Rotunda Zamość


The Rotunda Zamość or the Museum of Martyrdom of the Zamość region - Rotunda, is a Polish museum devoted to remembering the atrocities committed at the former Rotunda Zamość Nazi German camp located in Zamość near Lublin. The Nazi German Gestapo camp was set up in occupied Poland during World War II, as part of the Polish extermination program known as the German AB-Aktion in Poland, Ethnic cleansing of Zamojszczyzna by Nazi Germany....

History

Rotunda was built between 1825–1831 in accordance with the design of General Jean-Baptiste Mallet de Grandville. Was part of the fortifications of the Zamość Fortress. During World War II and German AB-Aktion in Poland in 1940 was taken over by the German Gestapo precinct. It served as a prison, holding camp and a place off mass execution of Polish people.
8000 people died in the Gestapo Rotunda camp in Zamość. Nobody was judged for those crimes. During Generalplan Ost and Ethnic cleansing of Zamojszczyzna by Nazi Germany from Zamość Region Germans resettled 297 villages, about 110,000 Polish people, including 16,000 to Majdanek concentration camp, 2,000 to KL Auschwitz-Birkenau. 30,000 children were resettled. 4,500 Polish children from Zamosc Region deported to Germany in order to be Germanized
The gate which leads to the yard has the original doors with an inscription in German which reads: The temporary camp for the prisoners of Security Police. In German: Gefangenen-Durchgangslager Sicherheistspol.
Last execution took place on 20 and 21 July 1944, when 150 people were shot
In the center of the courtyard there is a stone plaque commemorating the site of the cremation of human bodies. Here Nazi criminals burnt the bodies of the victims they had murdered, prisoners of the Rotunda. May they rest in peace.
On the cemetery around the Rotunda there are ashes of more than 45 thousand people
Rotunda. War cemetery.
prisoner
Prisoners of Rotunda including dr Zygmunt Klukowski, blessed Stanisław Kostka Starowieyski, Grażyna Kierszniewska 16 years old schoolgirl scout, Danuta Sztarejko 17 years old schoolgirl, Celina Sztarejko, count Aleksander Szeptycki, Michał Nowacki Vice Mayor of Zamość, Wacław Bajkowski president of Lublin, colonel Zdzisław Maćkowski Home Army Soldier, his sons Zdzisław and Jan, his wife Pelagia Maćkowska, Michał Wazowski Mayor of Zamość, priest Antoni Gomółka chaplain of scouts, Władysław Szala farmer, his son Jan Szala 19 years old, Henryk Rosiński notary. It is estimated that over 50,000 people passed through the camp.

Gallery