concentration camp outside the German 
Reich.
In the center of the camp ten fields were planned, surrounded by electric barbed wire and watchtowers. 
Each field should contain 20 barracks for prisoners and two barracks for necessary equipment.
In three gas chambers the people were gassed mostly by carbon-monoxide (this information is from 
the camp undergound reports which are kept at the museal archive). The victims' belongings were sold,
their 
hairs too!
The bodies were burned in a crematory. Forced labourers worked in about 20 barracks 
(workshops and storerooms) and outside the camp.
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| Hill of Ashes - First Memorial | 
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| Burned Crematory | 
Prisoners who didn't die by starvation, exhaustion or illness often were hanged, shot or gassed.
The biggest mass murder in Majdanek happened on 3 November 1943. In course of the 
"
Aktion Erntefest" 16,000 - 18,000 Jews were shot this day.
See the 
Commemorative Plaque!
In July 1944 the camp was evacuated because of the pushing ahead of the Red Army. During its 
existence about 300,000 prisoners (more than 50% Jews) passed through the camp, 150,000 - 200,000 died.
Resistance organisations were active during the camp's existence. A few prisoners could escape and informed
others about the structures and conditions in the camp. The report of a Slovakian Jew is kept in the Majdanek
archive. He escaped from the camp together with another inmate. They bore witness to their fellow Jews in Hungary
and Slovakia. 
See a rare 
document, drawn by a fugitive. He (she?) knew the location of the 
prisoners' field and the storerooms very well. The gas chamber is not correctly placed, perhaps because it was not 
yet built. Therefore the fugitive must have escaped before October 1942. 
Since 1944 the former camp site is a 
memorial.
Today the visitor can still see the workshop barracks, two gas chamber buildings, the crematory, 
some prisoners barracks and a few remainings of SS buildings.
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| CO Gas Cylinders | Chimney | Gas Chamber Door | Shoes | 
Photos: Majdanek Memorial Archive.