To
celebrate the International Holocaust Remembrance Day every year on January 27,
I will post the information about Auschwitz Concentration Camp from Wikipedia.
The main gate at the
former German Nazi death camp of Auschwitz II (Birkenau). Note that this is
inside the camp looking back from the loading ramp to the "Gate of
Death".
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Coordinates
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Other names
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Birkenau
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Location
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Auschwitz, Nazi Germany
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Operated by
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the Nazi Schutzstaffel
(SS), the Soviet NKVD (after World War II)
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Original use
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Army barracks
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Operational
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May 1940 – January 1945
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Inmates
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mainly Jews, Poles, Roma, Soviet soldiers
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Killed
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1.1 million (estimated)
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Liberated by
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Soviet Union, January 27, 1945
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Notable inmates
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Notable books
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Website
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Auschwitz concentration camp (German: Konzentrationslager
Auschwitz [ˈaʊʃvɪts] ( )) was a network
of concentration and extermination camps built and operated by the Third Reich
in Polish areas annexed by Nazi Germany during World War II. It consisted of
Auschwitz I (the base camp); Auschwitz II–Birkenau (the extermination camp);
Auschwitz III–Monowitz (a labor camp to staff an IG Farben factory), and 45
satellite camps.
Auschwitz
I was first constructed to hold Polish political prisoners, who began to arrive
in May 1940. The first extermination of prisoners took place in September 1941,
and Auschwitz II–Birkenau went on to become a major site of the Nazi
"Final Solution to the Jewish question". From early 1942 until late
1944, transport trains delivered Jews to the camp's gas chambers from all over
German-occupied Europe, where they were killed with the pesticide Zyklon B. At
least 1.1 million prisoners died at Auschwitz, around 90 percent of them
Jewish; approximately 1 in 6 Jews killed in the Holocaust died at the camp.
Others deported to Auschwitz included 150,000 Poles, 23,000 Romani and Sinti,
15,000 Soviet prisoners of war, 400 Jehovah's Witnesses, and tens of thousands
of people of diverse nationalities. Living conditions were brutal, and many of
those not killed in the gas chambers died of starvation, forced labor,
infectious diseases, individual executions, and medical experiments.
In
the course of the war, the camp was staffed by 6,500 to 7,000 members of the
German Schutzstaffel (SS), approximately 15 percent of whom were later
convicted of war crimes. Some, including camp commandant Rudolf Höss, were
executed. The Allied Powers refused to believe early reports of the atrocities
at the camp, and their failure to bomb the camp or its railways remains
controversial. One hundred and forty-four prisoners are known to have
successfully escaped from Auschwitz, and on October 7, 1944, two Sonderkommando
units—prisoners assigned to staff the gas chambers—launched a brief,
unsuccessful uprising.
As
Soviet troops approached Auschwitz in January 1945, most of its population was
evacuated and sent on a death march. The prisoners remaining at the camp were
liberated on January 27, 1945, a day now commemorated as International
Holocaust Remembrance Day. In the following decades, survivors such
as Primo Levi, Viktor Frankl, and Elie Wiesel wrote memoirs of their
experiences in Auschwitz, and the camp became a dominant symbol of the
Holocaust. In 1947, Poland founded a museum on the site of Auschwitz I and II,
and in 1979, it was named a UNESCO World Heritage Site.
History
Background
Discrimination
against Jews began immediately after the Nazi seizure of power in Germany on
January 30, 1933. The Law for the Restoration of the Professional Civil
Service, passed on April 7 that year, excluded most Jews from the legal
profession and the civil service. Similar legislation soon deprived Jewish
members of other professions of the right to practise. Violence and economic
pressure were used by the regime to encourage Jews to voluntarily leave the
country. Jewish businesses were denied access to markets, forbidden to
advertise in newspapers, and deprived of access to government contracts.
Citizens were harassed and subjected to violent attacks and boycotts of their
businesses.
In
September 1935 the Nuremberg Laws were enacted. These laws prohibited
marriages between Jews and people of Germanic extraction, extramarital
relations between Jews and Germans, and the employment of German women under
the age of 45 as domestic servants in Jewish households. The Reich Citizenship
Law stated that only those of Germanic or related blood were defined as
citizens. Thus Jews and other minority groups were stripped of their German
citizenship. By the start of World War II in 1939, around 250,000 of Germany's
437,000 Jews emigrated to the United States, Palestine, Great Britain, and
other countries.
The
ideology of Nazism brought together elements of antisemitism, racial hygiene,
and eugenics, and combined them with pan-Germanism and territorial expansionism
with the goal of obtaining more Lebensraum (living space) for the
Germanic people. Nazi Germany attempted to obtain this new territory by
attacking Poland and the Soviet Union, intending to deport or kill the Jews and
Slavs living there, who were viewed as being inferior to the Aryan master race.
After the invasion of Poland in September 1939, German dictator Adolf Hitler
ordered that the Polish leadership and intelligentsia should be destroyed.
Approximately 65,000 civilians were killed by the end of 1939. In addition to
leaders of Polish society, the Nazis killed Jews, prostitutes, Romani, and the
mentally ill. SS-Obergruppenführer (Senior Group Leader) Reinhard
Heydrich, then head of the Gestapo, ordered on September 21 that Jews should be
rounded up and concentrated into cities with good rail links. Initially the intention
was to deport the Jews to points further east, or possibly to Madagascar.
