Auschwitz Concentration Camp (World war - II)
Auschwitz Concentration Camp
(World War-II)
Today, Auschwitz is open to the public as the Auschwitz-Birkenau Memorial and Museum. It tells the story of the largest mass murder site in history and acts as a reminder of the horrors of genocide .
Auschwitz is the German name for the Polish city Oświęcim. Oświęcim is located in Poland, approximately 40 miles (about 64 km) west of Kraków. Germany annexed this area of Poland in 1939 . The Auschwitz concentration camp was located on the outskirts of Oświęcim in German-occupied Poland. It was originally established in 1940 and later referred to as "Auschwitz I" or "Main Camp."
Auschwitz, also
known as Auschwitz-Birkenau, opened in 1940 and was the largest of the Nazi
concentration and death camps. Located in southern Poland, Auschwitz initially
served as a detention center for political prisoners. However, it evolved into
a network of camps where Jewish people and other perceived enemies of the Nazi
state were exterminated, often in gas chambers, or used as slave labor. Some
prisoners were also subjected to barbaric medical experiments led by Josef
Mengele (1911-79). During World War II (1939-45), more than 1 million people,
by some accounts, lost their lives at Auschwitz. In January 1945, with the
Soviet army approaching, Nazi officials ordered the camp abandoned and sent an
estimated 60,000 prisoners on a forced march to other locations. When the
Soviets entered Auschwitz, they found thousands of emaciated detainees and
piles of corpses left behind.
After the start
of World War II, Adolf Hitler (1889-1945),
the chancellor of Germany from 1933 to 1945, implemented a policy that came to
be known as the “Final Solution.” Hitler was determined not just to isolate
Jews in Germany and countries annexed by the Nazis, subjecting them to
dehumanizing regulations and random acts of violence. Instead, he became
convinced that his “Jewish problem” would be solved only with the elimination
of every Jew in his domain, along with artists, educators, Romas, communists,
homosexuals, the mentally and physically handicapped and others deemed unfit
for survival in Nazi Germany .
Did you know?
In October 1944, a group of Auschwitz "Sonderkommando," young Jewish
males responsible for removing corpses from crematoriums and gas chambers,
staged a revolt. They assaulted their guards, using tools and makeshift
explosives, and demolished a crematorium. All were apprehended and killed .
To complete
this mission, Hitler ordered the construction of death camps. Unlike
concentration camps, which had existed in Germany since 1933 and were detention
centers for Jews, political prisoners and other perceived enemies of the Nazi
state, death camps existed for the sole purpose of killing Jews and other
“undesirables,” in what became known as the Holocaust .
Auschwitz, the largest and
arguably the most notorious of all the Nazi death camps, opened in the spring
of 1940. Its first commandant was Rudolf Höss (1900-47), who previously had
helped run the Sachsenhausen concentration camp in Oranienburg, Germany. Auschwitz
was located on a former military base outside Oswiecim, a town in southern
Poland situated near Krakow, one of the country’s largest cities. During the
camp’s construction, nearby factories were appropriated and all those living in
the area were forcibly ejected from their homes, which were bulldozed by the
Nazis.
Auschwitz
originally was conceived as a concentration camp, to be used as a detention
center for the many Polish citizens arrested after Germany annexed the country
in 1939. These detainees included anti-Nazi activists, politicians, resistance
members and luminaries from the cultural and scientific communities. Once
Hitler’s Final Solution became official Nazi policy, however, Auschwitz was
deemed an ideal death camp locale. For one thing, it was situated near the
center of all German-occupied countries on the European continent. For another,
it was in close proximity to the string of rail lines used to transport
detainees to the network of Nazi camps.
However,
not all those arriving at Auschwitz were immediately exterminated. Those deemed
fit to work were employed as slave labor in the production of munitions,
synthetic rubber and other products considered essential to Germany’s efforts
in World War II .
