Here is a sad moment at the Auschwitz Death Camp in
German-Occupied Poland (of course most moments there were sad.)
A little Boy found a dandelion in the grass and is handing it
or showing it to an older Boy.
This is part of the Auschwitz Album (193 pictures the Germans
took from May-July 1944 to document their “Great Work” at Auschwitz when
437,000 Jewish Men, Women and Children from Hungary arrived at the Death Camp
and where 80% of them were murdered upon arrival.)
Back to these Pictures: The People (Men, Women and Children)
have been selected to be killed in the Gas Chamber, but they don’t know that.
The 4 Gas Chambers at Auschwitz (each able to kill 2,000
People at one time in 15-20 minutes) must have been full at the time so these
People are being kept outside near them waiting for their turn.
Once the Gas Chamber was available these People, including the
2 Boys, were taken to an Undressing Room where they took off all of their
clothes and went into the Gas Chamber itself (thinking they were taking a Shower.)
Instead of Water Gas was poured into the Room by Germans
wearing Gas Masks. Immediately the People inside started suffocating unable to
breath and screaming.
In 15-20 minutes, when
there was no more cries or screaming the Germans looked through a peephole and
once everyone inside was dead they ordered the Sonderkommando (Prisoners forced
by the Germans to work in the Gas Chambers and Crematorium) would open the
doors.
They then cut the hair off the dead bodies (to be used to
make blankets for the German U-Boat Crews) and removed any fake gold teeth (to
be melted down and sent to German Nazi Bank Accounts in Germany and Switzerland
to finance the Holocaust.)
Then the bodies were either burned in the Crematorium or burned
outside in open pits.
The Germans were so proud of their “Work” murdering Men,
Women and Children that even in 1944, when the Second World War was already
lost and Nazi Germany was going to be defeated, the Germans continued to not
only murder Innocent People, but also took the time and resources to document
their “Great Work” for future generations to “enjoy.”
After the War, and even to this day, the German Government
continues to give money to these Germans for their "Service to the
Fatherland" - that service was
murdering Men, Women and Children.
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