Auschwitz Birkenau German death camp in Poland. Entrance to Auschwitz I, photograph taken in mid-March, 2002 by Uri Yanover. |
Auschwitz
I
Oświęcim
(Auschwitz) was located administratively in Germany, Province of Upper Silesia,
Regierungsbezirk Kattowitz, Landkreis Bielitz. It was first suggested as a site
for a concentration camp for Polish prisoners by SS-Oberführer Arpad
Wigand, an aide to Higher SS and Police Leader for Silesia, Erich von dem
Bach-Zelewski. Bach-Zelewski had been searching for a site to house prisoners
in the Silesia region, as the local prisons were filled to capacity. Richard
Glücks, head of the Concentration Camps Inspectorate, sent former Sachsenhausen
concentration camp commandant Walter Eisfeld to inspect the site, which already
held sixteen dilapidated one-story buildings that had once served as an army
barracks and a camp for transient workers. Reichsführer-SS Heinrich
Himmler, head of the Schutzstaffel (SS), approved the site in April
1940, intending to use the facility to house political prisoners. SS-Obersturmbannführer
(lieutenant colonel) Rudolf Höss oversaw the development of the camp and served
as the first commandant. SS-Obersturmführer (senior lieutenant) Josef
Kramer was appointed Höss's deputy. Auschwitz I, the original camp, became the
administrative center for the whole complex.
Local
residents were evicted, including 1,200 people who lived in shacks around the
barracks. Around 300 Jewish residents of Oświęcim were brought in to lay
foundations. From 1940 to 1941, 17,000 Polish and Jewish residents of the western
districts of Oświęcim were expelled from places adjacent to the camp. The
Germans also ordered expulsions from the villages of Broszkowice, Babice,
Brzezinka, Rajsko, Pławy, Harmęże, Bór, and Budy. German citizens were offered
tax concessions and other benefits if they would relocate to the area. By
October 1943, more than 6,000 Reich Germans had arrived. The Nazis planned to
build a model modern residential area for incoming Germans, including schools,
playing fields, and other amenities. Some of the plans went forward, including
the construction of several hundred apartments, but many were never fully
implemented. Basic amenities such as water and sewage disposal were inadequate,
and water-borne illnesses were commonplace.
Main
article: First mass
transport to Auschwitz concentration camp
The
first prisoners (30 German criminal prisoners from the Sachsenhausen camp)
arrived in May 1940, intended to act as functionaries within the prison system.
The first transport of 728 Polish prisoners, which included 20 Jews, arrived on
June 14, 1940, from the prison in Tarnów, Poland. They were interned in the
former building of the Polish Tobacco Monopoly, adjacent to the site, until the
camp was ready. The inmate population grew quickly as the camp absorbed
Poland's intelligentsia and dissidents, including the Polish underground
resistance. By March 1941, 10,900 were imprisoned there, most of them Poles. By
the end of 1940, the SS had confiscated land in the surrounding area to create
a "zone of interest" about 40 square kilometres (15 sq mi)
in area surrounded by a double ring of electrified barbed wire fences and
watchtowers. Like other Nazi concentration camps, the gates to Auschwitz I
displayed the motto Arbeit macht frei ("Work brings
freedom").
Map showing the
location of the three main camps (1944)
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Photo
of the German extermination camp at Birkenau, taken by a United States Army Air
Force plane, August 25, 1944 Poland. Crematoria II and III are visible. For
reference as to the date of the photo and what it shows, see The Case for
Auschwitz by Robert Jan van Pelt, 2002, Indiana University Press, ISBN 0253340160,
page 175.
This photo is oriented
with south at the top.
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Auschwitz
II-Birkenau
Construction
on Auschwitz II-Birkenau began in October 1941 to ease congestion at the main
camp. Himmler intended the camp to house 50,000 prisoners of war, who would be
interned as forced laborers. Plans called for the expansion of the camp first to
house 150,000 and eventually as many as 200,000 inmates. An initial contingent
of 10,000 Soviet soldiers arrived at Auschwitz I in October 1941, but by March
1942 only 945 were still alive, and these were transferred to Birkenau, where
most of them died from disease or starvation by May. By this time Hitler had
decided that the Jews of Europe were to be exterminated, so Birkenau was
repurposed as a combination labor camp / extermination camp.
The
first gas chamber at Birkenau was the "red house" (called Bunker 1 by
SS staff), a brick cottage converted into a gassing facility by tearing out the
inside and bricking up the walls. It was operational by March 1942. A second
brick cottage, the "white house" or Bunker 2, was converted some
weeks later. These structures were in use for mass killings until early 1943.
Himmler visited the camp in person on July 17 and 18, 1942. He was given a
demonstration of a mass killing using the gas chamber in Bunker 2 and toured
the building site of the new IG Farben plant being constructed at the nearby
town of Monowitz.
In
early 1943, the Nazis decided to increase greatly the gassing capacity of
Birkenau. Crematorium II, originally designed as a mortuary, with morgues in
the basement and ground-level incinerators, was converted into a killing
factory by installing gas-tight doors, vents for the Zyklon B (a highly lethal
cyanide-based pesticide) to be dropped into the chamber, and ventilation
equipment to later remove the gas. It went into operation in March. Crematorium
III was built using the same design. Crematoria IV and V, designed from the
start as gassing centers, were also constructed that spring. By June 1943, all
four crematoria were operational. Most of the victims were killed using these
four structures.
The
Gypsy camp
See
also: Porajmos
On
December 10, 1942, Himmler issued an order to send all Sinti and Roma (Gypsies)
to concentration camps, including Auschwitz. A separate camp for Roma was set
up at Auschwitz II-Birkenau known as the Zigeunerfamilienlager (Gypsy
Family Camp). The first transport of German Gypsies arrived on February 26,
1943, and was housed in Section B-IIe of Auschwitz II. Approximately 23,000
Gypsies had been brought to Auschwitz by 1944, 20,000 of whom died there. One
transport of 1,700 Polish Sinti and Roma was killed upon arrival, as they were
suspected to be ill with spotted fever.
Gypsy
prisoners were used primarily for construction work. Thousands died of typhus
and noma due to overcrowding, poor sanitary conditions, and malnutrition.
