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Auschwitz concentration camp

Auschwitz concentration camp (German: Konzentrationslager Auschwitz (pronounced [kɔntsɛntʁaˈtsi̯oːnsˌlaːɡɐ ˈʔaʊʃvɪts] (listen)); also KL Auschwitz or KZ Auschwitz) was a complex of over 40 concentration and extermination camps operated by Nazi Germany in occupied Poland (in a portion annexed into Germany in 1939)[3] during World War II and the Holocaust. It consisted of Auschwitz I, the main camp (Stammlager) in Oświęcim; Auschwitz II-Birkenau, a concentration and extermination camp with gas chambers; Auschwitz III-Monowitz, a labor camp for the chemical conglomerate IG Farben; and dozens of subcamps.[4] The camps became a major site of the Nazis' final solution to the Jewish question.

Auschwitz
Konzentrationslager Auschwitz (German)
Nazi concentration and extermination camp (1940–1945)
Top: Gate to Auschwitz I with its Arbeit macht frei sign ("work sets you free")
Bottom: Auschwitz II-Birkenau gatehouse; the train track, in operation May–October 1944, led directly to the gas chambers.[1]
Coordinates50°02′09″N 19°10′42″E / 50.03583°N 19.17833°E / 50.03583; 19.17833
Known forThe Holocaust
LocationGerman-occupied Poland
Operated byNazi Germany and the Schutzstaffel
CommandantSee list
Original useArmy barracks
OperationalMay 1940 – January 1945
InmatesMainly Jews, Poles, Romani, Soviet prisoners of war
Number of inmatesAt least 1.3 million[2]
KilledAt least 1.1 million[2]
Liberated bySoviet Union, 27 January 1945
Notable inmatesAuschwitz prisoners: Adolf Burger, Edith Eger, Anne Frank, Viktor Frankl, Imre Kertész, Maximilian Kolbe, Primo Levi, Fritz Löhner-Beda, Irène Némirovsky, Tadeusz Pietrzykowski, Witold Pilecki, Liliana Segre, Edith Stein, Simone Veil, Rudolf Vrba, Alfréd Wetzler, Elie Wiesel, Else Ury, Eddie Jaku, Władysław Bartoszewski
Notable books
Websiteauschwitz.org/en/
Official nameAuschwitz Birkenau, German Nazi Concentration and Extermination Camp (1940–1945)
TypeCultural
Criteriavi
Designated1979 (3rd session)
Reference no.31
RegionEurope and North America

After Germany sparked World War II by invading Poland in September 1939, the Schutzstaffel (SS) converted Auschwitz I, an army barracks, into a prisoner-of-war camp.[5]

The initial transport of political detainees to Auschwitz consisted almost solely of Poles for whom the camp was initially established. The bulk of inmates were Polish for the first two years.[6]

In May 1940, German criminals brought to the camp as functionaries, established the camp's reputation for sadism. Prisoners were beaten, tortured, and executed for the most trivial reasons. The first gassings—of Soviet and Polish prisoners—took place in block 11 of Auschwitz I around August 1941. Construction of Auschwitz II began the following month, and from 1942 until late 1944 freight trains delivered Jews from all over German-occupied Europe to its gas chambers. Of the 1.3 million people sent to Auschwitz, 1.1 million were murdered. The number of victims includes 960,000 Jews (865,000 of whom were gassed on arrival), 74,000 ethnic Poles, 21,000 Roma, 15,000 Soviet prisoners of war, and up to 15,000 other Europeans.[7] Those not gassed were murdered via starvation, exhaustion, disease, individual executions, or beatings. Others were killed during medical experiments.

At least 802 prisoners tried to escape, 144 successfully, and on 7 October 1944, two Sonderkommando units, consisting of prisoners who operated the gas chambers, launched an unsuccessful uprising. Only 789 Schutzstaffel personnel (no more than 15 percent) ever stood trial after the Holocaust ended;[8] several were executed, including camp commandant Rudolf Höss. The Allies' failure to act on early reports of atrocities by bombing the camp or its railways remains controversial.

As the Soviet Red Army approached Auschwitz in January 1945, toward the end of the war, the SS sent most of the camp's population west on a death march to camps inside Germany and Austria. Soviet troops entered the camp on 27 January 1945, a day commemorated since 2005 as International Holocaust Remembrance Day. In the decades after the war, survivors such as Primo Levi, Viktor Frankl, and Elie Wiesel wrote memoirs of their experiences, and the camp became a dominant symbol of the Holocaust. In 1947, Poland founded the Auschwitz-Birkenau State Museum on the site of Auschwitz I and II, and in 1979 it was named a World Heritage Site by UNESCO.

Background

 
Camps and ghettos in German-occupied Europe, 1944
 
Auschwitz I, II, and III

The ideology of National Socialism (Nazism) combined elements of "racial hygiene", eugenics, antisemitism, pan-Germanism, and territorial expansionism, Richard J. Evans writes.[9] Adolf Hitler and his Nazi Party became obsessed by the "Jewish question".[10] Both during and immediately after the Nazi seizure of power in Germany in 1933, acts of violence against German Jews became ubiquitous,[11] and legislation was passed excluding them from certain professions, including the civil service and the law.[a]

Harassment and economic pressure encouraged Jews to leave Germany; their businesses were denied access to markets, forbidden from advertising in newspapers, and deprived of government contracts.[13] On 15 September 1935, the Reichstag passed the Nuremberg Laws. One, the Reich Citizenship Law, defined as citizens those of "German or related blood who demonstrate by their behaviour that they are willing and suitable to serve the German People and Reich faithfully", and the Law for the Protection of German Blood and German Honor prohibited marriage and extramarital relations between those with "German or related blood" and Jews.[14]

When Germany invaded Poland in September 1939, triggering World War II, Hitler ordered that the Polish leadership and intelligentsia be destroyed.[15] The area around Auschwitz was annexed to the German Reich, as part of first Gau Silesia and from 1941 Gau Upper Silesia.[16] The camp at Auschwitz was established in April 1940, at first as a quarantine camp for Polish political prisoners. On 22 June 1941, in an attempt to obtain new territory, Hitler invaded the Soviet Union.[17] The first gassing at Auschwitz—of a group of Soviet prisoners of war—took place around August 1941.[18] By the end of that year, during what most historians regard as the first phase of the Holocaust, 500,000–800,000 Soviet Jews had been murdered in mass shootings by a combination of German Einsatzgruppen, ordinary German soldiers, and local collaborators.[19] At the Wannsee Conference in Berlin on 20 January 1942, Reinhard Heydrich outlined the Final Solution to the Jewish Question to senior Nazis,[20] and from early 1942 freight trains delivered Jews from all over occupied Europe to German extermination camps in Poland: Auschwitz, Bełżec, Chełmno, Majdanek, Sobibór, and Treblinka. Most prisoners were gassed on arrival.[21]

Camps

Auschwitz I

Growth

 
Auschwitz I, 2009; the prisoner reception center of Auschwitz I became the visitor reception center of the Auschwitz-Birkenau State Museum.[22]
 
Former prisoner reception center; the building on the far left with the row of chimneys was the camp kitchen.
 
An aerial reconnaissance photograph of the Auschwitz concentration camp showing the Auschwitz I camp, 4 April 1944

A former World War I camp for transient workers and later a Polish army barracks, Auschwitz I was the main camp (Stammlager) and administrative headquarters of the camp complex. Fifty km southwest of Kraków, the site was first suggested in February 1940 as a quarantine camp for Polish prisoners by Arpad Wigand, the inspector of the Sicherheitspolizei (security police) and deputy of Erich von dem Bach-Zelewski, the Higher SS and Police Leader for Silesia. Richard Glücks, head of the Concentration Camps Inspectorate, sent Walter Eisfeld, former commandant of the Sachsenhausen concentration camp in Oranienburg, Germany, to inspect it.[23] Around 1,000 m long and 400 m wide,[24] Auschwitz consisted at the time of 22 brick buildings, eight of them two-story. A second story was added to the others in 1943 and eight new blocks were built.[25]

Reichsführer-SS Heinrich Himmler, head of the SS, approved the site in April 1940 on the recommendation of SS-Obersturmbannführer Rudolf Höss of the camps inspectorate. Höss oversaw the development of the camp and served as its first commandant. The first 30 prisoners arrived on 20 May 1940 from the Sachsenhausen camp. German "career criminals" (Berufsverbrecher), the men were known as "greens" (Grünen) after the green triangles on their prison clothing. Brought to the camp as functionaries, this group did much to establish the sadism of early camp life, which was directed particularly at Polish inmates, until the political prisoners took over their roles.[26] Bruno Brodniewicz, the first prisoner (who was given serial number 1), became Lagerälteste (camp elder). The others were given positions such as kapo and block supervisor.[27]