At its peak of operation, Auschwitz
consisted of several divisions. The original camp, known as Auschwitz I, housed
between 15,000 and 20,000 political prisoners. Those entering its main gate
were greeted with an infamous and ironic inscription: “Arbeit Macht Frei,” or
“Work Makes You Free.”
Auschwitz
II, located in the village of Birkenau, or Brzezinka, was constructed in 1941
on the order of Heinrich Himmler (1900-45), commander of the “Schutzstaffel”
(or Select Guard/Protection Squad, more commonly known as the SS), which
operated all Nazi concentration camps and death camps. Birkenau, the biggest of
the Auschwitz facilities, could hold some 90,000 prisoners.
It
also housed a group of bathhouses where countless people were gassed to death,
and crematory ovens where bodies were burned. The majority of Auschwitz victims
died at Birkenau. More than 40 smaller facilities, called subcamps, dotted the
landscape and served as slave-labor camps. The largest of these subcamps,
Monowitz, also known as Auschwitz III, began operating in 1942 and housed some
10,000 prisoners .
By mid-1942, the majority of
those being sent by the Nazis to Auschwitz were Jews. Upon arriving at the
camp, detainees were examined by Nazi doctors. Those detainees considered unfit
for work, including young children, the elderly, pregnant women and the infirm,
were immediately ordered to take showers. However, the bathhouses to which they
marched were disguised gas chambers. Once inside, the prisoners were exposed to
Zyklon-B poison gas. Individuals marked as unfit for work were never officially
registered as Auschwitz inmates. For this reason, it is impossible to calculate
the number of lives lost in the camp.
For
those prisoners who initially escaped the gas chambers, an undetermined number
died from overwork, disease, insufficient nutrition or the daily struggle for
survival in brutal living conditions. Arbitrary executions, torture and
retribution happened daily in front of the other prisoners.
(The
black wall of Auschwitz)
Some
Auschwitz prisoners were subjected to inhumane medical experimentation. The
chief perpetrator of this barbaric research was Josef Mengele (1911-79),
a German physician who began working at Auschwitz in 1943. Mengele, who came to
be known as the “Angel of Death,” performed a range of experiments on
detainees. For example, in an effort to study eye color, he injected serum into
the eyeballs of dozens of children, causing them excruciating pain. He also
injected chloroform into the hearts of twins to determine if both siblings
would die at the same time and in the same manner .
As 1944 came to a close and the defeat
of Nazi Germany by the Allied forces seemed certain, the Auschwitz commandants
began destroying evidence of the horror that had taken place there. Buildings
were torn down, blown up or set on fire, and records were destroyed.
In
January 1945, as the Soviet army entered Krakow, the Germans ordered that
Auschwitz be abandoned. Before the end of the month, in what came to be known
as the Auschwitz death marches, an estimated 60,000 detainees, accompanied by
Nazi guards, departed the camp and were forced to march to the Polish towns of
Gliwice or Wodzislaw, some 30 miles away. Countless prisoners died during this
process; those who made it to the sites were sent on trains to concentration
camps in Germany.
When
the Soviet army entered Auschwitz on January 27, they found approximately 7,600
sick or emaciated detainees who had been left behind barbed wire. The
liberators also discovered mounds of corpses, hundreds of thousands of pieces
of clothing and pairs of shoes and seven tons of human hair that had been
shaved from detainees before their liquidation. According to some estimates,
between 1.1 million to 1.5 million people, the vast majority of them Jews, died
at Auschwitz during its years of operation. An estimated 70,000 to 80,000 Poles
perished at the camp, along with 19,000 to 20,000 Romas and smaller numbers of
Soviet prisoners of war and other individuals .
Auschwitz I, the main camp, was the first camp established
near Oswiecim. Construction began in April 1940 in an abandoned Polish army
barracks in a suburb of the city .
