The Auschwitz Album
The Germans documented the
Deportation and Selection Process of the Hungarian Jews in the “Auschwitz
Album” taken in the Spring/Summer 1944.
The Album has 56 pages and 193
photographs.
The Album's survival is
remarkable, given the strenuous efforts made by the Nazis to keep the
"Final Solution" a secret. Also, remarkable is the story of its
discovery.
Lili Jacob (later Lili
Jacob-Zelmanovic Meier) was selected for work at Auschwitz-Birkenau, while the
other members of her family were sent to the Gas Chambers. Auschwitz was
evacuated by the Nazis as the Soviet Army approached in January 1945. Jacob passed
through various Camps, finally arriving at the Dora Concentration Camp, where
she was eventually liberated.
Recovering from illness in a
vacated Barracks of the SS, Jacob found the Album in a cupboard beside her bed.
Inside, she found pictures of herself, her Relatives, and others from her
community. The coincidence was astounding, given that the Nordhausen-Dora camp
was over 640 km (400 miles) away and that over 1,100,000 people were killed at
Auschwitz.
The Album's existence had been
known publicly since at least the 1960s, when it was used as evidence at the
Frankfurt Auschwitz Trials.
Nazi-hunter Serge Klarsfeld visited Lili in 1980 and convinced her to donate the album to Yad Vashem. The Album's contents were first published that year in the book The Auschwitz Album, edited by Klarsfeld.
Arrival: In the photos we
see the Men, Women and Children step out of the overcrowded train, traumatized
and fearful after their horrendous journey. They have no clue that they have
just been delivered to a Death Factory and that few of them will survive.
Selection: The Selection Process carried out by SS Doctors and Wardens took place 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, as train after train unloaded its human cargo. Most Jews were sent immediately to their death. Men were separated from Women and Children and those selected for Forced Labor separated from those selected for death.
Selected for Slave Labor: "Still Able-Bodied Men and Women": The Jews chosen for Slave Labor have become Prisoners of Auschwitz. Their personal belongings were confiscated, their hair was shaved and a Registration Number was tattooed on their left arm.
Kanada: The work of sorting the possessions that the Jews brought with them to Auschwitz was done by Jewish Prisoners who were forced to collect the packages and sort the items that would then be sent to the Reich. By the time the sorting was completed, most of the previous owners were already dead.
The dead bodies were removed by
the Sonderkommando (Prisoners forced by the Germans to work in the Gas Chamber
and Crematorium) who had to cut the hair and remove the gold teeth of the dead
before putting them into the furnace or on a pile of fire outside.
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