Anywhere from 1,400 to 3,000 prisoners were transferred to other concentration
camps before the murder of the remaining population.
On
August 2, 1944, the SS cleared the Gypsy camp. A witness in another part of the
camp later told of the Gypsies unsuccessfully battling the SS with improvised
weapons before being loaded into trucks. The surviving population of 2,897 was
then killed en masse in the gas chambers. The murder of the Romani people by
the Nazis during World War II is known in the Romani language as the Porajmos
(devouring).
I.G. Farbens
Buna-Werke industrial complex near Dwory, Poland. Diagram shows Monowitz and
various subcamps.
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Auschwitz
III
Main
article: Monowitz concentration camp
After
examining several sites for a new plant to manufacture buna, a type of
synthetic rubber essential to the war effort, chemicals manufacturer IG Farben
chose a site near the towns of Dwory and Monowice (Monowitz in German), about 7
kilometres (4.3 mi) east of Auschwitz I and 3 kilometres (1.9 mi)
east of the town of Oświęcim. Financial support in the form of tax exemptions
was available to corporations prepared to develop industries in the frontier
regions under the Eastern Fiscal Assistance Law, passed in December 1940. In
addition to its proximity to the concentration camp, which could be used as a
source of cheap labor, the site had good railway connections and access to raw
materials. In February 1941, Himmler ordered that the Jewish population of
Oświęcim should be expelled to make way for skilled laborers that would be
brought in to work at the plant. All Poles able to work were to remain in the
town and were forced to work building the factory. Himmler visited in person in
March and decreed an immediate expansion of the parent camp to house 30,000
persons. Development of the camp at Birkenau began about six months later.
Construction of IG Auschwitz began in April, with an initial force of 1,000
workers from Auschwitz I assigned to work on the construction. This number
increased to 7,000 in 1943 and 11,000 in 1944. Over the course of its history,
about 35,000 inmates in total worked at the plant; 25,000 died as a result of
malnutrition, disease, and the physically impossible workload. In addition to
the concentration camp inmates, who comprised a third of the work force, IG
Auschwitz employed slave laborers from all over Europe.
Initially
the laborers walked the seven kilometers from Auschwitz I to the plant each
day, but as this meant they had to rise at 3:00 am, many arrived exhausted and
unable to work. The camp at Monowitz (also called Monowitz-Buna or Auschwitz
III) was constructed and began housing inmates on October 30, 1942, the first
concentration camp to be financed and built by private industry. In January
1943 the ArbeitsausbildungLager (labor education camp) was moved from
the parent camp to Monowitz. These prisoners were also forced to work on the
building site. The SS charged IG Farben three Reichsmarks per hour for
unskilled workers, four for skilled workers.
Although the camp administrators expected the prisoners to work at 75 percent
of the capacity of a free worker, the inmates were only able to perform 20 to
50 percent as well. Site managers constantly threatened inmates with
transportation to Birkenau for death in the gas chambers as a way to try to
increase productivity. Deaths and transfers to the gas chambers at Birkenau
reduced the prisoner population of Monowitz by nearly a fifth each month;
numbers were made up with new arrivals. Life expectancy of inmates at Monowitz
averaged about three months. Though the factory was initially expected to begin
production in 1943, shortages of labor and raw materials meant start-up had to
be repeatedly postponed. The plant was almost ready to commence production when
it was overrun by Soviet troops in 1945.
Subcamps
Further
information: List of subcamps of Auschwitz
Various
other German industrial enterprises, such as Krupp and Siemens-Schuckert, built
factories with their own subcamps. There were 45 such satellite camps, 28 of
which served corporations involved in the armanents industry. Prisoner
populations ranged from several dozen to several thousand. Subcamps were built
at Blechhammer, Jawiszowice, Jaworzno, Lagisze, Mysłowice, Trzebinia, and other
centers as far afield as the Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia. Satellite
camps were designated as Aussenlager (external camp), Nebenlager
(extension or subcamp), or Arbeitslager (labor camp).
Industries with satellite camps included coal mines, foundries and other metal
works, chemical plants, and other industries. Prisoners were also made to work
in forestry and farming.
Evacuation,
death marches, and liberation
In
November 1944, with the Soviet Red Army approaching through Poland, Himmler
ordered gassing operations to cease across the Reich. Crematoria II, III, and
IV were dismantled, while Crematorium I was transformed into an air raid
shelter. The Sonderkommando were ordered to remove other evidence of the
killings, including the mass graves. The SS destroyed written records, and in
the final week before the camp's liberation, burned or detonated many of its
buildings.
Himmler
ordered the evacuation of all camps in January 1945, charging camp commanders
with "making sure that not a single prisoner from the concentration camps
falls alive into the hands of the enemy." On January 17, 58,000 Auschwitz
detainees were evacuated under guard, largely on foot; thousands of them died
in the subsequent death march west. Approximately 20,000 Auschwitz prisoners
made it to Bergen-Belsen concentration camp
in Germany, where they were liberated by the British in April 1945.
Those
too weak or sick to walk—around 7,500 prisoners—were left behind. Six hundred
of them died or were murdered before the 322nd Rifle Division of the Red Army
liberated the camp on January 27. Among the items found by the Russians were
370,000 men's suits, 837,000 women's garments, and 7.7 tonnes (8.5 short tons)
of human hair.
The
camp's liberation received little press attention at the time. Rees attributes
this to three factors: the previous discovery of similar crimes at Majdanek concentration camp, competing
news from the Allied summit at Yalta, and the Soviet Union's
interest, for propaganda purposes, in minimizing attention to Jewish suffering.
