Radom Ghetto

E31606

Radom Ghetto was a World War II Jewish ghetto in Nazi-occupied Poland where Jews were confined under brutal conditions before many were deported to extermination camps.

Aliases (1)

Statements (47)
Predicate Object
instanceOf Nazi ghetto in occupied Poland
World War II Jewish ghetto
administeredBy German civil authorities in Radom
German police
condition brutal repression
disease
forced labor
overcrowding
starvation
country Poland
deportationDestination Treblinka extermination camp
forced-labor camps in the Radom region
dissolved 1944
established 1941
establishedBy German occupation authorities
event liquidation of the ghetto by German authorities
followedBy near destruction of the Jewish community of Radom
hasPart large ghetto in Radom
small ghetto in Radom
historicalRegion Masovian region
languageOfInhabitants Polish
Yiddish
locatedIn Generalgouvernement
Nazi-occupied Poland
Radom
memorializedBy Holocaust memorials in Radom
notableEvent mass deportations to Treblinka extermination camp
notableFor high mortality due to deportations and executions
use of Jewish forced labor in local industry
occupyingPower Nazi Germany
partOf Holocaust in Poland
Nazi ghetto system
persecutedGroup Radom Jewish community
populationType Jews
Roma (to a lesser extent)
precededBy anti-Jewish measures in Radom
purpose exploitation of Jewish forced labor
segregation of Jews
staging point for deportation to extermination camps
religionOfInhabitants Judaism
subjectOf Holocaust research
museum exhibitions on the Holocaust in Poland
survivor testimonies
timePeriod German occupation of Poland
World War II
victimOf Holocaust
Nazi racial policy

Referenced by (2)
Subject (surface form when different) Predicate
Radom Ghetto ("Radom Jewish community")
persecutedGroup
Treblinka
transportedFrom

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