*** Welcome to piglix ***

SS-Truppenübungsplatz Heidelager

SS-Truppenübungsplatz Heidelager
SS-officer training camp
Concentration camp
SS-Truppenübungsplatz Heidelager.jpg
Heidelager Museum
Location of Pustków on the map of Poland today
Coordinates 50°8′25″N 21°29′20″E / 50.14028°N 21.48889°E / 50.14028; 21.48889Coordinates: 50°8′25″N 21°29′20″E / 50.14028°N 21.48889°E / 50.14028; 21.48889
Operated by Schutzstaffel (SS)
Commandant Oberführer-SS Bernhardt Voss
Original use Slave labour, POW internment
Operational January 1940 – August 1944
Inmates Jews, Poles, Russians
Killed 15,000 total: 7,000 Jews, 5,000 Soviets, 3,000 Polish
Liberated by Flaga PPP.svg Armia Krajowa
Red Army flag.svg Red Army

SS-Truppenübungsplatz Heidelager was a World War II SS military complex and Nazi concentration camp in Pustków and Pustków Osiedle, Poland. The Nazi facility was built to train collaborationist military units, including the Ukrainian 14th Waffen SS Division "Galician", and units from Estonia. This training included killing operations inside the concentration camps – most notably at the nearby Pustków and Szebnie camps – and Jewish ghettos in the vicinity of the 'Heidelager'. The military area was situated in the triangle of the Wisła and San rivers, dominated by large forest areas. The centre of the Heidelager was at Blizna, the location of the secret Nazi V-2 missile launch site, which was built and staffed by prisoners from the concentration camp at Pustków.

The Nazis originally planned to erect a large SS training camp near Pustków with barracks, warehouses, and buildings for the intelligence services. The facility was built by order of Reichsführer-SS Heinrich Himmler under provision OKW No. 3032 of 21 December 1939, which allowed for construction of an SS military training centre in the area eastward of Dębica in Generalgouvernement Polen. The training site was to be built as a barrack camp with four ring roads (called: Lager Flandern). It was planned to be completed on 1 October 1940 for two reinforced infantry regiments. To accomplish this, about a dozen villages near Pustków were evacuated and then razed.


...
Wikipedia

...