Crossword-Solution: TREBLINKA 9 letters, 11 clues 🏆 scrabble score: 15

We have 11 clues for the answer “TREBLINKA”

Clue Answers
Nazi concentration camp in Poland in the Second World War 1 answer
POLISH Nazi extermination camp (WWII) 4 answers
POLISH extermination camp (WWII) 4 answers
NAZI extermination camp (WWII) 7 answers
POLISH concentration/labour camp (WWII) 7 answers
POLISH labor/labour camp (WWII) 7 answers
WORLD War II extermination camp (WWII) 7 answers
GERMAN war camp 9 answers
PRISONER of war camp (WW) 9 answers
WAR camp (hist.) 9 answers
EXTERMINATION camp (WWII) 10 answers
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Hint 1 meaning
A moving of the mind or soul; excitement of the feelings, whether pleasing or painful; disturbance or agitation of mind caused by a specific exciting cause and manifested by some sensible effect on the body.
Hint 2 anagram
NEOIOTM
Hint 3 another clue
A FEELING OF GREAT ELATION
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Quotes with TREBLINKA (3)

The American and British soldiers who liberated the dying inmates from camps in Germany believed that they had discovered the horrors of Nazism. The images their photographers and cameramen captured of the corpses and the living skeletons at Bergen-Belsen and Buchenwald seemed to convey the worst crimes of Hitler... this was far from the truth. The worst was in the ruins of Warsaw, or the fields of Treblinka, or the marshes of Belarus, or the pits of Babi Yar.
Timothy Snyder Bloodlands: Europe Between Hitler and Stalin
Anticipating their calamity and fright when deportation day came (August 6, 1942) he [Henryk Goldszmit, pen name: Janusz Korczak] joined them aboard the train bound for Treblinka, because, he said, he knew his presence would calm them — “You do not leave a sick child in the night, and you do not leave children at a time like this.” A photograph taken at the Umschlagplatz (Transshipment Square) shows him marching, hatless, in military boots, hand in hand with several children,…
Diane Ackerman
It’s that I no longer know where I am. I seem to move around perfectly easily among people, to have perfectly normal relations with them. Is it possible, I ask myself, that all of them are participants in a crime of stupefying proportions? Am I fantasizing it all? I must be mad! Yet every day I see the evidences. The very people I suspect produce the evidence, exhibit it, offer it to me. Corpses. Fragments of corpses that they have bought for money. It is as if I were to visi…
J. M. Coetzee Elizabeth Costello