First mass transport

The first mass transport—of 728 Polish male political prisoners, including Catholic priests and Jews—arrived on 14 June 1940 from Tarnów, Poland. They were given serial numbers 31 to 758.[b] In a letter on 12 July 1940, Höss told Glücks that the local population was "fanatically Polish, ready to undertake any sort of operation against the hated SS men".[29] By the end of 1940, the SS had confiscated land around the camp to create a 40-square-kilometer (15 sq mi) "zone of interest" (Interessengebiet) patrolled by the SS, Gestapo and local police.[30] By March 1941, 10,900 were imprisoned in the camp, most of them Poles.[24]

An inmate's first encounter with Auschwitz, if they were registered and not sent straight to the gas chamber, was at the prisoner reception center near the gate with the Arbeit macht frei sign, where they were tattooed, shaved, disinfected, and given a striped prison uniform. Built between 1942 and 1944, the center contained a bathhouse, laundry, and 19 gas chambers for delousing clothes. The prisoner reception center of Auschwitz I became the visitor reception center of the Auschwitz-Birkenau State Museum.[22]

Crematorium I, first gassings

 
Crematorium I, photographed in 2016, reconstructed after the war[31]

Construction of crematorium I began at Auschwitz I at the end of June or beginning of July 1940.[32] Initially intended not for mass murder but for prisoners who had been executed or had otherwise died in the camp, the crematorium was in operation from August 1940 until July 1943, by which time the crematoria at Auschwitz II had taken over.[33] By May 1942 three ovens had been installed in crematorium I, which together could burn 340 bodies in 24 hours.[34]

The first experimental gassing took place around August 1941, when Lagerführer Karl Fritzsch, at the instruction of Rudolf Höss, murdered a group of Soviet prisoners of war by throwing Zyklon B crystals into their basement cell in block 11 of Auschwitz I. A second group of 600 Soviet prisoners of war and around 250 sick Polish prisoners were gassed on 3–5 September.[35] The morgue was later converted to a gas chamber able to hold at least 700–800 people.[34][c] Zyklon B was dropped into the room through slits in the ceiling.[34]

First mass transport of Jews

Historians have disagreed about the date the all-Jewish transports began arriving in Auschwitz. At the Wannsee Conference in Berlin on 20 January 1942, the Nazi leadership outlined, in euphemistic language, its plans for the Final Solution.[36] According to Franciszek Piper, the Auschwitz commandant Rudolf Höss offered inconsistent accounts after the war, suggesting the extermination began in December 1941, January 1942, or before the establishment of the women's camp in March 1942.[37] In Kommandant in Auschwitz, he wrote: "In the spring of 1942 the first transports of Jews, all earmarked for extermination, arrived from Upper Silesia."[38] On 15 February 1942, according to Danuta Czech, a transport of Jews from Beuthen, Upper Silesia (Bytom, Poland), arrived at Auschwitz I and was sent straight to the gas chamber.[d][40] In 1998 an eyewitness said the train contained "the women of Beuthen".[e] Saul Friedländer wrote that the Beuthen Jews were from the Organization Schmelt labor camps and had been deemed unfit for work.[42] According to Christopher Browning, transports of Jews unfit for work were sent to the gas chamber at Auschwitz from autumn 1941.[43] The evidence for this and the February 1942 transport was contested in 2015 by Nikolaus Wachsmann.[44]

Around 20 March 1942, according to Danuta Czech, a transport of Polish Jews from Silesia and Zagłębie Dąbrowskie was taken straight from the station to the Auschwitz II gas chamber, which had just come into operation.[45] On 26 and 28 March, two transports of Slovakian Jews were registered as prisoners in the women's camp, where they were kept for slave labour; these were the first transports organized by Adolf Eichmann's department IV B4 (the Jewish office) in the Reich Security Head Office (RSHA).[f] On 30 March the first RHSA transport arrived from France.[46] "Selection", where new arrivals were chosen for work or the gas chamber, began in April 1942 and was conducted regularly from July. Piper writes that this reflected Germany's increasing need for labor. Those selected as unfit for work were gassed without being registered as prisoners.[47]

There is also disagreement about how many were gassed in Auschwitz I. Perry Broad, an SS-Unterscharführer, wrote that "transport after transport vanished in the Auschwitz [I] crematorium."[48] In the view of Filip Müller, one of the Auschwitz I Sonderkommando, tens of thousands of Jews were murdered there from France, Holland, Slovakia, Upper Silesia, and Yugoslavia, and from the Theresienstadt, Ciechanow, and Grodno ghettos.[49] Against this, Jean-Claude Pressac estimated that up to 10,000 people had been murdered in Auschwitz I.[48] The last inmates gassed there, in December 1942, were around 400 members of the Auschwitz II Sonderkommando, who had been forced to dig up and burn the remains of that camp's mass graves, thought to hold over 100,000 corpses.[50]

Auschwitz II-Birkenau

Construction

 
Auschwitz II-Birkenau gate from inside the camp, 2007
 
Same scene, May/June 1944, with the gate in the background. "Selection" of Hungarian Jews for work or the gas chamber. From the Auschwitz Album, taken by the camp's Erkennungsdienst.
 
Gate with the camp remains in the background, 2009

After visiting Auschwitz I in March 1941, it appears that Himmler ordered that the camp be expanded,[51] although Peter Hayes notes that, on 10 January 1941, the Polish underground told the Polish government-in-exile in London: "the Auschwitz concentration camp ...can accommodate approximately 7,000 prisoners at present, and is to be rebuilt to hold approximately 30,000."[52] Construction of Auschwitz II-Birkenau—called a Kriegsgefangenenlager (prisoner-of-war camp) on blueprints—began in October 1941 in Brzezinka, about three kilometers from Auschwitz I.[53] The initial plan was that Auschwitz II would consist of four sectors (Bauabschnitte I–IV), each consisting of six subcamps (BIIa–BIIf) with their own gates and fences. The first two sectors were completed (sector BI was initially a quarantine camp), but the construction of BIII began in 1943 and stopped in April 1944, and the plan for BIV was abandoned.[54]

SS-Sturmbannführer Karl Bischoff, an architect, was the chief of construction.[51] Based on an initial budget of RM 8.9 million, his plans called for each barracks to hold 550 prisoners, but he later changed this to 744 per barracks, which meant the camp could hold 125,000, rather than 97,000.[55] There were 174 barracks, each measuring 35.4 by 11.0 metres (116 by 36 ft), divided into 62 bays of 4 square metres (43 sq ft). The bays were divided into "roosts", initially for three inmates and later for four. With personal space of 1 square metre (11 sq ft) to sleep and place whatever belongings they had, inmates were deprived, Robert-Jan van Pelt wrote, "of the minimum space needed to exist".[56]

The prisoners were forced to live in the barracks as they were building them; in addition to working, they faced long roll calls at night. As a result, most prisoners in BIb (the men's camp) in the early months died of hypothermia, starvation or exhaustion within a few weeks.[57] Some 10,000 Soviet prisoners of war arrived at Auschwitz I between 7 and 25 October 1941,[58] but by 1 March 1942 only 945 were still registered; they were transferred to Auschwitz II,[39] where most of them had died by May.[59]

Crematoria II–V

The first gas chamber at Auschwitz II was operational by March 1942. On or around 20 March, a transport of Polish Jews sent by the Gestapo from Silesia and Zagłębie Dąbrowskie was taken straight from the Oświęcim freight station to the Auschwitz II gas chamber, then buried in a nearby meadow.[45] The gas chamber was located in what prisoners called the "little red house" (known as bunker 1 by the SS), a brick cottage that had been turned into a gassing facility; the windows had been bricked up and its four rooms converted into two insulated rooms, the doors of which said "Zur Desinfektion" ("to disinfection"). A second brick cottage, the "little white house" or bunker 2, was converted and operational by June 1942.[60] When Himmler visited the camp on 17 and 18 July 1942, he was given a demonstration of a selection of Dutch Jews, a mass-murder in a gas chamber in bunker 2, and a tour of the building site of Auschwitz III, the new IG Farben plant being constructed at Monowitz.[61] Use of bunkers I and 2 stopped in spring 1943 when the new crematoria were built, although bunker 2 became operational again in May 1944 for the murder of the Hungarian Jews. Bunker I was demolished in 1943 and bunker 2 in November 1944.[62]

Plans for crematoria II and III show that both had an oven room 30 by 11.24 metres (98.4 by 36.9 ft) on the ground floor, and an underground dressing room 49.43 by 7.93 metres (162.2 by 26.0 ft) and gas chamber 30 by 7 metres (98 by 23 ft). The dressing rooms had wooden benches along the walls and numbered pegs for clothing. Victims would be led from these rooms to a five-yard-long narrow corridor, which in turn led to a space from which the gas chamber door opened. The chambers were white inside, and nozzles were fixed to the ceiling to resemble showerheads.[63] The daily capacity of the crematoria (how many bodies could be burned in a 24-hour period) was 340 corpses in crematorium I; 1,440 each in crematoria II and III; and 768 each in IV and V.[64] By June 1943 all four crematoria were operational, but crematorium I was not used after July 1943. This made the total daily capacity 4,416, although by loading three to five corpses at a time, the Sonderkommando were able to burn some 8,000 bodies a day. This maximum capacity was rarely needed; the average between 1942 and 1944 was 1,000 bodies burned every day.[65]

