Auschwitz's Harrowing History
(A guard tower at
Auschwitz-Birkenau)
On January 27, 1945, observed as
Holocaust Remembrance Day, the Soviet army liberated prisoners from Auschwitz,
revealing unimaginable horrors perpetrated by the Third Reich. More than 49
million people have visited the memorial site at the former Auschwitz
concentration camp in southern Poland since its opening in 1947. Normally, more
than 2 million visitors from all over the world come to visit the memorial
every year, but the pandemic has reduced these numbers to around 500,000
annually.
Located about 50 kilometers (30
miles) west of Krakow, at the gates of the small town of Oswiecim, the former
Nazi concentration camp complex occupied a huge area up until 1945. Today there
is a state museum and memorial on the site. In addition to the Nazis' central
extermination camp, the complex consisted of three main camps and sub- and
external camps of various sizes. It was an industrial killing machine of
unimaginable proportions. The museum at the main concentration camp and the
memorial estate of Auschwitz-Birkenau together cover 191 hectares (472 acres).
Here are 10 historical facts
and figures related to the term "Auschwitz":
(A woman holds a flower on August
2, 2014 during the commemoration of the 70th anniversary of the Roma Genocide
in Auschwitz II-Birkenau, former Nazi concentration camp in Oswiecim)
1. The town of Oswiecim
(Auschwitz) Long before the name became known through the German concentration
camp, Auschwitz (Polish: Oświęcim) was a small town with an eventful history. The
town's name, Oswiecim, was first mentioned around 1200. In 1348 it was
incorporated into the Holy Roman Empire, and German became the official
language. At times it belonged to Austrian territory; at other times,
the Duchy of Auschwitz was part of the Kingdom of Bohemia or of the Kingdom of
Prussia — and was later once again returned to the Kingdom of Poland. And after
World War I, it was part of the newly established Polish state. When the
town was connected to the railways in 1900, Oswiecim's economy developed
quickly. Accommodation was required for the many seasonal and migrant workers
needed in the surrounding industrial areas of Upper Silesia and Bohemia. They
were housed in newly-built brick houses and wooden barracks. These buildings
were later to form the basis of the Auschwitz National Socialist concentration
camp. Shortly after the beginning of World War II in September 1939,
Oswiecim was conquered by the German Wehrmacht and annexed by the Third Reich.
In 1940, under the leadership of Heinrich Himmler, the SS (the
"Schutzstaffel," or the Nazi elite terror force responsible for
appointing personnel at the concentration camps) was able to quickly and without
much construction work convert the area into a concentration camp, the
Auschwitz I main camp. The vast
area of the Auschwitz-Birkenau extermination camp (Auschwitz II) was a later
addition.
(This gate is part of the
infamous history of the Auschwitz concentration camp)
2. The Jewish population Before
World War II, more than half of Oswiecim's 12,000 inhabitants were Jewish. The
Jewish community had grown considerably due to immigration; the number of
ethnic Germans in the town had been very small before the Nazis came. This
changed abruptly after the attack by Hitler's Wehrmacht on Poland on September
1, 1939, and the subsequent military occupation of the country. The Nazis'
policy of racial extermination had the Jewish population displaced to make way
for resettled Germans. Many Jews were isolated in ghettos or sent away to labor
camps. Others initially lived cramped together and were isolated from the rest
of the population in the old town of Oswiecim. From 1940 onward, many were
forced to work as slave laborers for the SS, in what was to become the
concentration camp. Many others were sent to labor camps elsewhere in the
country. After 1942, the few remaining survivors in Auschwitz were killed.
