World

Remains of 8,000 Nazi war victims found in Poland

Investigators say they were probably assassinated around 1939, mostly from elite society

Updated 4 years ago · Published on 14 Jul 2022 2:00PM

Remains of 8,000 Nazi war victims found in Poland
Poland’s Institute of National Remembrance says the human remains were unearthed near the Soldau concentration camp, now known as Dzialdowo, north of Warsaw. – AFP pic, July 14, 2022

DZIALDOWO – A mass grave containing human ashes equivalent to 8,000 people has been discovered near a former Nazi concentration camp in Poland, the country’s Institute of National Remembrance said yesterday.

The institute, which investigates crimes committed during the Nazi occupation of Poland and the communist era, said the remains were unearthed near the Soldau concentration camp, now known as Dzialdowo, north of Warsaw.

Nazi Germany built the camp when it occupied Poland during World War II, using it as a place of transit, internment and extermination for Jews, political opponents and members of the Polish political elite.

Estimates have put the number of prisoners killed at Soldau at 30,000, but the true toll has never been established.

A aerial view of the Bialucki Forest near Ilowo, the site where the mass grave of about 8,000 Nazi victims from the nearby Soldau concentration camp in Dzialdowo was unearthed at the beginning of July this year. – AFP pic, July 14, 2022
A aerial view of the Bialucki Forest near Ilowo, the site where the mass grave of about 8,000 Nazi victims from the nearby Soldau concentration camp in Dzialdowo was unearthed at the beginning of July this year. – AFP pic, July 14, 2022

The grim discovery of around 15,800kg of human ashes means it can be claimed that at least 8,000 people died there, according to investigator Tomasz Jankowski.

The estimate is based on the weight of the remains, with 2kg roughly corresponding to one body.

The victims buried in the mass grave “were probably assassinated around 1939 and mostly belonged to the Polish elites,” Jankowski said.

In 1944, the Nazi authorities ordered Jewish prisoners to dig up the bodies and burn them to wipe out evidence of war crimes.

Andrzej Ossowski, a genetics researcher at the Pomeranian Medical University, said samples from the ashes had been taken and would be studied in a laboratory.

“We can carry out DNA analysis, which will allow us to find out more about the identity of the victims,” he added, following similar studies at former Nazi camps at Sobibor and Treblinka. – AFP, July 14, 2022

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