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You have full access to this open access article. Archaeological research is shedding new light on the crime and its cover-up through analyses of the material evidence. The methods and tools of archaeological research and integrating results with the work of historians, ethnologists, physical anthropologists, forensic physicians, and prosecutors from the Polish Institute of National Remembrance, among others, is intended to put the crimes committed in and their cover-up in in a new light see also Groen et al.
The purpose of this text is to draw attention to the nature and extent of the crimes, which have not been discussed in detail in world archaeology. It is estimated that up to 7, people were killed there by the officers and supporters of the Third Reich. They show a frequently emphasized point in the discourse — not everything has been preserved in written, visual, and post-war reports, and they do not tell the whole story e. Archaeology provides insight into the organization, the course of the crimes, and the ways of covering them up, and presents the material heritage of the crimes.
In the second half of , the graves were exhumed and the corpses of the victims were burned in order to cover up the traces of the crime prepared by M. It should also be emphasized that the work carried out is part of the investigations conducted by the Polish Institute of National Remembrance on the mass crimes committed against the Polish people during the Second World War.
There is no statute of limitations for genocide. Although the perpetrators are long dead, this is no argument against conducting scientific research and prosecutorial investigations on them. From the very beginning, the Germans used Pomerania as a crime laboratory. The autumn of was the beginning of a terrible terror, the victims of which numbered in the tens of thousands among the Polish intelligentsia and other groups condemned to death by the Third Reich.