Ruins of barracks at
Birkenau
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After
the war
After
liberation, parts of Auschwitz I served first as a hospital for liberated
prisoners. Soviet and Polish investigators worked in the initial months to
document the war crimes of the SS. In the two years that followed, the Soviets
dismantled and exported the IG Farben factories, and the Birkenau barracks were
looted by Polish civilians. Area residents sifted the mass graves and ashes for
gold. Until 1947, some of the facilities were used as a prison camp of the
Soviet NKVD.
After
the site became a museum in 1947, exhumation work lasted for more than a decade.
Antoni Dobrowolski, the oldest known survivor of Auschwitz, died aged 108 on
October 21, 2012, in Dębno, Poland.
Camp
commandant Rudolf Höss was pursued by the British Intelligence Corps, who
arrested him at a farm near Flensburg, Germany, on March 11, 1946. Höss
confessed to his role in the mass killings at Auschwitz in his memoirs and in
his trial in Warsaw, Poland. He was hanged at the camp on April 16, 1947.
Around
15 percent of Auschwitz's 6,500 staff were eventually convicted of war crimes.
Poland was more active than other nations in investigating war crimes,
prosecuting 673 of the total 789 Auschwitz staff ever brought to trial. On
November 25, 1947, the Auschwitz Trial began in Kraków, when Poland's Supreme
National Tribunal brought to court 40 former Auschwitz staff. The trial's
defendants included commandant Arthur Liebehenschel, women's camp leader Maria
Mandel, and camp leader Hans Aumeier. The trials ended on December 22, 1947,
with 23 death sentences, 7 life sentences, and 9 prison sentences ranging from
three to fifteen years. Hans Münch, an SS doctor who had several former
prisoners testify on his behalf, was the only person to be acquitted.
Other
former staff were hanged for war crimes in the Dachau Trials and the Belsen
Trial, including camp leaders Josef Kramer, Franz Hössler, and Vinzenz Schöttl;
doctor Friedrich Entress; and guards Irma Grese and Elisabeth Volkenrath. The
Frankfurt Auschwitz Trials, held in Germany from December 20, 1963 to August
20, 1965, convicted 17 of 22 defendants, giving them prison sentences ranging
from life to three years and three months. The owner and the chief executive
officer of the firm Tesch & Stabenow, one of the suppliers of Zyklon B,
were executed for knowingly supplying the chemical for use on humans.
Gallows in Auschwitz I where Rudolf Höss was executed on April 16, 1947 |
Command
and control
Main
article: SS command of Auschwitz
concentration camp
Around
6,500 to 7,000 SS personnel in total were posted to Auschwitz during the war.
Of these, 4 percent were officers and 26 percent were non-commissioned officers,
while the remainder were rank-and-file members. Approximately three in four SS
personnel worked in security. Others worked in the medical or political
departments, in the camp headquarters, or in the economic administration, which
was responsible for the property of dead prisoners. SS personnel at the camp
included 200 women, who worked as guards, nurses, or messengers. The overall
command authority for the entire camp was Department D (the Concentration Camps
Inspectorate) of the SS-Wirtschafts-Verwaltungshauptamt (SS Economics
Main Office; SS-WVHA).
Auschwitz
was considered a comfortable posting by many SS members, due to many amenities
and the abundance of slave labor. Of the various prisoner groups, SS officers
preferred Jehovah's Witnesses for household slaves because of their nonviolent
behavior. Höss lived with his wife and children in a villa just outside the
camp grounds. Other SS personnel were also initially allowed to bring fiancees,
wives, and children to live at the camp, but when the SS camp grew more
crowded, Höss restricted further arrivals. Facilities for the SS personnel and
their families included a library, swimming pool, coffee house, and a theater
that hosted regular performances.
One
prisoner in each work detail or prisoner block—usually an Aryan—was appointed
as a Kapo ("head" or "overseer"). The Kapos
received better rations and lodging and wielded tremendous power over other
prisoners, whom they often abused. Very few Kapos were prosecuted after
the war, however, due to the difficulty in determining which Kapo
atrocities had been performed under SS orders and which had been individual
actions.
About
120 SS personnel were assigned to the gas chambers and lived on site at the
crematoria. Several SS personnel oversaw the killings at each gas chamber,
while the bulk of the work was done by the mostly Jewish prisoners known as Sonderkommando
(special squad). Sonderkommando responsibilities included guiding
victims to the gas chambers and removing, looting, and cremating the corpses.
The
Sonderkommado were housed separately from other prisoners, in somewhat
better conditions. Their quality of life was further improved by access to the
goods taken from murdered prisoners, which Sonderkommando were sometimes
able to steal for themselves and to trade on Auschwitz's black market.
Hungarian doctor Miklós Nyiszli reported that the Sonderkommando
numbered around 860 prisoners when the Hungarian Jews were being killed in
1944. Many Sonderkommando committed suicide due to the horrors of their
work; those who did not generally were shot by the SS in a matter of weeks, and
new Sonderkommando units were then formed from incoming transports. Almost
none of the 2,000 prisoners placed in these units survived to the camp's
liberation.
Toilets at Auschwitz 2
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Life
in the camps
The
prisoners' day began at 4:30 am (an hour later in winter) with morning roll
call. Dr. Miklos Nyiszli describes roll call as beginning 3:00 am and lasting
four hours. The weather was cold in Auschwitz at that time of day, even in
summer. The prisoners were ordered to line up outdoors in rows of five and had
to stay there until 7:00 am, when the SS officers arrived. Meanwhile the guards
forced the prisoners to squat for an hour with their hands above their heads or
levy punishments such as beatings or detention for infractions such as having a
missing button or an improperly cleaned food bowl. The inmates were counted and
re-counted. Nyiszli describes how even the dead had to be present at roll call,
standing supported by their fellow inmates until the ordeal was over. When he
was a prisoner in 1944–45, five to ten men were found dead in the barracks each
night. The prisoners assigned to Mengele's staff slept in a separate barracks
and were awoken at 7:00 am for a roll call that only took a few minutes.
