The death toll of the Holocaust wasn't 6 million, it was 11 million. These are some of the victims killed in Nazi-occupied Poland who often go overlooked.

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Share it: Email And if you liked this post, be sure to check out these popular posts: "The Forgotten Holocaust": 27 Tragic Photos From The Rape Of Nanking The Forgotten Holocaust: Heartbreaking Photos From The Armenian Genocide "The Forgotten Victims": Heartbreaking Photos Of The Children Of World War II 1 of 26 Six Polish civilians stand before a Nazi firing squad. 1939. Universal History Archive/UIG/Getty Images 2 of 26 A Nazi prepares to shoot a man during the Piaśnica massacres of 1939-1940, in which 12,000-14,000 Poles (intelligentsia, psychiatric patients, and others) were killed. Waldemar Engler/ Wikimedia Commons 3 of 26 Kazimiera Mika, a 12-year-old Polish girl, mourns the death of her older sister, Andzia, who was killed in Warsaw during a German air raid in 1939. Julien Bryan/Wikimedia Commons 4 of 26 Nazi officials mock Catholicism (one of their targets for eradication) inside a Polish church. Circa 1942. Laski Diffusion/Getty Images 5 of 26 A victim's hand sits perched on the edge of a crematorium furnace at the Nazis' Stutthof concentration camp built to house and slaughter Poles. May 8, 1945. TASS via Getty Images 6 of 26 Czesława Kwoka, a 14-year-old Polish Catholic girl who was sent to Auschwitz. This photo was taken once she arrived at the camp and after an official there had beat her about the face with a stick. She died in the camp in 1943. Wilhelm Brasse/ Wikimedia Commons 7 of 26 Nazis execute some of the 56 Poles who were killed in Bochnia on Dec. 18, 1939 as a reprisal for a recent attack on a German police officer by a Polish underground organization. Wikimedia Commons 8 of 26 Ethnic Germans arrive for resettlement in Nazi-occupied Poland. Circa 1942. Laski Diffusion/Getty Images 9 of 26 Nazis prepare to shoot Poles as part of a mass execution in Piaśnica in 1939. This photo was stolen from the SS member who took it by Polish workers and later made public. Waldemar Engler/ Wikimedia Commons 10 of 26 Nazi soldiers dress up in robes in order to mock Catholic ceremonies at an unspecified town in Poland. Circa 1945. Culture Club/Getty Images 11 of 26 Men dispose of one of the 1,200 Poles summarily executed by the Nazis in the streets of Warsaw during an uprising there in late 1943 and early 1944. Wikimedia Commons 12 of 26 Polish children line up inside a Nazi labor camp in Dzierżązna. Circa 1942-1943. Wikimedia Commons 13 of 26 Nazi soldiers lead a group of Polish women into a forested area to be shot. Location and date unspecified. Hulton-Deutsch Collection/CORBIS/Corbis/Getty Images 14 of 26 Maximilian Kolbe , a Polish monk who was sent to the Auschwitz concentration camp for providing shelter to Jews. While at Auschwitz, Kolbe switched places with a condemned man because the latter had a family and he didn't. Wikimedia Commons 15 of 26 Three Polish men killed as part of a public execution for trading in sugar and flour in Kutno on June 9, 1941. Laski Diffusion/Getty Images 16 of 26 A Nazi official conducts roll call at the Kinder KZ concentration camp for Polish children in Lodz. Date unspecified. Wikimedia Commons 17 of 26 Two Polish victims of summary execution by occupying Nazi forces hang from a lamppost. 1941. Keystone/Hulton Archive/Getty Images 18 of 26 Nazis murder Polish civilians in Leszno by lining them up against a wall and shooting them. 1939. Wikimedia Commons 19 of 26 Polish civilians surrender after being arrested as part of a “łapanka” (mass round-up for purposes of immediate deportation) on Parkowa Street in Warsaw. 1939. Wikimedia Commons 20 of 26 Public execution of 54 Poles in Rożki village near Radom in 1942. Wikimedia Commons 21 of 26 Polish men watch as a Nazi firing squad picks their fellow prisoners off methodically. The Polish men in this photo were shot in retaliation for the death of one German soldier. Hulton-Deutsch Collection/CORBIS/Corbis/Getty Images 22 of 26 Polish inmates of Pawiak prison, hanged by Nazis in Warsaw on Feb. 11, 1944. Wikimedia Commons 23 of 26 A Polish prisoner of war is interrogated by German officers after the failed uprising of Poles against the Nazis in Warsaw in 1944. Keystone/Getty Images 24 of 26 Polish civilian arrested during a “łapanka” round-up and guarded by German soldiers in Warsaw. 1939. Wikimedia Commons 25 of 26 Polish hostages (including Roman Catholic priests) stand with their hands raised in Bydgoszcz in September 1939. Wikimedia Commons 26 of 26 Like this gallery?