(An overview of the Auschwitz
concentration camp complex)
3. The strategic hub The
town of Oswiecim happened to be located at a strategically important site for
the Nazis, as its railway station was at the junction of lines from Prague,
Vienna, Berlin, Warsaw and the northern industrial areas of Silesia. This
created perfect conditions for the mass transport of people from the so-called
"Altreich," or Germany's territory in 1937, as planned by the SS and
the authorities of the Reich Main Security Office in Berlin. SS senior
official Adolf Eichmann was put in charge of the deportations of people into
camps in these eastern regions. He had prepared the files for the infamous
"Wannsee Conference" held on January 20,1942. High-ranking SS and
Nazi party officials gathered at the Wannsee villa for a meeting initiated by
the chief of the Reich Main Security Office, Reinhard Heydrich. After 90
minutes, they had set their murderous plan for a "final solution to the
European Jewish question." All the countries from which Jews should be
deported by train were listed in the minutes of the fateful meeting.
4. The concentration camp
system Following Dachau, Sachsenhausen, Buchenwald, Flossenbürg, Mauthausen
and the women's camp of Ravensbrück, Auschwitz was the seventh concentration
camp to be gradually established by the Nazis — and by far the largest one. The
site on the outskirts of Oswiecim was planned as a location for camps of
different sizes. In addition to the main camp (Auschwitz I) and the huge
killing center of Birkenau (Auschwitz II), where the crematoriums were located,
there were smaller external camps, as well as the Buna and Monowitz labor camps
(Auschwitz III). In line with decisions taken at the Wannsee Conference, in the
spring of 1942, Auschwitz was turned into a systematic death factory of
unimaginable proportions. As the SS commandant of the Auschwitz concentration
and extermination camp, Rudolf Höss managed the guards and the entire
administration of the camp, and was responsible for the technical execution of
the mass murders, up until his replacement in November 1943.
(A powerful weapon: A single can
of Zyklon B was enough to kill more than 1,000 people)
5. The SS influence zone By
the spring of 1942, 2,000 SS security guards were employed in Auschwitz.
Initially, only German citizens of the empire worked at the concentration camp,
but later, "Volksdeutsche" — German-speaking people from outside of
Germany — were also among the staff. By the end of summer 1944, this
number had doubled to more than 4,000 SS members serving at Auschwitz. This
also included camp guards, typists and nurses who were employed by the SS but
did not wear badges of rank. The SS also controlled local industrial
companies and craftspeople who, profiting from the expansion of the camp, had
settled in the region. The so-called SS settlement developed outside the camp's
borders, offering all kinds of amenities to its inhabitants. More than 8,000
members of the SS and their relatives were a part of the camps until its end.
(This pond contains the ashes of
tens of thousands of murdered people)
6. The death factory From
1942 onwards, the camps became centers of mass killings. Around 80% of the new
inmates were not registered as prisoners, but sent directly upon arrival to gas
chambers. In the spring of 1943, additional crematory ovens were put
into operation in the expanded complex of Auschwitz-Birkenau. The SS tested
their functionality on a group of transported prisoners: After their agonizing
death in a gas chamber filled with Zyklon B, the bodies of 1,100 men, women and
children were burned, and their ashes dispersed in surrounding lakes. The
camp's construction manager, Karl Bischoff, reported to Berlin: "From now
on, a total of 4,756 bodies can be cremated within 24 hours." A
three-track railroad ramp was built in Birkenau with the aim of speeding up the
selection of deportees at their arrival. This rail line can still be seen at
the memorial site today. The last
transports of Jews from all over Europe arrived in Auschwitz in late autumn of
1944. Among the deportees from the occupied Netherlands was 15-year-old Anne
Frank. Her diaries, which she wrote while in hiding in the Netherlands and
which were preserved by chance after she was captured, serve as a lasting
document of the persecution of Jews by the Nazis.
(The infamous 'Judenrampe,' the
platform where convoys of Jews arrived and where prisoners were sorted)
7. The number of victims Calculations
of the number of Holocaust victims who died at Auschwitz still vary, as new
details continue to come to light through historical and family archives. While
it's likely that we will never know the precise number of victims, it's now
estimated that more than 5 million people were deported to Nazi concentration
camps. Only very few survived. The Nazi regime is understood to have killed
some 6 million Jews in the Holocaust. The names of more than 60% of the
400,000 prisoners who were registered in the former Nazi German death camp
Auschwitz have been established, according to a research project commissioned
by the Auschwitz Memorial that was published in December 2019. Not
included in the database are the more than 900,000 Jews deported in mass
transports from European territories occupied by Germany, who were murdered in
gas chambers immediately upon arrival to the camp without being registered.
