Escape from Sobibor
It is these historical events that have sparked a great debate in history, which is an escape from the Nazi death camp Sobibor, where about a quarter of a million Jews were executed. And among 600 inmates in the camp. On the other hand, about 300 prisoners escaped, although all but 50 to 70 were re-arrested and killed. After the escape, the commander of the Special Forces, Heinrich Himmler, ordered the closure of the death camp, where it was dismantled, swept underground, and planted over the trees to cover it.
December1956, Neath, Glamorgan, Wales, UK
8 March 1962, Beograd, Serbia
23 July 1942, Berlin, Germany
1945, UK
July 30, 1941 in Belgrade, Serbia, Yugoslavia
20 July 1941, Bergreichenstein, Sudetenland [now Kasperské Hory, Czech Republic]
3 December 1947, London, England, UK
20 August 1933, Belgrade, Serbia, Yugoslavia
24 May 1938, Novi Sad, Serbia, Yugoslavia
10 October 1915, Chicago, Illinois, USA
19 June 1955, Zagreb, Croatia, Yugoslavia
6 May 1938, Berlin, Germany
10 September 1934, Zenica, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Yugoslavia
29 October 1940, Leeds, Yorkshire, England, UK
19 January 1952, Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Yugoslavia
2 January 1957, Tomaszów Lubelski, Lubelskie, Poland
9 February 1956, Split, Croatia, Yugoslavia
13 June 1937, Belgrade, Serbia, Yugoslavia
1940, Berlin, Germany
5 June 1905, Orasac near Visoko, Ottoman Empire [now Bosnia and Herzegovina]
14 May 1941, Zürich, Switzerland
29 August 1962, Amsterdam, Noord-Holland, Netherlands

