The timing of the miltary actions around Treblinka is important because it impinges on the question about the meaning of the scaring visible on the September aerial photography. It is known that after the Soviet Forces overran eastern Poland and took Warsaw, the local peasantry churned the grounds of the camp seeking gold and other valubles, rumored to have been buried there by the Jews before being murdered. If the Photography was flown shortly after the Red Army captured Treblinka, the scaring can be interpreted as largely due to camp structures and practices before its disolution.
Although the precise time that the sanitized remnant of Treblinka was abandoned by the SS caretaker is unknown, given the military situation, he and his family must have fled sometime in late August, just before the Soviets renewed their offensive which led to the capture of Warsaw. The map
Give these historical facts, it is presumed that the destruction of the remnants of Treblinka occurred in early September, just before the Luftwaffe flight that took GX12555. And that very little treasure hunting had yet begun.
Treblinka was of interest to the Soviets. Soviet security personnel were examining and photographing the camp soon after they captured it. There are prints available that were taken in the fall of 1944, shortly after the camp was overrun. Given these facts, it is likely that Treblinka was not yet greatly disturbed by treasure seekers when the German aerial photography acquired in September.
Last modified: November, 2004
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