Klementowice | Lublin

/ Klementowice railway station. It was an important railway junction during the war. During the occupation, a second railway line was built by the inmates of the Klementowice labor camp, under supervision of the Germans. ©Aleksey Kasyanov/Yahad - In Unum Helena W., born in 1932, witnessed the execution of two Jews who were unable to carry out the order to dig a pit and were then shot by the gendarmes in the Klementowice forest in June 1942. ©Aleksey Kasyanov/Yahad - In Unum Henryk R., born in 1928, saw the pit near the railway in Klementowice, where the bodies of the executed Jewish men were buried in June 1942. ©Aleksey Kasyanov/Yahad - In Unum Stefania S., born in 1930, who lived near the field where the 350 Jews were executed in June 1942, heard the peeling machine digging the pit and the sound of gunfire. ©Aleksey Kasyanov/Yahad - In Unum Wladyslaw B, born in 1922, was sent to the labor camp in Klementowice. He remembers the Jewish men who passed through the camp before being shot near the railway tracks. ©Olga Szymerowska/Yahad - In Unum The Yahad team during an interview at the execution site in Klementowice with the witness Henryk R., born in 1928. ©Aleksey Kasyanov/Yahad - In Unum The execution site in a field near to the railway in Klementowice, where the Germans killed 350 Jews deported from the Warsaw ghetto in June 1942.  ©Aleksey Kasyanov/Yahad - In Unum A memorial erected in Klementowice in 2015 at the site where 350 Jews were executed in June 1942.  ©Aleksey Kasyanov/Yahad - In Unum

Execution of Jews in Klementowice

1 Killing site(s)

Investigated by Yahad:
2018
Kind of place before:
Field next to the railway
Memorials:
Yes
Period of occupation:
1939-1944
Number of victims:
About 350

Witness interview

Stefania S., born in 1930: "One day, the Jews arrived by train and were kept for a few days in the square next to the agricultural school. Then, one Sunday morning, we heard the sound of a peeling machine. My father was surprised because the Germans didn’t usually work on Sundays. My mother forbade us from going outside, so I watched through the small window of our house as several groups of Jews passed by. After one group had gone, we heard a lot of shooting—so much shooting. Later that day, when we went to look near the railway, we saw that the pit had been covered with earth, forming a long barrow, about 10 meters in length.” [Testimony N°YIU847P, interviewed in Klementowice, on June 27, 2018]

Historical note

Klementowice is a village in the Kurów district, Puławy county, in eastern Poland. It is situated approximately 7 km (4 miles) southwest of Kurów, 15 km (9 miles) southeast of Puławy, and 32 km (20 miles) west of the regional capital, Lublin. According to local witnesses interviewed by Yahad, there were no Jewish residents in Klementowice before the war.

Holocaust by bullets in figures

German units entered Klementowice in September 1939. Although there was no permanent German gendarmerie post in the village, a German division was stationed at the agricultural school to oversee local railway construction, which was carried out by forced laborers from the Junaki labor camp, established in Klementowice.

In June 1942, the Germans brought approximately 400 Jewish men from the Warsaw Ghetto to Klementowice by train to work on the railway construction. According to witnesses interviewed by Yahad, the men were kept in the courtyard of the agricultural school under extremely harsh conditions, sleeping and eating in the open air for several days. As most of the men were starving and unable to work, the Germans selected 50 Jews deemed fit for labor. The remaining 350 were executed.

Initially, a group of Jewish men was taken by the Germans in a truck to the nearby Stary Las forest and ordered to dig a pit. Exhausted and too weak to complete the task, two of the men were killed on the spot, and their bodies were left in the forest. The rest of the group was returned to the schoolyard.

The following night, a pit was dug in a field near the railway using the excavators employed for track construction. On a Sunday morning in June 1942, when there were no witnesses working in the surrounding fields, the Jewish men were taken to the pit, shot, and buried with the excavator.

To commemorate the Jewish victims murdered in Klementowice, a memorial was erected at the execution site in 2015.

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