After
roll call, the Kommando, or work details, walked to their place of work,
five abreast, wearing striped camp fatigues, no underwear, and ill-fitting
wooden shoes without socks. A prisoner's orchestra (such as the Women's Orchestra of Auschwitz) was
forced to play cheerful music as the workers left the camp. Kapos were
responsible for the prisoners' behavior while they worked, as was an SS escort.
The working day lasted 12 hours during the summer and a little less in the
winter. Much of the work took place outdoors at construction sites, gravel
pits, and lumber yards. No rest periods were allowed. One prisoner was assigned
to the latrines to measure the time the workers took to empty their bladders
and bowels. Sunday was not a work day, but the prisoners did not rest; they
were required to clean the barracks and take their weekly shower. Prisoners
were allowed to write (in German) to their families on Sundays. Inmates who did
not speak German would trade some of their bread to another inmate for help
composing their letters. Members of the SS censored the outgoing mail.
A
second mandatory roll call took place in the evening. If a prisoner was
missing, the others had to remain standing in place until he was either found
or the reason for his absence discovered, regardless of the weather conditions,
even if it took hours. After roll call, individual and collective punishments
were meted out, depending on what had happened during the day, before the
prisoners were allowed to retire to their blocks for the night and receive
their bread rations and water. Curfew was two or three hours later. The
prisoners slept in long rows of wooden bunks, lying in and on their clothes and
shoes to prevent them from being stolen.
According
to Nyiszli, "Eight hundred to a thousand people were crammed into the
superimposed compartments of each barracks. Unable to stretch out completely,
they slept there both lengthwise and crosswise, with one man's feet on
another's head, neck, or chest. Stripped of all human dignity, they pushed and
shoved and bit and kicked each other in an effort to get a few more inches'
space on which to sleep a little more comfortably. For they did not have long
to sleep".
The
types of prisoners were distinguishable by triangular pieces of cloth, called Winkel,
sewn onto on their jackets below their prisoner number. Political prisoners had
a red triangle, Jehovah's Witnesses had purple, criminals had green, and so on.
The nationality of the inmate was indicated by a letter stitched onto the Winkel.
Jews had a yellow triangle, overlaid by a second Winkel if they also fit
into a second category. Uniquely at Auschwitz, prisoners were tattooed with
their prisoner number, on the chest for Soviet prisoners of war and on the left
arm for civilians.
Prisoners
received a hot drink in the morning, but no breakfast, and a thin meatless
vegetable soup at noon. In the evening they received a small ration of moldy
bread. Most prisoners saved some of the bread for the following morning.
Nyiszli notes the daily intake did not exceed 700 calories, except for
prisoners being subjected to live medical experimentation, who were better fed
and clothed. Sanitary arrangements were poor, with inadequate latrines and a
lack of fresh water.
In Auschwitz II-Birkenau, latrines were not installed until 1943, two years
after camp construction began. The camps were infested with vermin such as
disease-carrying lice, and the inmates suffered and died in epidemics of typhus
and other diseases. Noma, a bacterial infection occurring among the
malnourished, was a common cause of death among children in the Gypsy camp.
Block
11 of Auschwitz I was the prison within the prison, where violators of the
numerous rules were punished. Some prisoners were made to spend the nights in
standing cells. These cells were about 1.5 m2
(16 sq ft), and held four men; they could do nothing but stand, and
were forced during the day to work with the other prisoners. Prisoners
sentenced to death for attempting to escape were confined in a dark cell and
given neither food nor water until they were dead.
In
the basement were the "dark cells", which had only a very tiny window
and a solid door. Prisoners placed in these cells gradually suffocated as they
used up all the oxygen in the cell; sometimes the SS lit a candle in the cell
to use up the oxygen more quickly. Many were subjected to hanging with their
hands behind their backs for hours, even days, thus dislocating their shoulder
joints.
Auschwitz I Death
Block 11
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Selection
and extermination process
On
July 31, 1941, Hermann Göring gave written authorization to Heydrich, Chief of
the Reich Main Security
Office (RSHA), to prepare and submit a plan for Die Endlösung der
Judenfrage (the Final Solution of the Jewish question) in
territories under German control and to coordinate the participation of all
involved government organizations. The resulting Generalplan Ost
(General Plan for the East) called for deporting the population of occupied
Eastern Europe and the Soviet Union to Siberia, for use as slave labour or to
be murdered. In addition to eliminating Jews, the Nazis also planned to reduce
the population of the conquered territories by 30 million people through
starvation in an action called the Hunger Plan.
Food supplies would be diverted to the German army and German civilians. Cities
would be razed and the land allowed to return to forest or resettled by German
colonists.
Somewhere
around the time of the failed offensive against Moscow in December 1941, Hitler
resolved that the Jews of Europe were to be exterminated immediately. Plans for
the total eradication of the Jewish population of Europe—eleven million
people—were formalized at the Wannsee Conference on January 20, 1942. Some
would be worked to death and the rest would be killed. Initially the victims
were killed with gas vans or by Einsatzgruppen
firing squads, but these methods proved impracticable for an operation of this
scale. By 1941, killing centers at Auschwitz, Sobibor, Treblinka, and other
Nazi extermination camps replaced Einsatzgruppen as the primary method
of mass killing.
The
first mass exterminations at Auschwitz took place in early September 1941, when
900 inmates were killed by gathering them in the basement of Block 11 and
gassing them with Zyklon B. This building proved unsuitable for mass gassings,
so the site of the killings was moved to the crematorium at Auschwitz I
(Crematorium I, which operated until July 1942). There, more than 700 victims
could be killed at once. In order to keep the victims calm, they were told they
were to undergo disinfection and de-lousing. They were ordered to undress
outside and then were locked in the building and gassed. After its
decommissioning as a gas chamber, the building was converted to a storage
facility and later served as an air raid shelter for the SS. The gas chamber
and crematorium were reconstructed after the war using the original components,
which remained on site. Some 60,000 people were killed at Crematorium I.
