Treblinka II was an extermination camp and only about 40 people survived - that is, were still alive at the end of World War 2 in Europe. None of them is particularly famous.
The most famous Nazi survivors were probably Dr Mengele and Adolf Eichmann, though Eichmann was himself captured many years later.
no, but some gained fame since then.
Treblinka extermination camp was created in 1942.
The death toll was highest at the extermination camps: * Auschwitz (group) - at least 1.1 million * Trelinka - 850,000 + * Belzec - 434,508 Jews plus an unknown number of gypsies The camp with the highest death rate (that is smallest number of known survivors) was Belzec, with only two (!) known survivors. Treblinka, with only about 120 survivors would rank next.
The number of survivors of Treblinka II (the extermination camp) still alive at the end of World War 2 is given in the Wikipedia article on Treblinka as 40 (forty). (Compare this with the usual estimate of at least 850,000 victims slaughtered). Please see the link below. In addition, there was an older labor camp, Treblinka I, which was mainly intended for non-Jewish Poles who did not "cooperate" with the Nazis. It was a concentration camp (not an extermination camp) and had more survivors. Apparently some prisoners from this camp were drafted for various tasks at Treblinka II, but otherwise the two camps were distinct and separate.
The most famous Nazi survivors were probably Dr Mengele and Adolf Eichmann, though Eichmann was himself captured many years later.
Treblinka (I) began as a concentration camp for Poles.
http://www.holocaustresearchproject.org/ar/treblinka/trebmap3.jpg
no, but some gained fame since then.
Treblinka extermination camp was created in 1942.
Treblinka extermination camp ended in 1943.
The death toll was highest at the extermination camps: * Auschwitz (group) - at least 1.1 million * Trelinka - 850,000 + * Belzec - 434,508 Jews plus an unknown number of gypsies The camp with the highest death rate (that is smallest number of known survivors) was Belzec, with only two (!) known survivors. Treblinka, with only about 120 survivors would rank next.
The number of survivors of Treblinka II (the extermination camp) still alive at the end of World War 2 is given in the Wikipedia article on Treblinka as 40 (forty). (Compare this with the usual estimate of at least 850,000 victims slaughtered). Please see the link below. In addition, there was an older labor camp, Treblinka I, which was mainly intended for non-Jewish Poles who did not "cooperate" with the Nazis. It was a concentration camp (not an extermination camp) and had more survivors. Apparently some prisoners from this camp were drafted for various tasks at Treblinka II, but otherwise the two camps were distinct and separate.
Treblinka was a Nazi death camp on the northern part of Poland during the Holocaust.
The Camp Commando of Treblinka Extermination Camp was Kurt Hubert Franz (He was the 3rd and last commando of Treblinka.
Auschwitz - the most famous Belzec, Chelmno, Majdanek, Sobibor, T.II, Bergen-Belsen, Buchenwald, Dachau, Sachsenhausen, Treblinka, and Theresienstadt they are all of them, famous or not they were all terrible
Treblinka II was the main extermination camp after Auschwitz II (Birkenau). An estimated 850,000 Jews were slaughtered there and only about 40-45 survived.