Construction of Auschwitz II, or Auschwitz-Birkenau, began
at Brzezinka in October 1941 . Trains arrived at
Auschwitz frequently with transports of Jews from virtually every country in
Europe occupied by or allied to Germany. These transports arrived from early
1942 to early November 1944. The approximate breakdown of deportations
from individual countries:
- Hungary:
426,000
- Poland:
300,000
- France:
69,000
- Netherlands:
60,000
- Greece:
55,000
- Bohemia
and Moravia: 46,000
- Slovakia:
27,000
- Belgium:
25,000
- Yugoslavia:
10,000
- Italy:
7,500
- Norway:
690
- Other
(including concentration camps): 34,000
With the deportations from Hungary, the role of Auschwitz-Birkenau in the German plan to murder the Jews of Europe achieved its highest effectiveness. Between late April and early July 1944, approximately 440,000 Jews were deported from Hungary. Of the nearly 426,000 Hungarian Jews deported to Auschwitz, approximately 320,000 of them were sent directly to the gas chambers in Auschwitz-Birkenau. They deployed approximately 110,000 at forced labor in the Auschwitz camp complex. The SS authorities transferred many of these Hungarian Jewish forced laborers within weeks of their arrival in Auschwitz to other concentration camps in Germany and Austria .
Auschwitz III, also called Buna or Monowitz, was established in October 1942. It housed prisoners assigned to work at the Buna synthetic rubber works, located on the outskiruschwitz inmates were employed on huge farms, including the experimental agricultural station at Rajsko. They were also forced to work in coal mines, in stone quarries, in fisheries, and especially in armaments industries such as the SS-owned German Equipment Works (established in 1941). Periodically, prisoners underwent selection. If the SS judged them too weak or sick to continue working, they were transported to Auschwitz-Birkenau and killedts of the small village of Monowice .
In
mid-January 1945, as Soviet forces approached the Auschwitz concentration camp
complex, the SS began evacuating Auschwitz and its subcamps . S units forced
nearly 60,000 prisoners to march west from the Auschwitz camp system.
Thousands had been killed in the camps in the days before these death marches
began .
The day began at 4:30 am for the men
(an hour later in winter), and earlier for the women, when the block supervisor
sounded a gong and started beating inmates with sticks to make them wash and
use the latrines quickly. Sanitary arrangements were atrocious, with few
latrines and a lack of clean water. Each washhouse had to service thousands of
prisoners. In sectors BIa and BIb in Auschwitz II, two buildings containing
latrines and washrooms were installed in 1943. These contained troughs for
washing and 90 faucets; the toilet facilities were "sewage channels"
covered by concrete with 58 holes for seating. There were three barracks with
washing facilities or toilets to serve 16 residential barracks in BIIa, and six
washrooms/latrines for 32 barracks in BIIb, BIIc, BIId, and BIIe. Primo Levi described a 1944 Auschwitz III washroom .
It is badly lighted, full of draughts,
with the brick floor covered by a layer of mud. The water is not drinkable; it
has a revolting smell and often fails for many hours. The walls are covered by
curious didactic frescoes: for example, there is the good Häftling
[prisoner], portrayed stripped to the waist, about to diligently soap his
sheared and rosy cranium, and the bad Häftling, with a strong Semitic nose and
a greenish colour, bundled up in his ostentatiously stained clothes with a
beret on his head, who cautiously dips a finger into the water of the washbasin
. Prisoners received half a liter of coffee substitute or a herbal tea in the
morning, but no food. A second gong heralded roll call, when inmates lined up
outside in rows of ten to be counted. No matter the weather, they had to wait
for the SS to arrive for the count; how long they stood there depended on the
officers' mood, and whether there had been escapes or other events attracting
punishment. Guards might force the prisoners to squat for an hour with their
hands above their heads or hand out beatings or detention for infractions such
as having a missing button or an improperly cleaned food bowl. The inmates were
counted and re-counted . After roll call, to the sound of "Arbeitskommandos
formieren" ("form work details"), prisoners walked to their
place of work, five abreast, to begin a working day that was normally 11 hours
long—longer in summer and shorter in winter. A prison 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. 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 . Lunch was
three-quarters of a liter of watery soup at midday, reportedly foul-tasting,
with meat in the soup four times a week and vegetables (mostly potatoes
and rutabaga) three times.