Auschwitz III-Monowitz

 
Detailed map of Buna Werke, Monowitz, and nearby subcamps

After examining several sites for a new plant to manufacture Buna-N, a type of synthetic rubber essential to the war effort, the German chemical conglomerate IG Farben chose a site near the towns of Dwory and Monowice (Monowitz in German), about 7 kilometres (4.3 mi) east of Auschwitz I.[66] Tax exemptions were available to corporations prepared to develop industries in the frontier regions under the Eastern Fiscal Assistance Law, passed in December 1940. In addition to its proximity to the concentration camp, a source of cheap labor, the site had good railway connections and access to raw materials.[67] In February 1941, Himmler ordered that the Jewish population of Oświęcim be expelled to make way for skilled laborers; that all Poles able to work remain in the town and work on building the factory; and that Auschwitz prisoners be used in the construction work.[68]

Auschwitz inmates began working at the plant, known as Buna Werke and IG-Auschwitz, in April 1941, demolishing houses in Monowitz to make way for it.[69] By May, because of a shortage of trucks, several hundred of them were rising at 3 am to walk there twice a day from Auschwitz I.[70] Because a long line of exhausted inmates walking through the town of Oświęcim might harm German-Polish relations, the inmates were told to shave daily, make sure they were clean, and sing as they walked. From late July they were taken to the factory by train on freight wagons.[71] Given the difficulty of moving them, including during the winter, IG Farben decided to build a camp at the plant. The first inmates moved there on 30 October 1942.[72] Known as KL Auschwitz III-Aussenlager (Auschwitz III subcamp), and later as the Monowitz concentration camp,[73] it was the first concentration camp to be financed and built by private industry.[74]

 
Heinrich Himmler (second left) visits the IG Farben plant in Auschwitz III, July 1942.

Measuring 270 by 490 metres (890 ft × 1,610 ft), the camp was larger than Auschwitz I. By the end of 1944, it housed 60 barracks measuring 17.5 by 8 metres (57 ft × 26 ft), each with a day room and a sleeping room containing 56 three-tiered wooden bunks.[75] IG Farben paid the SS three or four Reichsmark for nine- to eleven-hour shifts from each worker.[76] In 1943–1944, about 35,000 inmates worked at the plant; 23,000 (32 a day on average) were killed through malnutrition, disease, and the workload. Within three to four months at the camp, Peter Hayes writes, the inmates were "reduced to walking skeletons".[77] Deaths and transfers to the gas chambers at Auschwitz II reduced the population by nearly a fifth each month.[78] Site managers constantly threatened inmates with the gas chambers, and the smell from the crematoria at Auschwitz I and II hung heavy over the camp.[79]

Although the factory had been expected to begin production in 1943, shortages of labor and raw materials meant start-up was postponed repeatedly.[80] The Allies bombed the plant in 1944 on 20 August, 13 September, 18 December, and 26 December. On 19 January 1945, the SS ordered that the site be evacuated, sending 9,000 inmates, most of them Jews, on a death march to another Auschwitz subcamp at Gliwice.[81] From Gliwice, prisoners were taken by rail in open freight wagons to the Buchenwald and Mauthausen concentration camps. The 800 inmates who had been left behind in the Monowitz hospital were liberated along with the rest of the camp on 27 January 1945 by the 1st Ukrainian Front of the Red Army.[82]

Subcamps

Several other German industrial enterprises, such as Krupp and Siemens-Schuckert, built factories with their own subcamps.[83] There were around 28 camps near industrial plants, each camp holding hundreds or thousands of prisoners.[84] Designated as Aussenlager (external camp), Nebenlager (extension camp), Arbeitslager (labor camp), or Aussenkommando (external work detail),[85] camps were built at Blechhammer, Jawiszowice, Jaworzno, Lagisze, Mysłowice, Trzebinia, and as far afield as the Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia in Czechoslovakia.[86] Industries with satellite camps included coal mines, foundries and other metal works, and chemical plants. Prisoners were also made to work in forestry and farming.[87] For example, Wirtschaftshof Budy, in the Polish village of Budy near Brzeszcze, was a farming subcamp where prisoners worked 12-hour days in the fields, tending animals, and making compost by mixing human ashes from the crematoria with sod and manure.[88] Incidents of sabotage to decrease production took place in several subcamps, including Charlottengrube, Gleiwitz II, and Rajsko.[89] Living conditions in some of the camps were so poor that they were regarded as punishment subcamps.[90]

Life in the camps

SS garrison

 
From the Höcker Album (left to right): Richard Baer (Auschwitz commandant from May 1944), Josef Mengele (camp physician), and Rudolf Höss (first commandant) in Solahütte, an SS resort near Auschwitz, summer 1944.[91]
 
The commandant's and administration building, Auschwitz I

Rudolf Höss, born in Baden-Baden in 1900,[92] was named the first commandant of Auschwitz when Heinrich Himmler ordered on 27 April 1940 that the camp be established.[93] Living with his wife and children in a two-story stucco house near the commandant's and administration building,[94] he served as commandant until 11 November 1943,[93] with Josef Kramer as his deputy.[24] Succeeded as commandant by Arthur Liebehenschel,[93] Höss joined the SS Business and Administration Head Office in Oranienburg as director of Amt DI,[93] a post that made him deputy of the camps inspectorate.[95]

Richard Baer became commandant of Auschwitz I on 11 May 1944 and Fritz Hartjenstein of Auschwitz II from 22 November 1943, followed by Josef Kramer from 15 May 1944 until the camp's liquidation in January 1945. Heinrich Schwarz was commandant of Auschwitz III from the point at which it became an autonomous camp in November 1943 until its liquidation.[96] Höss returned to Auschwitz between 8 May and 29 July 1944 as the local SS garrison commander (Standortältester) to oversee the arrival of Hungary's Jews, which made him the superior officer of all the commandants of the Auschwitz camps.[93]

According to Aleksander Lasik, about 6,335 people (6,161 of them men) worked for the SS at Auschwitz over the course of the camp's existence;[97] 4.2 percent were officers, 26.1 percent non-commissioned officers, and 69.7 percent rank and file.[98] In March 1941, there were 700 SS guards; in June 1942, 2,000; and in August 1944, 3,342. At its peak in January 1945, 4,480 SS men and 71 SS women worked in Auschwitz; the higher number is probably attributable to the logistics of evacuating the camp.[99] Female guards were known as SS supervisors (SS-Aufseherinnen).[100]

Most of the staff were from Germany or Austria, but as the war progressed, increasing numbers of Volksdeutsche from other countries, including Czechoslovakia, Poland, Yugoslavia, and the Baltic states, joined the SS at Auschwitz. Not all were ethnically German. Guards were also recruited from Hungary, Romania, and Slovakia.[101] Camp guards, around three quarters of the SS personnel, were members of the SS-Totenkopfverbände (death's head units).[102] Other SS staff worked in the medical or political departments, or in the economic administration, which was responsible for clothing and other supplies, including the property of dead prisoners.[103] The SS viewed Auschwitz as a comfortable posting; being there meant they had avoided the front and had access to the victims' property.[104]

Functionaries and Sonderkommando

 
Auschwitz I, 2009

Certain prisoners, at first non-Jewish Germans but later Jews and non-Jewish Poles,[105] were assigned positions of authority as Funktionshäftlinge (functionaries), which gave them access to better housing and food. The Lagerprominenz (camp elite) included Blockschreiber (barracks clerk), Kapo (overseer), Stubendienst (barracks orderly), and Kommandierte (trusties).[106] Wielding tremendous power over other prisoners, the functionaries developed a reputation as sadists.[105] Very few were prosecuted after the war, because of the difficulty of determining which atrocities had been performed by order of the SS.[107]

Although the SS oversaw the murders at each gas chamber, the forced labor portion of the work was done by prisoners known from 1942 as the Sonderkommando (special squad).[108] These were mostly Jews but they included groups such as Soviet POWs. In 1940–1941 when there was one gas chamber, there were 20 such prisoners, in late 1943 there were 400, and by 1944 during the Holocaust in Hungary the number had risen to 874.[109] The Sonderkommando removed goods and corpses from the incoming trains, guided victims to the dressing rooms and gas chambers, removed their bodies afterwards, and took their jewelry, hair, dental work, and any precious metals from their teeth, all of which was sent to Germany. Once the bodies were stripped of anything valuable, the Sonderkommando burned them in the crematoria.[110]

Because they were witnesses to the mass murder, the Sonderkommando lived separately from the other prisoners, although this rule was not applied to the non-Jews among them.[111] Their quality of life was further improved by their access to the property of new arrivals, which they traded within the camp, including with the SS.[112] Nevertheless, their life expectancy was short; they were regularly murdered and replaced.[113] About 100 survived to the camp's liquidation. They were forced on a death march and by train to the camp at Mauthausen, where three days later they were asked to step forward during roll call. No one did, and because the SS did not have their records, several of them survived.[114]

