Abstract
In July 1941, after Germany attacked the Soviet Union, Heinrich
Himmler visited the town of Lublin (Poland) and ordered a prisoner of
war camp to be built there. In November 1941, work began on the
“Prisoner of War Camp of the Waffen-SS in Lublin.” Soon thereafter, the
camp was placed under the control of the inspector of concentration
camps, and in March 1942 it was assigned to the SS Economic and
Administrative Main Office [SS
Wirtschafts- und Verwaltungshauptamt]. Direct supervision of the
camp was in the hands of Odilo Globocnik, the SS and police leader in
Lublin. In February 1943, Himmler officially renamed the camp “Lublin
Concentration Camp” (in common usage it is usually referred to as
“Majdanek”). Due to the high death rates among Wehrmacht prisoners,
Soviet POWs were never transported to Lublin on a large scale. Rather,
Lublin was used as a concentration and death camp primarily for Polish
and Jewish deportees. The governing principle was “extermination through
labor,” but from October 1942 on, prisoners were also gassed,
particularly those judged unfit to work. Furthermore, in early November
1943, after an uprising in the Sobibor death camp, 17,000 to 18,000
Jewish inmates in the Lublin concentration camp were shot on Himmler's
orders as part of the “Harvest Festival Operation"
[Aktion Erntefest]. A total of 78,000
prisoners perished in the Lublin concentration camp, including 60,000
Jews. Lublin was liberated by the Red Army on July 23, 1944.