Odilo was the second child of Franz Globocnik. Odilo Globocnik was born on 21 April 1904 and died on 13 May 1945. Odilo Globocnik was born in Italy into a Germanised Slovene family. He died when he was just 41 years old. Odilo was born in Trieste, Austria-Hungary (Italy) and died in Paternion, Austria.
Odilo was an Austrian Nazi and later was a SS leader. He joined the Nazi Party in 1930. He became the radical leader. In 1933 he joined the SS and was assigned deputy district leader in Austria. Globocnik then volunteered for the Waffen-SS and worked as a non-commissioner officer. He was imprisoned for over a year for a number of political offenses, he may have even murdered the Jewish jeweller Futterweiss. Globocnik used a …show more content…
The Treblinka camp was operated from June 1941 to July 1944. Treblinka was the final destination for a little over 2,500 Jews in Bransk. The Jews were taken from Treblinka by train on November 8, 1942. Treblinka was established in 1941 as a forced labor camp for the Jews that were accused of committing crimes. Treblinka tried to minimize the chances of the Jewish rebellion or resistance. Sobibor was the second death camp. The Sobibor death camp was near the Sobibor village, which is located in the eastern part of Lublin. The death camp had branches built in to make sure that no one on the outside of the fence could look in and see what was going on. When the Jews got to the camp they had to be separated by their gender and later were executed. Sobibor had three gas chambers and each one held 160 to 180 persons. A small train held the persons that had died. The Belzec death camp is located in South Eastern Poland. In the early 1940s, the Germans set up many of labor camps in and around Belzec. The Polish workers that were paid for their hard work were replaced by the Jews. The entire camp was not very big, it was pretty small compared to the other death camps. The outer fence of the Belzec death camp was camouflage with the tree branches. Camp two of the Belzec death camp was where the exterminations of the Jews happened, this included gas chambers and large rectangular burial pits. The camouflaged barbed wires were a path to the gas chambers. Belzec death camp was split up into two sections. The first section was the reception area and could hold only 10 wagons, and the second section was where all of the exterminations of the Jews happened. The two camps were separated by two camouflaged barbed wire