Tattoos and triangles

 
Auschwitz clothing

Uniquely at Auschwitz, prisoners were tattooed with a serial number, on their left breast for Soviet prisoners of war[115] and on the left arm for civilians.[116][117] Categories of prisoner were distinguishable by triangular pieces of cloth (German: Winkel) sewn onto on their jackets below their prisoner number. Political prisoners (Schutzhäftlinge or Sch), mostly Poles, had a red triangle, while criminals (Berufsverbrecher or BV) were mostly German and wore green. Asocial prisoners (Asoziale or Aso), which included vagrants, prostitutes and the Roma, wore black. Purple was for Jehovah's Witnesses (Internationale Bibelforscher-Vereinigung or IBV)'s and pink for gay men, who were mostly German.[118] An estimated 5,000–15,000 gay men prosecuted under German Penal Code Section 175 (proscribing sexual acts between men) were detained in concentration camps, of whom an unknown number were sent to Auschwitz.[119] Jews wore a yellow badge, the shape of the Star of David, overlaid by a second triangle if they also belonged to a second category. The nationality of the inmate was indicated by a letter stitched onto the cloth. A racial hierarchy existed, with German prisoners at the top. Next were non-Jewish prisoners from other countries. Jewish prisoners were at the bottom.[120]

Transports

 
Freight car inside Auschwitz II-Birkenau, near the gatehouse, used to transport deportees, 2014[121]

Deportees were brought to Auschwitz crammed in wretched conditions into goods or cattle wagons, arriving near a railway station or at one of several dedicated trackside ramps, including one next to Auschwitz I. The Altejudenrampe (old Jewish ramp), part of the Oświęcim freight railway station, was used from 1942 to 1944 for Jewish transports.[121][122] Located between Auschwitz I and Auschwitz II, arriving at this ramp meant a 2.5 km journey to Auschwitz II and the gas chambers. Most deportees were forced to walk, accompanied by SS men and a car with a Red Cross symbol that carried the Zyklon B, as well as an SS doctor in case officers were poisoned by mistake. Inmates arriving at night, or who were too weak to walk, were taken by truck.[123] Work on a new railway line and ramp (right) between sectors BI and BII in Auschwitz II, was completed in May 1944 for the arrival of Hungarian Jews[122] between May and early July 1944.[124] The rails led directly to the area around the gas chambers.[121]

Life for the inmates

The day began at 4:30 am for the men (an hour later in winter), and earlier for the women, when the block supervisor sounded a gong and started beating inmates with sticks to make them wash and use the latrines quickly.[125] Sanitary arrangements were atrocious, with few latrines and a lack of clean water. Each washhouse had to service thousands of prisoners. In sectors BIa and BIb in Auschwitz II, two buildings containing latrines and washrooms were installed in 1943. These contained troughs for washing and 90 faucets; the toilet facilities were "sewage channels" covered by concrete with 58 holes for seating. There were three barracks with washing facilities or toilets to serve 16 residential barracks in BIIa, and six washrooms/latrines for 32 barracks in BIIb, BIIc, BIId, and BIIe.[126] Primo Levi described a 1944 Auschwitz III washroom:

 
Latrine in the men's quarantine camp, sector BIIa, Auschwitz II, 2003

It is badly lighted, full of draughts, with the brick floor covered by a layer of mud. The water is not drinkable; it has a revolting smell and often fails for many hours. The walls are covered by curious didactic frescoes: for example, there is the good Häftling [prisoner], portrayed stripped to the waist, about to diligently soap his sheared and rosy cranium, and the bad Häftling, with a strong Semitic nose and a greenish colour, bundled up in his ostentatiously stained clothes with a beret on his head, who cautiously dips a finger into the water of the washbasin. Under the first is written: "So bist du rein" (like this you are clean), and under the second, "So gehst du ein" (like this you come to a bad end); and lower down, in doubtful French but in Gothic script: "La propreté, c'est la santé" [cleanliness is health].[127]

Prisoners received half a liter of coffee substitute or a herbal tea in the morning, but no food.[128] A second gong heralded roll call, when inmates lined up outside in rows of ten to be counted. No matter the weather, they had to wait for the SS to arrive for the count; how long they stood there depended on the officers' mood, and whether there had been escapes or other events attracting punishment.[129] Guards might force the prisoners to squat for an hour with their hands above their heads or hand out beatings or detention for infractions such as having a missing button or an improperly cleaned food bowl. The inmates were counted and re-counted.[130]

 
Auschwitz II brick barracks, sector BI, 2006; four prisoners slept in each partition, known as a buk.[131]
 
Auschwitz II wooden barracks, 2008

After roll call, to the sound of "Arbeitskommandos formieren" ("form work details"), prisoners walked to their place of work, five abreast, to begin a working day that was normally 11 hours long—longer in summer and shorter in winter.[132] A prison orchestra, such as the Women's Orchestra of Auschwitz, was forced to play cheerful music as the workers left the camp. Kapos were responsible for the prisoners' behavior while they worked, as was an SS escort. Much of the work took place outdoors at construction sites, gravel pits, and lumber yards. No rest periods were allowed. One prisoner was assigned to the latrines to measure the time the workers took to empty their bladders and bowels.[133]

Lunch was three-quarters of a liter of watery soup at midday, reportedly foul-tasting, with meat in the soup four times a week and vegetables (mostly potatoes and rutabaga) three times. The evening meal was 300 grams of bread, often moldy, part of which the inmates were expected to keep for breakfast the next day, with a tablespoon of cheese or marmalade, or 25 grams of margarine or sausage. Prisoners engaged in hard labor were given extra rations.[134]

A second roll call took place at seven in the evening, in the course of which prisoners might be hanged or flogged. If a prisoner was missing, the others had to remain standing until the absentee was found or the reason for the absence discovered, even if it took hours. On 6 July 1940, roll call lasted 19 hours because a Polish prisoner, Tadeusz Wiejowski, had escaped; following an escape in 1941, a group of prisoners was picked out from the escapee's barracks and sent to block 11 to be starved to death.[135] After roll call, prisoners retired to their blocks for the night and received their bread rations. Then they had some free time to use the washrooms and receive their mail, unless they were Jews: Jews were not allowed to receive mail. Curfew ("nighttime quiet") was marked by a gong at nine o'clock.[136] Inmates slept in long rows of brick or wooden bunks, or on the floor, lying in and on their clothes and shoes to prevent them from being stolen.[137] The wooden bunks had blankets and paper mattresses filled with wood shavings; in the brick barracks, inmates lay on straw.[138] According to Miklós Nyiszli:

Eight hundred to a thousand people were crammed into the superimposed compartments of each barracks. Unable to stretch out completely, they slept there both lengthwise and crosswise, with one man's feet on another's head, neck, or chest. Stripped of all human dignity, they pushed and shoved and bit and kicked each other in an effort to get a few more inches' space on which to sleep a little more comfortably. For they did not have long to sleep.[139]

Sunday was not a work day, but prisoners had to clean the barracks and take their weekly shower,[140] and were allowed to write (in German) to their families, although the SS censored the mail. Inmates who did not speak German would trade bread for help.[141] Observant Jews tried to keep track of the Hebrew calendar and Jewish holidays, including Shabbat, and the weekly Torah portion. No watches, calendars, or clocks were permitted in the camp. Only two Jewish calendars made in Auschwitz survived to the end of the war. Prisoners kept track of the days in other ways, such as obtaining information from newcomers.[142]

Women's camp

 
Women in Auschwitz II, May 1944
 
Roll call in front of the kitchen building, Auschwitz II

About 30 percent of the registered inmates were female.[143] The first mass transport of women, 999 non-Jewish German women from the Ravensbrück concentration camp, arrived on 26 March 1942. Classified as criminal, asocial and political, they were brought to Auschwitz as founder functionaries of the women's camp.[144] Rudolf Höss wrote of them: "It was easy to predict that these beasts would mistreat the women over whom they exercised power ... Spiritual suffering was completely alien to them."[145] They were given serial numbers 1–999.[46][g] The women's guard from Ravensbrück, Johanna Langefeld, became the first Auschwitz women's camp Lagerführerin.[144] A second mass transport of women, 999 Jews from Poprad, Slovakia, arrived on the same day. According to Danuta Czech, this was the first registered transport sent to Auschwitz by the Reich Security Head Office (RSHA) office IV B4, known as the Jewish Office, led by SS Obersturmbannführer Adolf Eichmann.[46] (Office IV was the Gestapo.)[146] A third transport of 798 Jewish women from Bratislava, Slovakia, followed on 28 March.[46]