(Seven
tons of hair , shown here in a 1945 photo , were found in the camp’s depots .
Also recovered at the camp were some 3800 suitcases ; more than 88 pounds of
eyeglasses ; 379 striped uniforms; 246prayer shawls; and more than 12,000 pots
and pans brought to the camp by victims who believed they would eventually be
resettled )
The evening meal
was 300 grams of bread, often moldy, part of which the inmates were expected to
keep for breakfast the next day, with a tablespoon of cheese or marmalade, or
25 grams of margarine or sausage. Prisoners engaged in hard labor were given
extra rations. A second roll call took place at seven in the evening, in the
course of which prisoners might be hanged or flogged. If a prisoner was
missing, the others had to remain standing until the absentee was found or the
reason for the absence discovered, even if it took hours. On 6 July 1940, roll
call lasted 19 hours because a Polish prisoner, Tadeusz Wiejowski, had escaped; following an escape in
1941, a group of prisoners was picked out from the escapee's barracks and sent
to block 11 to be starved to death. After roll call, prisoners retired to their
blocks for the night and received their bread rations. Then they had some free
time to use the washrooms and receive their mail, unless they were Jews: Jews
were not allowed to receive mail. Curfew ("nighttime quiet") was marked
by a gong at nine o'clock. Inmates slept in long rows of brick or wooden bunks,
or on the floor, lying in and on their clothes and shoes to prevent them from
being stolen. The wooden bunks had blankets and paper mattresses filled with
wood shavings; in the brick barracks, inmates lay on straw .
Sunday
was not a work day, but prisoners had to clean the barracks and take their
weekly shower, and were allowed to write (in German) to their families,
although the SS censored the mail. Inmates who did not speak German would trade
bread for help. Observant Jews tried to keep track of the Hebrew calendar and Jewish holidays, including Shabbat, and the weekly Torah portion. No watches, calendars, or clocks were
permitted in the camp. Only two Jewish calendars made in Auschwitz survived to
the end of the war. Prisoners kept track of the days in other ways, such as
obtaining information from newcomers .
About 30 percent of the registered
inmates were female . Conditions in the women's camp were
so poor that when a group of male prisoners arrived to set up an infirmary in
October 1942, their first task, according to researchers from the Auschwitz
museum, was to distinguish the corpses from the women who were still alive. Gisella Perl, a
Romanian-Jewish gynecologist and inmate of the women's camp, wrote in 1948:
There was one
latrine for thirty to thirty-two thousand women and we were permitted to use it
only at certain hours of the day. We stood in line to get in to this tiny
building, knee-deep in human excrement. As we all suffered from dysentry, we
could barely wait until our turn came, and soiled our ragged clothes, which
never came off our bodies, thus adding to the horror of our existence by the
terrible smell that surrounded us like a cloud. The latrine consisted of a deep
ditch with planks thrown across it at certain intervals. We squatted on those
planks like birds perched on a telegraph wire, so close together that we could
not help soiling one another .
A separate camp for the Roma, the Zigeunerfamilienlager ("Gypsy
family camp"), was set up in the BIIe sector of Auschwitz II-Birkenau in
February 1943. For unknown reasons, they were not subject to selection and
families were allowed to stay together. The first transport of German
Roma arrived on 26
February that year. There had been a small number of Romani inmates before
that; two Czech Romani prisoners, Ignatz and Frank Denhel, tried to escape in
December 1942, the latter successfully, and a Polish Romani woman, Stefania
Ciuron, arrived on 12 February 1943 and escaped in April. Josef Mengele, the Holocaust's most infamous physician, worked in the
gypsy family camp from 30 May 1943 when he began his work in Auschwitz .