Mass
exterminations were moved to two provisional gas chambers (Bunkers 1 and 2),
where the killings continued while the larger Crematoria II, III, IV, and V
were under construction. Bunker 2 was temporarily reactivated from May to
November 1944, when large numbers of Hungarian Jews were exterminated. In
summer 1944 the capacity of the crematoria and outdoor incineration pits was
20,000 bodies per day. A planned sixth facility—Crematorium VI—was never built.
Prisoners
were transported from all over German-occupied Europe by rail, arriving in
daily convoys. By July 1942, the SS were conducting "selections".
Incoming Jews were segregated; those deemed able to work were sent to the right
and admitted into the camp, and those deemed unfit for labor were sent to the
left and immediately gassed. The group selected to die, about three-quarters of
the total, included almost all children, women with small children, all the
elderly, and all those who appeared on brief and superficial inspection by an
SS doctor not to be completely fit. After the selection process was complete,
those too ill or too young to walk to the crematoria were transported there on
trucks or killed on the spot with a bullet to the head. The belongings of the
arrivals were seized by the SS and sorted in an area of the camp called
"Canada", so called because Canada was seen as a land of plenty. Many
of the SS at the camp enriched themselves by pilfering the confiscated
property.
SS
officers told the victims they were to take a shower and undergo delousing. The
victims undressed in an outer chamber and walk into the gas chamber, which was
disguised as a shower facility. Some were even issued soap and a towel. The
Zyklon B was delivered by ambulance to the crematoria by a special SS bureau known
as the Hygienic Institute. The actual delivery of the gas to the victims was
always handled by the SS, on the order of the supervising SS doctor. After the
doors were shut, SS men dumped in the Zyklon B pellets through vents in the
roof or holes in the side of the chamber. The victims were dead within 20
minutes. Despite the thick concrete walls, screaming and moaning from within
could be heard outside. In one failed attempt to muffle the noise, two
motorcycle engines were revved up to full throttle nearby, but the sound of
yelling could still be heard over the engines.
Sonderkommando
wearing gas masks then dragged the bodies from the chamber. The victims'
glasses, artificial limbs, jewelry, and hair were removed, and any dental work
was extracted so the gold could be melted down. The corpses were burned in the
nearby incinerators, and the ashes were buried, thrown in the river, or used as
fertilizer.
The
gas chambers worked to their fullest capacity from April–July 1944, during the massacre of Hungary's Jews. Hungary
was an ally of Germany during the war, but it had resisted turning over its
Jews until Germany invaded that March. A rail spur leading directly into
Birkenau was completed that May to deliver the victims closer to the gas
chambers. From 14 May until early July 1944, 437,000 Hungarian Jews, half of
the pre-war population, were deported to Auschwitz, at a rate of 12,000 a day
for a considerable part of that period. The incoming volume was so great that
the SS resorted to burning corpses in open-air pits as well as in the
crematoria. The last selection took place on October 30, 1944.
Hungarian
Jews on the Judenrampe (Jewish ramp) after disembarking from the transport
trains. To be sent rechts!—to the right—meant the person had been
chosen as a laborer; links!—to the left—meant death in the gas
chambers. Photo from the Auschwitz
Album (May 1944).
|
Hungarian Jews not
selected as laborers were murdered in the gas chambers almost immediately after
arrival. Photo from the Auschwitz Album (May 1944).
|
A Deutsche Reichsbahn "Güterwagen"
(goods wagon), one type of rail car used for deportations
|
Destroyed Gas chambers
of Aushwitz
|
Medical
experiments
Main
article: Nazi human experimentation
German
doctors performed a wide variety of experiments on prisoners at Auschwitz. SS
doctors tested the efficacy of X-rays as a sterilization device by
administering large doses to female prisoners. Prof. Dr. Carl Clauberg injected
chemicals into women's uteruses in an effort to glue them shut. Bayer, then a
subsidiary of IG Farben, bought prisoners to use as research subjects for
testing new drugs. Prisoners were also deliberately infected with spotted fever
for vaccination research and exposed to toxic substances to study the effects.
The
most infamous doctor at Auschwitz was Josef
Mengele, known as the "Angel of Death". Particularly interested
in research on identical twins, Mengele performed cruel experiments on them,
such as inducing diseases in one twin and killing the other when the first died
to perform comparative autopsies. He also took a special interest in dwarfs,
and he deliberately induced noma in twins, dwarfs, and other prisoners to study
the effects.
Kurt
Heissmeyer took twenty Jewish children from Auschwitz to use in
pseudoscientific medical experiments at the Neuengamme concentration camp. In
April 1945, the children were killed by hanging to conceal the project.
A
skeleton collection was obtained from among a pool of 115 Jewish Auschwitz
inmates, chosen for their perceived stereotypical racial characteristics.
Rudolf Brandt and Wolfram Sievers, general manager of the Ahnenerbe (a
Nazi research institute), were responsible for delivering the skeletons to the
collection of the Anatomy Institute at the Reich University of Strasbourg in
the Alsace region of Occupied France. The collection was sanctioned by Himmler
and under the direction of August Hirt. Ultimately 87 of the inmates were
shipped to Natzweiler-Struthof and killed in August 1943. Brandt and Sievers
were later convicted in the Doctors' Trial in Nuremberg.
The cadaver of Berlin
dairy merchant Menachem Taffel. He was deported to Auschwitz in March 1943
along with his wife and child, who were gassed upon arrival. He was chosen to
be an anatomical specimen. He was shipped to Natzweiler-Struthof and murdered in the gas
chamber in August 1943.