Women were at first held in blocks 1–10 of Auschwitz I,[147] but from 6 August 1942,[148] 13,000 inmates were transferred to a new women's camp (Frauenkonzentrationslager or FKL) in Auschwitz II. This consisted at first of 15 brick and 15 wooden barracks in sector (Bauabschnitt) BIa; it was later extended into BIb,[149] and by October 1943 it held 32,066 women.[150] In 1943–1944, about 11,000 women were also housed in the Gypsy family camp, as were several thousand in the Theresienstadt family camp.[151]

Conditions in the women's camp were so poor that when a group of male prisoners arrived to set up an infirmary in October 1942, their first task, according to researchers from the Auschwitz museum, was to distinguish the corpses from the women who were still alive.[150] Gisella Perl, a Romanian-Jewish gynecologist and inmate of the women's camp, wrote in 1948:

There was one latrine for thirty to thirty-two thousand women and we were permitted to use it only at certain hours of the day. We stood in line to get in to this tiny building, knee-deep in human excrement. As we all suffered from dysentry, we could barely wait until our turn came, and soiled our ragged clothes, which never came off our bodies, thus adding to the horror of our existence by the terrible smell that surrounded us like a cloud. The latrine consisted of a deep ditch with planks thrown across it at certain intervals. We squatted on those planks like birds perched on a telegraph wire, so close together that we could not help soiling one another.[152]

Langefeld was succeeded as Lagerführerin in October 1942 by SS Oberaufseherin Maria Mandl, who developed a reputation for cruelty. Höss hired men to oversee the female supervisors, first SS Obersturmführer Paul Müller, then SS Hauptsturmführer Franz Hössler.[153] Mandl and Hössler were executed after the war. Sterilization experiments were carried out in barracks 30 by a German gynecologist, Carl Clauberg, and another German doctor, Horst Schumann.[150]

Medical experiments, block 10

 
Block 10, Auschwitz I, where medical experiments were performed on women

German doctors performed a variety of experiments on prisoners at Auschwitz. SS doctors tested the efficacy of X-rays as a sterilization device by administering large doses to female prisoners. Carl Clauberg injected chemicals into women's uteruses in an effort to glue them shut. Prisoners were infected with spotted fever for vaccination research and exposed to toxic substances to study the effects.[154] In one experiment, Bayer—then part of IG Farben—paid RM 150 each for 150 female inmates from Auschwitz (the camp had asked for RM 200 per woman), who were transferred to a Bayer facility to test an anesthetic. A Bayer employee wrote to Rudolf Höss: "The transport of 150 women arrived in good condition. However, we were unable to obtain conclusive results because they died during the experiments. We would kindly request that you send us another group of women to the same number and at the same price." The Bayer research was led at Auschwitz by Helmuth Vetter of Bayer/IG Farben, who was also an Auschwitz physician and SS captain, and by Auschwitz physicians Friedrich Entress and Eduard Wirths.[155]

 
Defendants during the Doctors' trial, Nuremberg, 1946–1947

The most infamous doctor at Auschwitz was Josef Mengele, the "Angel of Death", who worked in Auschwitz II from 30 May 1943, at first in the gypsy family camp.[156] Interested in performing research on identical twins, dwarfs, and those with hereditary disease, Mengele set up a kindergarten in barracks 29 and 31 for children he was experimenting on, and for all Romani children under six, where they were given better food rations.[157] From May 1944, he would select twins and dwarfs from among the new arrivals during "selection",[158] reportedly calling for twins with "Zwillinge heraus!" ("twins step forward!").[159] He and other doctors (the latter prisoners) would measure the twins' body parts, photograph them, and subject them to dental, sight and hearing tests, x-rays, blood tests, surgery, and blood transfusions between them.[160] Then he would have them killed and dissected.[158] Kurt Heissmeyer, another German doctor and SS officer, took 20 Polish Jewish children from Auschwitz to use in pseudoscientific experiments at the Neuengamme concentration camp near Hamburg, where he injected them with the tuberculosis bacilli to test a cure for tuberculosis. In April 1945, the children were murdered by hanging to conceal the project.[161]

A Jewish skeleton collection was obtained from among a pool of 115 Jewish inmates, chosen for their perceived stereotypical racial characteristics. Rudolf Brandt and Wolfram Sievers, general manager of the Ahnenerbe (a Nazi research institute), delivered the skeletons to the collection of the Anatomy Institute at the Reichsuniversität Straßburg in Alsace-Lorraine. The collection was sanctioned by Heinrich Himmler and under the direction of August Hirt. Ultimately 87 of the inmates were shipped to Natzweiler-Struthof and murdered in August 1943.[162] Brandt and Sievers were executed in 1948 after being convicted during the Doctors' trial, part of the Subsequent Nuremberg trials.[163]

Punishment, block 11

 
Block 11 and (left) the "death wall", Auschwitz I, 2000

Prisoners could be beaten and killed by guards and kapos for the slightest infraction of the rules. Polish historian Irena Strzelecka writes that kapos were given nicknames that reflected their sadism: "Bloody", "Iron", "The Strangler", "The Boxer".[164] Based on the 275 extant reports of punishment in the Auschwitz archives, Strzelecka lists common infractions: returning a second time for food at mealtimes, removing your own gold teeth to buy bread, breaking into the pigsty to steal the pigs' food, putting your hands in your pockets.[165]

Flogging during roll-call was common. A flogging table called "the goat" immobilized prisoners' feet in a box, while they stretched themselves across the table. Prisoners had to count out the lashes—"25 mit besten Dank habe ich erhalten" ("25 received with many thanks")— and if they got the figure wrong, the flogging resumed from the beginning.[165] Punishment by "the post" involved tying prisoners hands behind their backs with chains attached to hooks, then raising the chains so the prisoners were left dangling by the wrists. If their shoulders were too damaged afterwards to work, they might be sent to the gas chamber. Prisoners were subjected to the post for helping a prisoner who had been beaten, and for picking up a cigarette butt.[166] To extract information from inmates, guards would force their heads onto the stove, and hold them there, burning their faces and eyes.[167]

Known as block 13 until 1941, block 11 of Auschwitz I was the prison within the prison, reserved for inmates suspected of resistance activities.[168] Cell 22 in block 11 was a windowless standing cell (Stehbunker). Split into four sections, each section measured less than 1.0 m2 (11 sq ft) and held four prisoners, who entered it through a hatch near the floor. There was a 5 cm x 5 cm vent for air, covered by a perforated sheet. Strzelecka writes that prisoners might have to spend several nights in cell 22; Wiesław Kielar spent four weeks in it for breaking a pipe.[169] Several rooms in block 11 were deemed the Polizei-Ersatz-Gefängnis Myslowitz in Auschwitz (Auschwitz branch of the police station at Mysłowice).[170] There were also Sonderbehandlung cases ("special treatment") for Poles and others regarded as dangerous to Nazi Germany.[171]

Death wall

 
The "death wall" showing the death-camp flag, the blue-and-white stripes with a red triangle signifying the Auschwitz uniform of political prisoners.

The courtyard between blocks 10 and 11, known as the "death wall", served as an execution area, including for Poles in the General Government area who had been sentenced to death by a criminal court.[171] The first executions, by shooting inmates in the back of the head, took place at the death wall on 11 November 1941, Poland's National Independence Day. The 151 accused were led to the wall one at a time, stripped naked and with their hands tied behind their backs. Danuta Czech noted that a "clandestine Catholic mass" was said the following Sunday on the second floor of Block 4 in Auschwitz I, in a narrow space between bunks.[172]

An estimated 4,500 Polish political prisoners were executed at the death wall, including members of the camp resistance. An additional 10,000 Poles were brought to the camp to be executed without being registered. About 1,000 Soviet prisoners of war died by execution, although this is a rough estimate. A Polish government-in-exile report stated that 11,274 prisoners and 6,314 prisoners of war had been executed.[173] Rudolf Höss wrote that "execution orders arrived in an unbroken stream".[170] According to SS officer Perry Broad, "[s]ome of these walking skeletons had spent months in the stinking cells, where not even animals would be kept, and they could barely manage to stand straight. And yet, at that last moment, many of them shouted 'Long live Poland', or 'Long live freedom'."[174] The dead included Colonel Jan Karcz and Major Edward Gött-Getyński, executed on 25 January 1943 with 51 others suspected of resistance activities. Józef Noji, the Polish long-distance runner, was executed on 15 February that year.[175] In October 1944, 200 Sonderkommando were executed for their part in the Sonderkommando revolt.[176]

Family camps

Gypsy family camp

 
Romani children, Mulfingen, Germany, 1943; the children were studied by Eva Justin and later sent to Auschwitz.[177]

A separate camp for the Roma, the Zigeunerfamilienlager ("Gypsy family camp"), was set up in the BIIe sector of Auschwitz II-Birkenau in February 1943. For unknown reasons, they were not subject to selection and families were allowed to stay together. The first transport of German Roma arrived on 26 February that year. There had been a small number of Romani inmates before that; two Czech Romani prisoners, Ignatz and Frank Denhel, tried to escape in December 1942, the latter successfully, and a Polish Romani woman, Stefania Ciuron, arrived on 12 February 1943 and escaped in April.[178] Josef Mengele, the Holocaust's most infamous physician, worked in the gypsy family camp from 30 May 1943 when he began his work in Auschwitz.[156]