Their identity could nevertheless be determined through meticulously kept
deportation lists. Upon their arrival in Auschwitz-Birkenau, the only
ones to be registered were those with a tattooed prisoner number; those who on
the selection platform or so-called "Judenrampe" were deemed fit
enough to be used as laborers in the camp. Most people, especially the elderly,
ill, women and small children, were directly and without prior registration
forced into the gas chambers and murdered. According to the numbers of
the Auschwitz Memorial, more than 1.1 million people were killed at the
Auschwitz-Birkenau extermination camp. Some 90% of the victims were Jews —
primarily from Hungary, Poland, Italy, Belgium, France, the Netherlands,
Greece, Croatia, the Soviet Union, Austria and Germany. Other targeted victims
of Nazi killings included Sinti and Roma, gay people, Catholics, Jehovah's
Witnesses, and the disabled, as well as political opponents.
(Some surviving Auschwitz
prisoners when the concentration camp was liberated at the end of January 1945
by Soviet troops)
8. The liberation of the
imprisoned On January 27, 1945, Soviet Red Army soldiers reached the barbed
wire fences of the camp. They encountered almost 7,000 emaciated and feeble
inmates, with 500 children among them. Most of them couldn't even stand up and
were lying motionless on the ground. They had been too weak for the
death marches, in which SS guards had driven tens of thousands toward the West
through the freezing cold. The SS had cleared the camp at the end of
January in a last-minute attempt to cover up their mass murder, driving some
56,000 to 58,000 prisoners into the cold. The Nazis had also burned documents,
files and death certificates. Only a few documents and photos were preserved.
Most of the barracks, gas chambers and crematories had been blown up as well.
The emaciated prisoners on the death marches had been wearing only the thin
cotton clothes of the concentration camp, and hardly any of them had shoes on.
An estimated 15,000 persons died on these marches — either from starvation,
freezing to death, or being shot.
(The 'March of the Living' is
held every year at Auschwitz. Left: Holocaust survivor Edward Mosberg)
9. The Auschwitz-Birkenau memorial
site In early 1946, the Soviet occupying forces transferred authority over
the former camp to the Polish state. Based on an initiative of former prisoners
and a decision by the Polish government, the Auschwitz-Birkenau State Museum
was established as a memorial in 1947. The memorial site includes
preserved facilities, buildings and barracks of the main Nazi concentration
camp (Auschwitz I) and the almost-empty site of the Auschwitz-Birkenau
extermination camp (Auschwitz II), as well as the current museum area. The
first exhibition was created in collaboration with Israel's World Holocaust
Remembrance Center, Yad Vashem. In the first year of its existence, the
memorial site was visited by 170,000 people. In 2018 and 2019, more than 2
million visitors a year came to the site of Holocaust remembrance, with many
school groups among them. The Auschwitz memorial was listed as a UNESCO World
Heritage Site in 1979.
10. The last survivors Every
year, January 27 is commemorated as the day of the liberation of the Auschwitz
concentration camp in 1945. A commemoration ceremony also takes place in
Germany's parliament on that day. In past years, German presidents,
European politicians, as well as Jewish Holocaust survivors, including the
now-deceased Ruth Klüger and 96-year-old Anita Lasker-Wallfisch, as well as
prominent Jewish writers and historians, such as Marcel Reich-Ranicki and Saul
Friedländer, have given emotional speeches to mark the occasion. International
Holocaust Remembrance Day has been held worldwide since 2005. Today, there are
very few remaining Auschwitz concentration camp survivors. During the annual
"March of the Living," they walk hand in hand with young people from
all over the world from the former concentration camp Auschwitz to Birkenau.
It is up to the following generations to keep carrying the remembrance
forward.
^ This gives a good, concise
summary of what Auschwitz was and is. ^
https://www.dw.com/en/auschwitzs-harrowing-history/a-52082752
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