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25 Tragic Photos Of The Forgotten Genocide In Nazi-Occupied Poland View Gallery

When we think of the Nazis' crimes against humanity, the most obvious example is the horrific, systematic murder of about 6 million Jews across Europe. However, the Holocaust does not represent the full extent of Nazi genocide.

In total, aside from enemies killed in battle, the Nazis murdered approximately 11 million people. One of the groups most devastated was non-Jewish Polish civilians. The Nazis killed at least 1.8 million ethnic Poles, with some estimates ranging as high as 3 million.

They carried out these killings in Nazi-occupied Poland in service of their principle of Lebensraum, a colonialist concept that called for Germany to expand its borders to the east and take others' territory — often by killing them — so that ethnic Germans might settle it. Ultimately, the Nazis put this principle into action in the form of Generalplan Ost.

This initiative detailed the planned extermination of the Slavic peoples who lived east of Germany and the resettlement of their land with ethnic German peoples. At best, the plan showed an utter disregard for Polish civilian lives. At worst, it called for their systematic extermination.

The Nazis hoped that their invasion of Poland in 1939 would ultimately allow them to remove or exterminate tens of millions of Poles and other Slavic peoples in Eastern Europe in order to make way for the planned resettlement of the area with "racially pure" Germans.

Hitler's speech to his generals in August 1939 upon the invasion of Poland (and the beginning of World War II) explicitly and chillingly stated exactly how his soldiers were to treat Polish civilians who fell under their control: "Kill without pity or mercy all men, women or children of Polish descent or language."

Likewise, SS leader Heinrich Himmler said, "All Polish specialists will be exploited in our military-industrial complex. Later, all Poles will disappear from this world. It is imperative that the great German nation considers the elimination of all Polish people as its chief task."

Indeed, the Nazis hoped to execute 85 percent of all Poles and keep the remaining 15 percent as slaves.

Nazi preparation for this destruction of Polish society had begun well before it came to fruition. Throughout the late 1930s, the Nazis had been drawing up a list of some 61,000 prominent Polish civilians (scholars, politicians, priests, Catholics, and others) to be killed. In 1939, Nazi leaders then distributed this list to SS death squads who followed the advancing German military forces into Poland in order to execute the civilians on the list as well as anyone else perceived to be a threat.

Indeed, the Nazis proceeded to execute the Poles on the list as well as about 60,000 others in 1939 and 1940 across Nazi-occupied Poland in what was called Operation Tannenberg. But this was just the initial phase of the Nazis' planned destruction of the Polish people.

In addition to the systematic execution of specific individuals, the Nazis killed an indiscriminate murder of civilians once the German Air Force started bombing cities, even those that had no military or strategic value whatsoever.

It is estimated that more than 200,000 Polish civilians died due to aerial bombing in Nazi-occupied Poland in the months following September 1939 as the Nazi war machine rolled into their country and, in conjunction with the Soviet invasion from the east, quickly destroyed Polish resistance. For example, the town of Frampol was completely destroyed and 50 percent of its inhabitants were killed by German bombing for the sole purpose of practicing their aim for future bombing raids.

On the ground, German soldiers murdered Polish civilians at an equally horrifying rate. "Polish civilians and soldiers are dragged out everywhere," one soldier said. "When we finish our operation, the entire village is on fire. Nobody is left alive, also all the dogs were shot."

As the war progressed and Germany took full control of Poland, the Nazis put procedures of systematic genocide into place. The Nazis forced about 1.5 million Polish civilians from their homes, replacing them with Germans, and forcing the displaced into slave labor camps and some of the same death camps where Jews were slaughtered. About 150,000 non-Jewish Poles were sent to Auschwitz alone, with another 65,000 dying in the Stutthof concentration camp set up specifically for Poles.

Poles who did resist such mass deportations and killings, like those in the resistance who led the Warsaw Uprising of 1944, were arrested and killed en masse with the Nazis showing no mercy.

At the same time, the Nazis kidnapped thousands of local women during army raids of Polish cities. These women were sent to serve as sex slaves in German brothels with girls as young as 15 sometimes taken from their homes for this specific purpose.

Meanwhile, young Polish children with certain desired physical features (such as blue eyes) were also subject to kidnapping by German authorities. These children were forced into a series of tests to determine their capacity for Germanization. The children who passed these tests were resettled into "pure" German families while those who failed were executed or sent to death camps.

This fate befell about 50,000-200,000 children, with 10,000 of them killed in the process, and most of them never able to reunite with their families after the war.

These numbers, appalling though they are, scarcely do justice to what must have been the true horror for those who suffered in Nazi-occupied Poland.

After this look at genocide in Nazi-occupied Poland, see some of the most haunting photos taken during the Holocaust. Then, view some of the most disturbing photos taken inside the Jewish ghettos built by the Nazis.