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Death
toll
The
exact number of victims at Auschwitz is difficult to fix with certainty, as
many prisoners were never registered and much evidence was destroyed by the SS
in the final days of the war. As early as 1942, Himmler visited the camp and
ordered that "all mass graves were to be opened and the corpses burned. In
addition the ashes were to be disposed of in such a way that it would be
impossible at some future time to calculate the number of corpses burned."
Shortly
following the camp's liberation, the Soviet government stated that four million
people had been killed on the site, a figure now regarded as greatly
exaggerated. While under interrogation, Höss said that Adolf Eichmann told him
that two and a half million Jews had been killed in gas chambers and about half
a million had died of other causes. Later he wrote, "I regard two and a
half million far too high. Even Auschwitz had limits to its destructive
possibilities". Raul Hilberg's 1961 work The Destruction of the
European Jews estimated the number killed at a maximum of 1,000,000 Jewish
victims, and Gerald Reitlinger's 1968 book The Final Solution estimated
the number killed at 800,000 to 900,000.
In
1983, French scholar George Wellers was one of the first to use German data on
deportations to estimate the number killed at Auschwitz, arriving at a figure
of 1,471,595 dead, including 1.35 million Jews and 86,675 Poles. A larger
study started by Franciszek Piper used timetables of train arrivals combined
with deportation records to calculate at least 960,000 Jewish deaths and at
least 1.1 million total deaths, a figure adopted as official by the
Auschwitz-Birkenau State Museum in the 1990s. Piper also stated that a figure
of as many as 1.5 total million deaths was possible.
By
nation, the greatest number of Auschwitz's Jewish victims were from Hungary,
accounting for 438,000 deaths, followed by Polish Jews (300,000 deaths), French
(69,000), Dutch (60,000), and Greek (55,000). Fewer than one percent of Soviet
Jews murdered in the Holocaust were killed in Auschwitz, as German forces had
already been driven from Russia when the killing at Auschwitz reached its peak
in 1944. Approximately 1 in 6 Jews killed in the Holocaust died at the camp.
The
next largest group of victims were non-Jewish Poles, who accounted for 70,000
to 75,000 deaths. Twenty-one thousand Roma and Sinti were killed, along with
15,000 Soviet POWs and 10,000 to 15,000 peoples of other nations. Around 400
Jehovah's Witnesses were imprisoned at Auschwitz, at least 152 of whom died.
"The Mass
Extermination of Jews in German Occupied Poland", a paper issued by the Republic of Poland addressed to the League
of Nations, 1942
|
Escapes,
resistance, and the Allies' knowledge of the camps
Main
article: Resistance movement in Auschwitz
Inmates
were at times able to distribute information from the camp via messages and
shortwave radio transmissions. The Polish government-in-exile in London first
reported the gassing of prisoners on July 21, 1942. However, these reports were
for a long time discarded as exaggerated or unreliable by the Allied Powers, Germany's opponents.
Main
article: Witold's Report
Information
regarding Auschwitz was also available to the Allies during the years 1940–43
by the accurate and frequent reports of Polish Home Army (Armia Krajowa)
Captain Witold Pilecki. Pilecki was the only known person to volunteer to be
imprisoned at Auschwitz concentration camp, spending 945 days there. He
gathered evidence of genocide and organized resistance structures known as
Związek Organizacji Wojskowej (ZOW) at the camp. His first report was smuggled
to the outside world in November 1940, through an inmate who was released from
the camp. He eventually escaped on April 27, 1943, but his personal report of
mass killings was dismissed as exaggeration by the Allies, as were his previous
ones.
In
1943, the Kampfgruppe Auschwitz (Combat Group Auschwitz) was organized
with the aim of sending out information about what was happening. Sonderkommandos
buried notes in the ground, hoping they would be found by the camp's
liberators. The group also took and smuggled out photographs of corpses and
preparations for mass killings in mid-1944.
Main
article: Vrba–Wetzler report
Main
article: George Mantello
The
attitude of the Allies changed with receipt of the detailed, 32-page
Vrba–Wetzler report, compiled by two Jewish prisoners, Rudolf Vrba and Alfréd
Wetzler, who escaped on April 7, 1944. This report finally convinced Allied
leaders that mass killings were taking place in Auschwitz.
Details
from the Vrba-Wetzler report were released to the Swiss press and printed on
June 6 by The New York Times.
Main
article: Auschwitz bombing debate
Starting
with a plea from the Slovakian rabbi Chaim Michael Dov Weissmandl in May 1944,
there was a growing campaign by Jewish organizations to persuade the Allies to
bomb Auschwitz or the railway lines leading to it. At one point British Prime
Minister Winston Churchill ordered that such a plan be prepared, but he was
told that precision bombing the camp to free the prisoners or disrupt the
railway was not technically feasible.
In
1978, historian David S. Wyman published an essay titled "Why Auschwitz
Was Never Bombed", arguing that the US Air Force had the capability to
attack Auschwitz and should have done so; books by Bernard Wasserstein and
Martin Gilbert raised similar questions about British inaction. Since the
1990s, other historians have argued that Allied bombing accuracy was not
sufficient for Wyman's proposed attack, and that counterfactual history is an
inherently problematic endeavor. The controversy over this decision has lasted
to the present day in both countries.
Individual
escape attempts
At
least 802 prisoners attempted to escape from the Auschwitz camps, mostly Polish
or Soviet prisoners fleeing from work sites outside the camp. 144 were
successful. The fates of 331 of the escapees are unknown. A common punishment
for escape attempts was death by starvation; the families of successful
escapees were sometimes arrested and interned in Auschwitz and prominently
displayed to deter others. If someone did manage to escape, the SS picked ten
people at random from the prisoner's block and starve them to death.
