From AFP:
“Kazimierz Albin, early Auschwitz
prisoner, dies in Poland”
Kazimierz Albin, the last
survivor of the first convoy of prisoners sent by the Nazis to the Auschwitz
death camp has died at the age of 96, the camp museum said on Tuesday. "With
great sorrow we received information about the death of Kazimierz Albin, the
last living survivor of the first transport of Poles to the German Auschwitz
camp (No. 118)," the Auschwitz Memorial said on its official Twitter site.
Born in 1922 the southern Polish city of Krakow, Albin was arrested by the
Nazis in January 1940 in Slovakia where he had fled after Germany occupied
Poland in 1939. Albin had been on his way to join the Polish Army then forming
in France to fight the Nazis. On June 14, 1940, he was deported to Auschwitz
with the first convoy of Polish prisoners. Their forearms were tattooed with
the camp's notorious identification numbers ranging from 31 to 758. Albin was
tattooed with the number 118. He was one of the 140,000 to 150,000 non-Jewish
Polish prisoners in Auschwitz, half of whom died there, according to Auschwitz
museum estimates. Albin survived because he managed to escape on February 27,
1943 along with six other prisoners. "It was a starry night, around minus
8 or minus 10 degrees Celsius (17 or 14 Fahrenheit) outside," Albin
recalled in a 2015 interview with AFP. "We took our clothes off and were
half way across the Sola River when I heard the siren... Ice floes surrounded
us," he said, referring to a waterway passing through the southern Polish
city of Oswiecim where Nazi Germany built Auschwitz. Once free, Albin caught up
with the Polish resistance. Escapes from Auschwitz were rare. Of around 1.3
million people sent to the camp, only 802 -- including 45 women -- tried to
flee, according to estimates from the museum. Only 144 succeeded, while 327
were caught. The fate of the remaining 331 is unknown. After the war, Albin
studied at the aviation department of the Krakow Polytechnic School to become
an engineer. He was a member of the International Auschwitz Council, an
advisory body to the Polish prime minister that looks after the memorial site. Nazi
Germany killed some 1.1 million people, including one million European Jews, at
the Auschwitz-Birkenau twin death camps before their liberation by the Soviet
Red Army on January 27, 1945.
^ Anyone who could survive Auschwitz
for even 1 day is a miracle. The fact that he not only survived there from 1940
until 1943 but that he also successfully escaped makes him a hero. He lived to
be 96 years old and that, I’m sure, was no easy feat (even after World War 2
ended.) ^
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