A groundbreaking new book, Survival at Treblinka: Geography, Gender, and Social Networks in Jewish Resistance, is rewriting one of the Holocaust’s least-known stories, revealing that Jewish women played a far greater role in resisting the Nazis at the Treblinka death camp than history has long recognized.Built as one of Nazi Germany’s deadliest extermination camps under Operation Reinhard, Treblinka was the site where more than 900,000 Jews were systematically murdered in gas chambers disguised as showers. In August 1943, as the Nazis prepared to erase the camp and execute the remaining prisoners, inmates launched a desperate uprising—stealing weapons, setting the camp ablaze, and storming the gates. Hundreds escaped, though most were later hunted down and killed. The revolt forced the Nazis to shut down and dismantle the camp in an attempt to destroy evidence of the mass murder.Gibbs’ research reveals that Jewish women secretly smuggled food, passed intelligence, moved weapons, and helped make the uprising possible, while uncovering previously undocumented evidence of a camp brothel where women endured horrific abuse even as some secretly aided the resistance. The study also expands the number of known Treblinka survivors from 68 to 262, restoring the forgotten stories of women whose courage was largely erased from Holocaust history.The post Hidden heroines of Treblinka: New book rewrites Holocaust history appeared first on World Israel News.