One
daring escape from Auschwitz was staged by Ukrainian Eugeniusz Bendera and
three Poles, Kazimierz Piechowski, Stanisław Gustaw Jaster, and Józef Lempart,
on June 20, 1942. After breaking into a warehouse, the four dressed as members
of the SS-Totenkopfverbände (the SS units
responsible for concentration camps), armed themselves, and stole an SS staff
car, which they then drove unchallenged through the main gate.
On
June 24, 1944, a Belgian Jewish woman, Mala Zimetbaum, escaped with her Polish
boyfriend, Edek Galinski, also in stolen SS uniforms. They were later
recaptured, tortured, and executed by the SS.
Ruins of Crematorium
IV, blown up in the revolt
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Birkenau
revolt
The
Sonderkommando units were aware that as witnesses to the killings, they
themselves would eventually be killed to hide Nazi crimes. Though they knew
that it would mean their deaths, the Sonderkommando of Birkenau Kommando
III staged an uprising on October 7, 1944, following an announcement that some
of them would be selected to be "transferred to another camp"—a
common Nazi ruse for the murder of prisoners. The Sonderkommando
attacked the SS guards with stones, axes, and makeshift hand grenades. As the
SS set up machine guns to attack the prisoners in Crematorium IV, the Sonderkommando
in Crematorium II also revolted, some of them managing to escape the compound.
The rebellion was suppressed by nightfall.
Ultimately,
three SS guards were killed—one of whom was burned alive by the prisoners in
the oven of Crematorium II—and 250 Sonderkommando were killed. Hundreds
of prisoners escaped, but were all soon captured and executed, along with an
additional group who participated in the revolt. Crematorium IV was destroyed
in the fighting, and a group of prisoners in the gas chamber of Crematorium V
was spared in the chaos.
Large field where all
the barns were when the concentration victims lived there during WWll
|
Old Chimney stacks where barns (living quarters for the jews) lived during WWll |
Crematorium at
Auschwitz I.
|
Legacy
In
the decades since its liberation, Auschwitz has become a primary symbol of the
Holocaust. Historian Timothy D. Snyder
attributes this to the camp's high death toll as well as its "unusual
combination of an industrial camp complex and a killing facility", which
left behind far more witnesses than single-purpose killing facilities such as Chełmno
or Treblinka. The United Nations General Assembly has designated January 27,
the date of the camp's liberation, as International
Holocaust Remembrance Day. In a speech on the fiftieth anniversary
of the liberation, German chancellor Helmut Kohl described Auschwitz as the
"darkest and most horrific chapter of German history".
Notable
memoirists of the camp include Primo Levi, Elie Wiesel, and Tadeusz Borowski. In If This Is a Man, Levi wrote that the
concentration camps represented the epitome of the totalitarian system:
[N]ever has there existed a state that was really "totalitarian." ... Never has some form of reaction, a corrective of the total tyranny, been lacking, not even in the Third Reich or Stalin's Soviet Union: in both cases, public opinion, the magistrature, the foreign press, the churches, the feeling for justice and humanity that ten or twenty years of tyranny were not enough to eradicate, have to a greater or lesser extent acted as a brake. Only in the Lager [camp] was the restraint from below non-existent, and the power of these small satraps absolute.
Psychiatrist
Viktor Frankl drew on his imprisonment at Auschwitz in composing Man's
Search for Meaning (1946), one of the most widely read works about the
camp. An existentialist work, the book argues that individuals can find purpose
even among great suffering, and that this sense of purpose sustains them.
Wiesel wrote about his own imprisonment at Auschwitz in Night (1960) and
other works, and became a prominent spokesman against ethnic violence. In 1986,
he was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize.
Camp
survivor Simone Veil was later elected President of the European Parliament,
serving from 1979–82. Two Auschwitz victims—Maximilian
Kolbe, a priest who volunteered to die by starvation in place of a
stranger, and Edith Stein, a Jewish convert to Catholicism—were later
named saints of the Roman Catholic Church.
The entry gate to Auschwitz concentration camp, taken in July 2006. The infamous "ARBEIT MACHT FREI" message is visible. |
Auschwitz-Birkenau
State Museum
Main
article: Auschwitz-Birkenau State Museum
On
July 2, 1947, the Polish government passed a law establishing a state memorial
to the victims of Nazism on the site of the camp. In 1955, an exhibition opened
displaying prisoner mug shots; hair, suitcases, and shoes taken from murdered
prisoners; canisters of Zyklon B pellets; and other objects related to the
killings.
UNESCO added the camp to its list of World Heritage Sites in 1979. In 2011, the
museum drew 1,400,000 visitors.
Pope
John Paul II performed mass over train tracks leading to the camp on June 7,
1979. In the decades following his visit, controversies erupted over a group of
Carmelite nuns founding a convent on the site and erecting a large cross
originally used in the pope's mass. Protesters objected to what they saw as
Christianization of the site, while others argued that the cross's presence
effectively recognized the camp's Catholic victims.
The
5-metre (16 ft), 41-kilogram (90 lb) wrought-iron "Arbeit macht
frei" sign over the entrance to Auschwitz I was stolen on December 18,
2009. Authorities temporarily replaced the stolen sign with a replica. Police
found the sign, cut into three parts, in northern Poland two days later. Aftonbladet
reported that the sign had been stolen by Polish thieves on behalf of a Swedish
right-wing extremist group hoping to use proceeds from the proposed sale of the
sign to a collector of Nazi memorabilia, to finance a series of terror attacks
aimed at influencing voters in upcoming Swedish parliamentary elections. Three
men pled guilty to the theft, but arrest warrants had to be issued when they
failed to return from compassionate leave.
On
September 4, 2003, three Israeli
Air Force F-15 Eagles performed a fly-over of Auschwitz-Birkenau
during a ceremony at the camp below. The flight was led by Major-General Amir Eshel,
the son of Holocaust survivors.
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