Editing Theresienstadt Ghetto
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The inmates were also allowed slightly more privileges, including postal correspondence and the right to receive food parcels.{{sfn|Rothkirchen|2006|p=243}} On 24 August 1943, [[Bialystok children|1,200 Jewish children]] from the [[Białystok Ghetto]] in Poland arrived at Theresienstadt.{{sfn|Klibanski|1995|p=93}} They refused to be disinfected due to their fear that the showers were [[gas chambers]]. This incident was one of the only clues as to what happened to those deported from Theresienstadt. The children were held in strict isolation for six weeks before deportation to Auschwitz; none survived.{{sfn|Adler|2017|p=127}}{{sfn|Klibanski|1995|p=94}} On 9 November 1943, Edelstein and other ghetto administrators were arrested, accused of covering up the escape of fifty-five prisoners. Two days later, commandant [[Anton Burger]] ordered a census of the entire ghetto population, approximately 36,000 people at that time. All inmates, regardless of age, were required to stand outside in freezing weather from 7 am to 11 pm; 300 people died on the field from exhaustion. Five thousand prisoners, including Edelstein and the other arrested leaders, were sent to the family camp at Auschwitz on 15 and 18 December.{{sfn|Rothkirchen|2006|p=244}} |
The inmates were also allowed slightly more privileges, including postal correspondence and the right to receive food parcels.{{sfn|Rothkirchen|2006|p=243}} On 24 August 1943, [[Bialystok children|1,200 Jewish children]] from the [[Białystok Ghetto]] in Poland arrived at Theresienstadt.{{sfn|Klibanski|1995|p=93}} They refused to be disinfected due to their fear that the showers were [[gas chambers]]. This incident was one of the only clues as to what happened to those deported from Theresienstadt. The children were held in strict isolation for six weeks before deportation to Auschwitz; none survived.{{sfn|Adler|2017|p=127}}{{sfn|Klibanski|1995|p=94}} On 9 November 1943, Edelstein and other ghetto administrators were arrested, accused of covering up the escape of fifty-five prisoners. Two days later, commandant [[Anton Burger]] ordered a census of the entire ghetto population, approximately 36,000 people at that time. All inmates, regardless of age, were required to stand outside in freezing weather from 7 am to 11 pm; 300 people died on the field from exhaustion. Five thousand prisoners, including Edelstein and the other arrested leaders, were sent to the family camp at Auschwitz on 15 and 18 December.{{sfn|Rothkirchen|2006|p=244}} |
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293 Jews arrived at Theresienstadt from [[Westerbork transit camp|Westerbork]] (in the Netherlands) in April 1943, but the rest of the 4,894 Jews eventually deported from Westerbork to Theresienstadt arrived during 1944.{{sfn|Hájková|2015|p=86}}{{sfn|United States Holocaust Memorial Museum|loc=[https://encyclopedia.ushmm.org/content/en/article/theresienstadt-other-prisoners Other Prisoners] | 2018}} 450 Jews from Denmark—the few who had not [[Rescue of the Danish Jews|escaped to Sweden]]—arrived in October 1943. The Danish government's inquiries after them prevented their deportation, and eventually the SS authorized representatives of the Danish Red Cross and the [[International Committee of the Red Cross]] (ICRC) to visit Theresienstadt.{{sfn|Rothkirchen|2006|p=254}}{{sfn|Adler|2017|p=53}} The RSHA archives were transported to Theresienstadt in July 1943, reducing the space for prisoners,{{sfn|Kárný|1994}} and stored in the Sudeten barracks until they were burned on 17 April 1945 on SS orders.{{sfn|Adler|2017|pp=160–161}} |
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===1944=== |
===1944=== |