In 1942 this mustard-yellow building was the administrative headquarters for Operation Reinhard, the German plan to exterminate the Jews of occupied Poland. Here the system of death camps like Bełżec, Sobibór and Treblinka were created and the systematic killing of over 2 million people was administered. Today, the building is used as a law school. There is no marker recalling its role in the Holocaust.
Former Headquarters of Operation Reinhard
Lonely Planet's must-see attractions
2.8 MILES
Majdanek concentration camp, where tens of thousands of people, mainly Jews, were murdered by the Germans during WWII, lies on the outskirts of Lublin –…
1.11 MILES
The old Jewish cemetery, established in 1541, has 30-odd readable tombstones, including the oldest Jewish tombstone in Poland in its original location…
29.1 MILES
Situated within the 16th-century Janowiec Castle, this museum has a few rooms given over to temporary exhibitions and contemporary art, as well as a…
26.47 MILES
Over the centuries, Kazimierz Dolny had a significant Jewish population, and in the decades leading up to WWII as much as half the population was Jewish…
26.87 MILES
This 1635 townhouse built for the Celej family is a branch of the Vistula River Museum. The focus is on art and several rooms on the upper floor are…
0.68 MILES
This gate leads from the castle area into the Old Town and was traditionally referred to as the 'Jewish' gate, since until WWII it also separated the main…
0.76 MILES
Lublin’s royal castle dates to the 12th century, though it's been rebuilt many times since; the oldest surviving part is the impressive Romanesque round…
0.68 MILES
Originally a Gothic complex founded by King Kazimierz III Wielki in 1342, the Dominican Priory was rebuilt in Renaissance style after it was ravaged by…
Nearby attractions
0.54 MILES
The only significant remnant of the fortified walls that once surrounded the Old Town is the 14th-century Gothic Kraków Gate, built during the reign of…
0.63 MILES
For an expansive view of the Old Town, climb to the top of Trinitarian Tower (1819), which houses the underrated Archdiocesan Museum. The chaotic layout…
3. Cathedral of St John the Baptist
0.63 MILES
This former Jesuit church dates from the 16th century and is the largest in Lublin; you can visit any time services are not taking place. The impressive…
0.65 MILES
A Jewish orphanage was established in this building in the 1860s. On 24 March 1942, the Nazis rounded up over 100 children here, most still in their…
0.68 MILES
This gate leads from the castle area into the Old Town and was traditionally referred to as the 'Jewish' gate, since until WWII it also separated the main…
0.68 MILES
Originally a Gothic complex founded by King Kazimierz III Wielki in 1342, the Dominican Priory was rebuilt in Renaissance style after it was ravaged by…
0.75 MILES
This sprawling and only vaguely organised market has a very long history, with a market held on this site for centuries. In fact some think Lublin started…
0.76 MILES
Lublin’s royal castle dates to the 12th century, though it's been rebuilt many times since; the oldest surviving part is the impressive Romanesque round…