The Auschwitz registry (Hauptbücher) shows that 20,946 Roma were registered prisoners,[179] and another 3,000 are thought to have entered unregistered.[180] On 22 March 1943, one transport of 1,700 Polish Sinti and Roma was gassed on arrival because of illness, as was a second group of 1,035 on 25 May 1943.[179] The SS tried to liquidate the camp on 16 May 1944, but the Roma fought them, armed with knives and iron pipes, and the SS retreated. Shortly after this, the SS removed nearly 2,908 from the family camp to work, and on 2 August 1944 gassed the other 2,897. Ten thousand remain unaccounted for.[181]

Theresienstadt family camp

The SS deported around 18,000 Jews to Auschwitz from the Theresienstadt ghetto in Terezin, Czechoslovakia,[182] beginning on 8 September 1943 with a transport of 2,293 male and 2,713 female prisoners.[183] Placed in sector BIIb as a "family camp", they were allowed to keep their belongings, wear their own clothes, and write letters to family; they did not have their hair shaved and were not subjected to selection.[182] Correspondence between Adolf Eichmann's office and the International Red Cross suggests that the Germans set up the camp to cast doubt on reports, in time for a planned Red Cross visit to Auschwitz, that mass murder was taking place there.[184] The women and girls were placed in odd-numbered barracks and the men and boys in even-numbered. An infirmary was set up in barracks 30 and 32, and barracks 31 became a school and kindergarten.[182] The somewhat better living conditions were nevertheless inadequate; 1,000 members of the family camp were dead within six months.[185] Two other groups of 2,491 and 2,473 Jews arrived from Theresienstadt in the family camp on 16 and 20 December 1943.[186]

On 8 March 1944, 3,791 of the prisoners (men, women and children) were sent to the gas chambers; the men were taken to crematorium III and the women later to crematorium II.[187] Some of the group were reported to have sung Hatikvah and the Czech national anthem on the way.[188] Before they were murdered, they had been asked to write postcards to relatives, postdated to 25–27 March. Several twins were held back for medical experiments.[189] The Czechoslovak government-in-exile initiated diplomatic manoeuvers to save the remaining Czech Jews after its representative in Bern received the Vrba-Wetzler report, written by two escaped prisoners, Rudolf Vrba and Alfred Wetzler, which warned that the remaining family-camp inmates would be gassed soon.[190] The BBC also became aware of the report; its German service broadcast news of the family-camp murders during its women's programme on 16 June 1944, warning: "All those responsible for such massacres from top downwards will be called to account."[191] The Red Cross visited Theresienstadt in June 1944 and were persuaded by the SS that no one was being deported from there.[184] The following month, about 2,000 women from the family camp were selected to be moved to other camps and 80 boys were moved to the men's camp; the remaining 7,000 were gassed between 10 and 12 July.[192]

Selection and extermination process

Gas chambers

 
A reconstruction of crematorium I, Auschwitz I, 2014[193]

The first gassings at Auschwitz took place in early September 1941, when around 850 inmates—Soviet prisoners of war and sick Polish inmates—were killed with Zyklon B in the basement of block 11 in Auschwitz I. The building proved unsuitable, so gassings were conducted instead in crematorium I, also in Auschwitz I, which operated until December 1942. There, more than 700 victims could be killed at once.[194] Tens of thousands were killed in crematorium I.[49] To keep the victims calm, they were told they were to undergo disinfection and de-lousing; they were ordered to undress outside, then were locked in the building and gassed. After its decommissioning as a gas chamber, the building was converted to a storage facility and later served as an SS air raid shelter.[195] The gas chamber and crematorium were reconstructed after the war. Dwork and van Pelt write that a chimney was recreated; four openings in the roof were installed to show where the Zyklon B had entered; and two of the three furnaces were rebuilt with the original components.[31]

 
Hungarian Jews arriving at Auschwitz II, May/June 1944
 
Crematoria II and III and their chimneys are visible in the background, left and right.
 
Jewish women and children from Hungary walking toward the gas chamber, Auschwitz II, May/June 1944. The gate on the left leads to sector BI, the oldest part of the camp.[196]

In early 1942, mass exterminations were moved to two provisional gas chambers (the "red house" and "white house", known as bunkers 1 and 2) in Auschwitz II, while the larger crematoria (II, III, IV, and V) were under construction. Bunker 2 was temporarily reactivated from May to November 1944, when large numbers of Hungarian Jews were gassed.[197] In summer 1944 the combined capacity of the crematoria and outdoor incineration pits was 20,000 bodies per day.[198] A planned sixth facility—crematorium VI—was never built.[199]

From 1942, Jews were being transported to Auschwitz from all over German-occupied Europe by rail, arriving in daily convoys.[200] The gas chambers worked to their fullest capacity from May to July 1944, during the Holocaust in Hungary.[201] A rail spur leading to crematoria II and III in Auschwitz II was completed that May, and a new ramp was built between sectors BI and BII to deliver the victims closer to the gas chambers (images top right). On 29 April the first 1,800 Jews from Hungary arrived at the camp.[202] From 14 May until early July 1944, 437,000 Hungarian Jews, half the pre-war population, were deported to Auschwitz, at a rate of 12,000 a day for a considerable part of that period.[124] The crematoria had to be overhauled. Crematoria II and III were given new elevators leading from the stoves to the gas chambers, new grates were fitted, and several of the dressing rooms and gas chambers were painted. Cremation pits were dug behind crematorium V.[202] The incoming volume was so great that the Sonderkommando resorted to burning corpses in open-air pits as well as in the crematoria.[203]

Selection

According to Polish historian Franciszek Piper, of the 1,095,000 Jews deported to Auschwitz, around 205,000 were registered in the camp and given serial numbers; 25,000 were sent to other camps; and 865,000 were murdered soon after arrival.[204] Adding non-Jewish victims gives a figure of 900,000 who were murdered without being registered.[205]

During "selection" on arrival, those deemed able to work were sent to the right and admitted into the camp (registered), and the rest were sent to the left to be gassed. The group selected to die included almost all children, women with small children, the elderly, and others who appeared on brief and superficial inspection by an SS doctor not to be fit for work.[206] Practically any fault—scars, bandages, boils and emaciation—might provide reason enough to be deemed unfit.[207] Children might be made to walk toward a stick held at a certain height; those who could walk under it were selected for the gas.[208] Inmates unable to walk or who arrived at night were taken to the crematoria on trucks; otherwise the new arrivals were marched there.[209] Their belongings were seized and sorted by inmates in the "Kanada" warehouses, an area of the camp in sector BIIg that housed 30 barracks used as storage facilities for plundered goods; it derived its name from the inmates' view of Canada as a land of plenty.[210]

Inside the crematoria

 
Entrance to crematorium III, Auschwitz II, 2008[211]

The crematoria consisted of a dressing room, gas chamber, and furnace room. In crematoria II and III, the dressing room and gas chamber were underground; in IV and V, they were on the ground floor. The dressing room had numbered hooks on the wall to hang clothes. In crematorium II, there was also a dissection room (Sezierraum).[212] SS officers told the victims they had to take a shower and undergo delousing. The victims undressed in the dressing room and walked into the gas chamber; signs said "Bade" (bath) or "Desinfektionsraum" (disinfection room). A former prisoner testified that the language of the signs changed depending on who was being killed.[213] Some inmates were given soap and a towel.[214] A gas chamber could hold up to 2,000; one former prisoner said it was around 3,000.[215]

The Zyklon B was delivered to the crematoria by a special SS bureau known as the Hygiene Institute.[216] After the doors were shut, SS men dumped in the Zyklon B pellets through vents in the roof or holes in the side of the chamber. The victims were usually dead within 10 minutes; Rudolf Höss testified that it took up to 20 minutes.[217] Leib Langfus, a member of the Sonderkommando, buried his diary (written in Yiddish) near crematorium III in Auschwitz II. It was found in 1952, signed "A.Y.R.A":[218]

It would be difficult to even imagine that so many people would fit in such a small [room]. Anyone who did not want to go inside was shot [...] or torn apart by the dogs. They would have suffocated from the lack of air within several hours. Then all the doors were sealed tight and the gas thrown in by way of a small hole in the ceiling. There was nothing more that the people inside could do. And so they only screamed in bitter, lamentable voices. Others complained in voices full of despair, and others still sobbed spasmodically and sent up a dire, heart-rending weeping. ... And in the meantime, their voices grew weaker and weaker ... Because of the great crowding, people fell one atop another as they died, until a heap arose consisting of five or six layers atop the other, reaching a height of one meter. Mothers froze in a seated position on the ground embracing their children in their arms, and husbands and wives died hugging each other. Some of the people made up a formless mass. Others stood in a leaning position, while the upper parts, from the stomach up, were in a lying position. Some of the people had turned completely blue under the influence of the gas, while others looks entirely fresh, as if they were asleep.[219]

