From the BBC:
“Auschwitz: How death camp became
centre of Nazi Holocaust”
On 27 January 1945, Soviet troops
cautiously entered Auschwitz. Primo Levi - one of the most famous survivors -
was lying in a camp hospital with scarlet fever when the liberators arrived. The
men cast "strangely embarrassed glances at the sprawling bodies, at the
battered huts and at us few still alive", he would later write. "They
did not greet us, nor did they smile; they seemed oppressed not only by
compassion but by... the feeling of guilt that such a crime should exist."
"We saw emaciated, tortured, impoverished people," soldier Ivan
Martynushkin said of liberating the death camp. "We could tell from their
eyes that they were happy to be saved from this hell." In less than four
years, Nazi Germany systematically murdered at least 1.1 million people at
Auschwitz. Almost one million were Jews. Those deported to the camp complex
were gassed, starved, worked to death and even killed in medical experiments.
The vast majority died in the Auschwitz II death camp - known as
Auschwitz-Birkenau. Six million Jewish people died in the Holocaust - the Nazi
campaign to eradicate Europe's Jewish population. Auschwitz was at the centre
of that genocide.
What was the Holocaust? When the
Nazis came to power in 1933 they began to strip Jewish people of all property,
freedoms and rights under the law. After the German invasion and occupation of
Poland in 1939, the Nazis started deporting Jewish people from Germany and
Austria to Poland, where they created ghettos to separate them from the rest of
the population. In 1941, during the
German invasion of the USSR, the Nazis began their campaign of extermination in
earnest. Nazis spoke about their invasion as a race war between Germany and
Jewish people, as well as the Slavic population and the Roma. Groups of German
soldiers called Einsatzgruppen set out across newly conquered lands in Eastern
Europe to massacre civilians. By the end of 1941, they had killed 500,000
people, and by 1945 they had murdered about two million - 1.3 million of whom
were Jewish. Behind the lines, Nazi commanders were experimenting with ways to
kill en masse. They feared that shooting people was too stressful for their
soldiers, and so came up with more efficient means of murder. Experimental gas vans had been used to kill
mentally disabled people in Poland as early as 1939. Poisonous fumes were
pumped into a sealed compartment to suffocate those inside. By the winter of
1941, the Nazis had constructed gas chambers at Auschwitz. Nazi leaders met in
January 1942 to coordinate the industrial slaughter. At the Wannsee Conference,
as it became known, they agreed to what they called a "final solution to
the Jewish question" - killing the entire European Jewish population, 11
million people, by extermination and forced labour.
What was Auschwitz? Auschwitz was
originally a Polish army barracks in southern Poland. Nazi Germany invaded and
occupied Poland in September 1939, and by May 1940 turned the site into a jail
for political prisoners. This area -
with the infamous lie Arbeit Macht Frei written above the entrance in German -
meaning work sets you free - became known as Auschwitz I. But as the war and the Holocaust progressed,
the Nazi regime greatly developed the site. The first prisoners to be gassed were a group
of Polish and Soviet prisoners in August 1941. Work began on a new camp,
Auschwitz II-Birkenau, the following month. This became the site of the huge
gas chambers where hundreds of thousands were murdered until November 1944, and
the crematoria was where their bodies were burned. German chemicals company IG
Farben built and operated a synthetic rubber factory at Auschwitz III-Monowitz.
Other private companies like Krupp and Siemens-Schuckert also ran factories nearby,
to use the prisoners as slave labour. Both Primo Levi and Nobel Prize winner
Elie Wiesel survived Monowitz concentration camp. When Auschwitz was eventually
liberated, it had more than 40 camps and subcamps.
How did Auschwitz work? People
from all over Europe were crammed into cattle wagons without windows, toilets,
seats or food, and transported to Auschwitz. There they were sorted into those who could
work and those who were to be immediately killed. The latter group were ordered
to strip naked and sent to the showers for "delousing" - a euphemism
used for the gas chambers. Guards used
Zyklon B pellets to murder people in the gas chambers Guards from the so-called "Hygienic
Institute" would then drop powerful Zyklon-B gas pellets into the sealed
chambers, and wait for people to die. It took about 20 minutes. The thick walls
could not hide the screams of those suffocating inside. Then Sonderkommandos -
other prisoners, usually Jews forced to work for the guards or be killed -
would remove artificial limbs, glasses, hair and teeth before dragging the
corpses to the incinerators. Ashes of the bodies were buried or used as
fertiliser. Belongings of those gassed and those sent to work were taken for
sorting in a part of the camp known as "Canada" - so named because
the country was seen as a land of plenty.
Who were the victims? SS guards
sought to hide their crimes as Soviet troops closed in, and tried to destroy
their extensive prisoner records - making it hard to fully quantify the number
of victims. Academic studies since agree that in total close to 1.3 million
people arrived at Auschwitz. About 1.1 million of them died there. Jews from all across Nazi-controlled Europe
made up the vast majority of the victims. Almost one million Jewish people were
murdered at Auschwitz. One specific example was Hungary's Jewish population. In
the space of just two months, between May and July 1944, Hungary transported
420,000 Jewish people to Auschwitz. So many Hungarian Jewish people were killed
in such a short time that victims' bodies were dropped in pits near the camp
and burned Tens of thousands of
Hungarian Jews were sent to Auschwitz every day. Three quarters of them were
killed on arrival. Some 75,000 Polish civilians, 15,000 Soviet prisoners of
war, 25,000 Roma and Sinti, as well as Jehovah's Witnesses, homosexuals and
political prisoners were also put to death by the German state at the Auschwitz
complex.
What happened when Auschwitz was
liberated? German authorities ordered a halt to gassing and the destruction of
the gas chambers and crematoria in late 1944, as Soviet troops advanced
westward. The stockpile of stolen valuables in the Canada sector was shipped to
Germany shortly afterwards. Determined to erase the evidence of their crimes,
the Nazis ordered tens of thousands of remaining prisoners to march west to
other concentration camps, such as Bergen-Belsen, Dachau and Sachsenhausen.
Those too sick to walk were left behind; any who fell behind on the march
itself were killed. Soviet forces found
only a few thousand survivors when they entered the camp on 27 January 1945,
along with hundreds of thousands of clothes and several tonnes of human hair.
Soldiers later recalled having to convince some survivors that the Nazis had
truly gone. Elie Wiesel later said in a speech to mark the 50th anniversary of
the liberation that the Nazi crimes at Auschwitz "produced a mutation on a
cosmic scale, affecting man's dreams and endeavours". "After
Auschwitz, the human condition is no longer the same. After Auschwitz, nothing
will ever be the same."
^ This gives a good summary of
what Auschwitz was and what is continues to symbolize. ^
https://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-50743973
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