The first gassings at Auschwitz took place in early September
1941, when around 850 inmates—Soviet prisoners of war and sick Polish
inmates—were killed with Zyklon B in the basement of block 11 in Auschwitz I. The building proved
unsuitable, so gassings were conducted instead in crematorium I, also in
Auschwitz I, which operated until December 1942. There, more than 700 victims
could be killed at once. Tens of thousands were killed in crematorium I. To
keep the victims calm, they were told they were to undergo disinfection
and de-lousing; they were ordered to undress outside,
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 SS air raid shelter. The gas chamber and crematorium were reconstructed
after the war. Dwork and van Pelt write that a chimney was recreated; four
openings in the roof were installed to show where the Zyklon B had entered; and
two of the three furnaces were rebuilt with the original components .
(A Soviet army surgeon an Auschwitz survivor , Vienna engineer Rudolf Scherm . )
The crematoria consisted of a dressing room, gas chamber, and
furnace room. In crematoria II and III, the dressing room and gas chamber were
underground; in IV and V, they were on the ground floor. The dressing room had
numbered hooks on the wall to hang clothes. In crematorium II, there was also a
dissection room (Sezierraum). SS officers told the victims they had to
take a shower and undergo delousing. The victims undressed in the dressing room
and walked into the gas chamber; signs said "Bade" (bath) or
"Desinfektionsraum" (disinfection room). A former prisoner testified
that the language of the signs changed depending on who was being killed. Some
inmates were given soap and a towel. A gas chamber could hold up to 2,000; one
former prisoner said it was around 3,000 .
Camp commandant Rudolf Höss was
arrested by the British on 11 March 1946 near Flensburg,
northern Germany, where he had been working as a farmer under the pseudonym
Franz Lang. He was imprisoned in Heide, then transferred to Minden for
interrogation, part of the British occupation zone. From there he was taken to Nuremberg to
testify for the defense in the trial of SS-Obergruppenführer Ernst Kaltenbrunner. Höss was straightforward about his own role in the mass
murder and said he had followed the orders of Heinrich Himmler. Extradited
to Poland on 25 May 1946, he wrote his memoirs in custody, first published in
Polish in 1951 then in German in 1958 as Kommandant in Auschwitz. His
trial before the Supreme National
Tribunal in Warsaw opened on 11
March 1947; he was sentenced to death on 2 April and hanged in Auschwitz I on
16 April, near crematorium I.
On 25 November 1947, the Auschwitz trial began in Kraków, when Poland's Supreme National Tribunal brought to court 40 former Auschwitz staff, including commandant Arthur Liebehenschel, women's camp leader Maria Mandel, and camp leader Hans Aumeier. The trials ended on 22 December 1947, with 23 death sentences, seven life sentences, and nine prison sentences ranging from three to 15 years. Hans Münch, an SS doctor who had several former prisoners testify on his behalf, was the only person to be acquitted .
(This medical card shows
14-year-old Hungrian boy , Stephen Bleier . The card diagnoses Bleier with
alimentary dystrophy , second degree .)
In 2018 the Polish government passed an amendment to
its Act on the Institute of National Remembrance, making it a criminal offence to violate
the "good name" of Poland by accusing it of crimes committed by
Germany in the Holocaust, which would include referring to
Auschwitz and other camps as "Polish death camps". Staff at the museum were accused by nationalist media in
Poland of focusing too much on the fate of the Jews in Auschwitz at the expense
of ethnic Poles. The brother of the museum's director, Piotr Cywiński, wrote that Cywiński had experienced "50 days of incessant hatred". After discussions with Israel's prime
minister, amid international concern that the new law would stifle research,
the Polish government adjusted the amendment so that anyone accusing Poland of
complicity would be guilty only of a civil offence .
Thank you for read
Best wishes from
Suvendu Singha & Mamata Singha .
(Asia , India , Odisha , Balasore ,Jaleswar
)
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