Use of corpses

 
One of the Sonderkommando photographs: Women on their way to the gas chamber, Auschwitz II, August 1944

Sonderkommando wearing gas masks dragged the bodies from the chamber. They removed glasses and artificial limbs and shaved off the women's hair;[217] women's hair was removed before they entered the gas chamber at Bełżec, Sobibór, and Treblinka, but at Auschwitz it was done after death.[220] By 6 February 1943, the Reich Economic Ministry had received 3,000 kg of women's hair from Auschwitz and Majdanek.[220] The hair was first cleaned in a solution of sal ammoniac, dried on the brick floor of the crematoria, combed, and placed in paper bags.[221] The hair was shipped to various companies, including one manufacturing plant in Bremen-Bluementhal, where workers found tiny coins with Greek letters on some of the braids, possibly from some of the 50,000 Greek Jews deported to Auschwitz in 1943.[222] When they liberated the camp in January 1945, the Red Army found 7,000 kg of human hair in bags ready to ship.[221]

Just before cremation, jewelry was removed, along with dental work and teeth containing precious metals.[223] Gold was removed from the teeth of dead prisoners from 23 September 1940 onwards by order of Heinrich Himmler.[224] The work was carried out by members of the Sonderkommando who were dentists; anyone overlooking dental work might themselves be cremated alive.[223] The gold was sent to the SS Health Service and used by dentists to treat the SS and their families; 50 kg had been collected by 8 October 1942.[224] By early 1944, 10–12 kg of gold were being extracted monthly from victims' teeth.[225]

The corpses were burned in the nearby incinerators, and the ashes were buried, thrown in the Vistula river, or used as fertilizer. Any bits of bone that had not burned properly were ground down in wooden mortars.[226]

Death toll

 
New arrivals, Auschwitz II-Birkenau, May/June 1944

At least 1.3 million people were sent to Auschwitz between 1940 and 1945, and at least 1.1 million died.[7] Overall 400,207 prisoners were registered in the camp: 268,657 male and 131,560 female.[143] A study in the late 1980s by Polish historian Franciszek Piper, published by Yad Vashem in 1991,[227] used timetables of train arrivals combined with deportation records to calculate that, of the 1.3 million sent to the camp, 1,082,000 had died there, a figure (rounded up to 1.1 million) that Piper regarded as a minimum.[7] That figure came to be widely accepted.[h]

The Germans tried to conceal how many they had murdered. In July 1942, according to Rudolf Höss's post-war memoir, Höss received an order from Heinrich Himmler, via Adolf Eichmann's office and SS commander Paul Blobel, that "[a]ll mass graves were to be opened and the corpses burned. In addition the ashes were to be disposed of in such a way that it would be impossible at some future time to calculate the number of corpses burned."[231]

Earlier estimates of the death toll were higher than Piper's. Following the camp's liberation, the Soviet government issued a statement, on 8 May 1945, that four million people had been murdered on the site, a figure based on the capacity of the crematoria.[232] Höss told prosecutors at Nuremberg that at least 2,500,000 people had been gassed there, and that another 500,000 had died of starvation and disease.[233] He testified that the figure of over two million had come from Eichmann.[234] In his memoirs, written in custody, Höss wrote that Eichmann had given the figure of 2.5 million to Höss's superior officer Richard Glücks, based on records that had been destroyed.[235] Höss regarded this figure as "far too high. Even Auschwitz had limits to its destructive possibilities," he wrote.[236]

Nationality/ethnicity
(Source: Franciszek Piper)[2]
Registered deaths
(Auschwitz)
Unregistered deaths
(Auschwitz)
Total
Jews 95,000 865,000 960,000
Ethnic Poles 64,000 10,000 74,000 (70,000–75,000)
Roma and Sinti 19,000 2,000 21,000
Soviet prisoners of war 12,000 3,000 15,000
Other Europeans:
Soviet citizens (Byelorussians, Russians, Ukrainians),
Czechs, Yugoslavs, French, Germans, Austrians
10,000–15,000 n/a 10,000–15,000
Total deaths in Auschwitz, 1940–1945 200,000–205,000 880,000 1,080,000–1,085,000

Around one in six Jews murdered in the Holocaust died in Auschwitz.[237] By nation, the greatest number of Auschwitz's Jewish victims originated from Hungary, accounting for 430,000 deaths, followed by Poland (300,000), France (69,000), Netherlands (60,000), Greece (55,000), Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia (46,000), Slovakia (27,000), Belgium (25,000), Germany and Austria (23,000), Yugoslavia (10,000), Italy (7,500), Norway (690), and others (34,000).[238] Timothy Snyder writes that fewer than one percent of the million Soviet Jews murdered in the Holocaust were murdered in Auschwitz.[239] Of the at least 387 Jehovah's Witnesses who were imprisoned at Auschwitz, 132 died in the camp.[240]

Resistance, escapes, and liberation

Camp resistance, flow of information

Information about Auschwitz became available to the Allies as a result of reports by Captain Witold Pilecki of the Polish Home Army[243] who, as "Tomasz Serafiński" (serial number 4859),[244] allowed himself to be arrested in Warsaw and taken to Auschwitz.[243] He was imprisoned there from 22 September 1940[245] until his escape on 27 April 1943.[244] Michael Fleming writes that Pilecki was instructed to sustain morale, organize food, clothing and resistance, prepare to take over the camp if possible, and smuggle information out to the Polish military.[243] Pilecki called his resistance movement Związek Organizacji Wojskowej (ZOW, "Union of Military Organization").[245]

 

The resistance sent out the first oral message about Auschwitz with Dr. Aleksander Wielkopolski, a Polish engineer who was released in October 1940.[246] The following month the Polish underground in Warsaw prepared a report on the basis of that information, The camp in Auschwitz, part of which was published in London in May 1941 in a booklet, The German Occupation of Poland, by the Polish Ministry of Foreign Affairs. The report said of the Jews in the camp that "scarcely any of them came out alive". According to Fleming, the booklet was "widely circulated amongst British officials". The Polish Fortnightly Review based a story on it, writing that "three crematorium furnaces were insufficient to cope with the bodies being cremated", as did The Scotsman on 8 January 1942, the only British news organization to do so.[247]

On 24 December 1941, the resistance groups representing the various prisoner factions met in block 45 and agreed to cooperate. Fleming writes that it has not been possible to track Pilecki's early intelligence from the camp. Pilecki compiled two reports after he escaped in April 1943; the second, Raport W, detailed his life in Auschwitz I and estimated that 1.5 million people, mostly Jews, had been murdered.[248] On 1 July 1942, the Polish Fortnightly Review published a report describing Birkenau, writing that "prisoners call this supplementary camp 'Paradisal', presumably because there is only one road, leading to Paradise". Reporting that inmates were being killed "through excessive work, torture and medical means", it noted the gassing of the Soviet prisoners of war and Polish inmates in Auschwitz I in September 1941, the first gassing in the camp. It said: "It is estimated that the Oswiecim camp can accommodate fifteen thousand prisoners, but as they die on a mass scale there is always room for new arrivals."[249]

 
The camp badge for non-Jewish Polish political prisoners

The Polish government-in-exile in London first reported the gassing of prisoners in Auschwitz on 21 July 1942,[250] and reported the gassing of Soviet POWs and Jews on 4 September 1942.[251] In 1943, the Kampfgruppe Auschwitz (Combat Group Auschwitz) was organized within the camp with the aim of sending out information about what was happening.[252] The Sonderkommando buried notes in the ground, hoping they would be found by the camp's liberators.[253] The group also smuggled out photographs; the Sonderkommando photographs, of events around the gas chambers in Auschwitz II, were smuggled out of the camp in September 1944 in a toothpaste tube.[254]

According to Fleming, the British press responded, in 1943 and the first half of 1944, either by not publishing reports about Auschwitz or by burying them on the inside pages. The exception was the Polish Jewish Observer, a City and East London Observer supplement edited by Joel Cang, a former Warsaw correspondent for the Manchester Guardian. The British reticence stemmed from a Foreign Office concern that the public might pressure the government to respond or provide refuge for the Jews, and that British actions on behalf of the Jews might affect its relationships in the Middle East. There was similar reticence in the United States, and indeed within the Polish government-in-exile and the Polish resistance. According to Fleming, the scholarship suggests that the Polish resistance distributed information about the Holocaust in Auschwitz without challenging the Allies' reluctance to highlight it.[255]

Escapes, Auschwitz Protocols

 
Telegram dated 8 April 1944 from KL Auschwitz reporting the escape of Rudolf Vrba and Alfréd Wetzler

From the first escape on 6 July 1940 of Tadeusz Wiejowski, at least 802 prisoners (757 men and 45 women) tried to escape from the camp, according to Polish historian Henryk Świebocki.[256][i] He writes that most escapes were attempted from work sites outside the camp's perimeter fence.[258] Of the 802 escapes, 144 were successful, 327 were caught, and the fate of 331 is unknown.[257]

Four Polish prisoners—Eugeniusz Bendera [pl] (serial number 8502), Kazimierz Piechowski (no. 918), Stanisław Gustaw Jaster [pl] (no. 6438), and Józef Lempart (no. 3419)—escaped successfully on 20 June 1942. After breaking into a warehouse, three of them dressed as SS officers and stole rifles and an SS staff car, which they drove out of the camp with the fourth handcuffed as a prisoner. They wrote later to Rudolf Höss apologizing for the loss of the vehicle.[259] On 21 July 1944, Polish inmate Jerzy Bielecki dressed in an SS uniform and, using a faked pass, managed to cross the camp's gate with his Jewish girlfriend, Cyla Cybulska, pretending that she was wanted for questioning. Both survived the war. For having saved her, Bielecki was recognized by Yad Vashem as Righteous Among the Nations.[260]

Jerzy Tabeau (no. 27273, registered as Jerzy Wesołowski) and Roman Cieliczko (no. 27089), both Polish prisoners, escaped on 19 November 1943; Tabeau made contact with the Polish underground and, between December 1943 and early 1944, wrote what became known as the Polish Major's report about the situation in the camp.[261] On 27 April 1944, Rudolf Vrba (no. 44070) and Alfréd Wetzler (no. 29162) escaped to Slovakia, carrying detailed information to the Slovak Jewish Council about the gas chambers. The distribution of the Vrba-Wetzler report, and publication of parts of it in June 1944, helped to halt the deportation of Hungarian Jews to Auschwitz. On 27 May 1944, Arnost Rosin (no. 29858) and Czesław Mordowicz (no. 84216) also escaped to Slovakia; the Rosin-Mordowicz report was added to the Vrba-Wetzler and Tabeau reports to become what is known as the Auschwitz Protocols.[262] The reports were first published in their entirety in November 1944 by the United States War Refugee Board as The Extermination Camps of Auschwitz (Oświęcim) and Birkenau in Upper Silesia.[263]

Bombing proposal

 
Aerial view of Auschwitz II-Birkenau taken by the RAF on 23 August 1944

In January 1941 the Commander-in-Chief of the Polish Army and prime minister-in-exile, Władysław Sikorski, arranged for a report to be forwarded to Air Marshal Richard Pierse, head of RAF Bomber Command.[264] Written by Auschwitz prisoners in or around December 1940, the report described the camp's atrocious living conditions and asked the Polish government-in-exile to bomb it:

The prisoners implore the Polish Government to have the camp bombed. The destruction of the electrified barbed wire, the ensuing panic and darkness prevailing, the chances of escape would be great. The local population will hide them and help them to leave the neighbourhood. The prisoners are confidently awaiting the day when Polish planes from Great Britain will enable their escape. This is the prisoners unanimous demand to the Polish Government in London.[265]

Pierse replied that it was not technically feasible to bomb the camp without harming the prisoners.[264] In May 1944 Slovak rabbi Michael Dov Weissmandl suggested that the Allies bomb the rails leading to the camp.[266] Historian David Wyman published an essay in Commentary in 1978 entitled "Why Auschwitz Was Never Bombed", arguing that the United States Army Air Forces could and should have attacked Auschwitz. In his book The Abandonment of the Jews: America and the Holocaust 1941–1945 (1984), Wyman argued that, since the IG Farben plant at Auschwitz III had been bombed three times between August and December 1944 by the US Fifteenth Air Force in Italy, it would have been feasible for the other camps or railway lines to be bombed too. Bernard Wasserstein's Britain and the Jews of Europe (1979) and Martin Gilbert's Auschwitz and the Allies (1981) raised similar questions about British inaction.[267] Since the 1990s, other historians have argued that Allied bombing accuracy was not sufficient for Wyman's proposed attack, and that counterfactual history is an inherently problematic endeavor.[268]

Sonderkommando revolt

 
Sonderkommando member Zalmen Gradowski, pictured with his wife, Sonia, buried his notebooks near crematorium III. Sonia Gradowski was gassed on 8 December 1942.[269]

The Sonderkommando who worked in the crematoria were witnesses to the mass murder and were therefore regularly murdered themselves.[270] On 7 October 1944, following an announcement that 300 of them were to be sent to a nearby town to clear away rubble—"transfers" were a common ruse for the murder of prisoners—the group, mostly Jews from Greece and Hungary, staged an uprising.[271] They attacked the SS with stones and hammers, killing three of them, and set crematorium IV on fire with rags soaked in oil that they had hidden.[272] Hearing the commotion, the Sonderkommando at crematorium II believed that a camp uprising had begun and threw their Oberkapo into a furnace. After escaping through a fence using wirecutters, they managed to reach Rajsko, where they hid in the granary of an Auschwitz satellite camp, but the SS pursued and killed them by setting the granary on fire.[273]

By the time the rebellion at crematorium IV had been suppressed, 212 members of the Sonderkommando were still alive and 451 had been killed.[274] The dead included Zalmen Gradowski, who kept notes of his time in Auschwitz and buried them near crematorium III; after the war, another Sonderkommando member showed the prosecutors where to dig.[275] The notes were published in several formats, including in 2017 as From the Heart of Hell.[276]

Evacuation and death marches

 
Ruins of crematorium IV, Auschwitz II, blown up during the revolt

The last mass transports to arrive in Auschwitz were 60,000–70,000 Jews from the Łódź Ghetto, some 2,000 from Theresienstadt, and 8,000 from Slovakia.[277] The last selection took place on 30 October 1944.[198] On 1 or 2 November 1944, Heinrich Himmler ordered the SS to halt the mass murder by gas.[278][why?] On 25 November, he ordered that Auschwitz's gas chambers and crematoria be destroyed. The Sonderkommando and other prisoners began the job of dismantling the buildings and cleaning up the site.[279] On 18 January 1945, Engelbert Marketsch, a German criminal transferred from Mauthausen, became the last prisoner to be assigned a serial number in Auschwitz, number 202499.[280]

According to Polish historian Andrzej Strzelecki, the evacuation of the camp was one of its "most tragic chapters".[281] Himmler ordered the evacuation of all camps in January 1945, telling camp commanders: "The Führer holds you personally responsible for ... making sure that not a single prisoner from the concentration camps falls alive into the hands of the enemy."[282] The plundered goods from the "Kanada" barracks, together with building supplies, were transported to the German interior. Between 1 December 1944 and 15 January 1945, over one million items of clothing were packed to be shipped out of Auschwitz; 95,000 such parcels were sent to concentration camps in Germany.[283]

Beginning on 17 January, some 58,000 Auschwitz detainees (about two-thirds Jews)—over 20,000 from Auschwitz I and II and over 30,000 from the subcamps—were evacuated under guard, at first heading west on foot, then by open-topped freight trains, to concentration camps in Germany and Austria: Bergen-Belsen, Buchenwald, Dachau, Flossenburg, Gross-Rosen, Mauthausen, Dora-Mittelbau, Ravensbruck, and Sachsenhausen.[284] Fewer than 9,000 remained in the camps, deemed too sick to move.[285] During the marches, the SS shot or otherwise dispatched anyone unable to continue; "execution details" followed the marchers, killing prisoners who lagged behind.[281] Peter Longerich estimated that a quarter of the detainees were thus killed.[286] By December 1944 some 15,000 Jewish prisoners had made it from Auschwitz to Bergen-Belsen, where they were liberated by the British on 15 April 1945.[287]

On 20 January, crematoria II and III were blown up, and on 23 January the "Kanada" warehouses were set on fire; they apparently burned for five days. Crematorium IV had been partly demolished after the Sonderkommando revolt in October, and the rest of it was destroyed later. On 26 January, one day ahead of the Red Army's arrival, crematorium V was blown up.[288]

Liberation

 
Young survivors at the camp, liberated by the Red Army in January 1945
 
Eyeglasses of victims, 1945

The first in the camp complex to be liberated was Auschwitz III, the IG Farben camp at Monowitz; a soldier from the 100th Infantry Division of the Red Army entered the camp around 9 am on Saturday, 27 January 1945.[289] The 60th Army of the 1st Ukrainian Front (also part of the Red Army) arrived in Auschwitz I and II around 3 pm. They found 7,000 prisoners alive in the three main camps, 500 in the other subcamps, and over 600 corpses.[290] Items found included 837,000 women's garments, 370,000 men's suits, 44,000 pairs of shoes,[291] and 7,000 kg of human hair, estimated by the Soviet war crimes commission to have come from 140,000 people.[221] Some of the hair was examined by the Forensic Science Institute in Kraków, where it was found to contain traces of hydrogen cyanide, the main ingredient of Zyklon B.[292] Primo Levi described seeing the first four soldiers on horseback approach Auschwitz III, where he had been in the sick bay. They threw "strangely embarrassed glances at the sprawling bodies, at the battered huts and at us few still alive ...":[293]

They did not greet us, nor did they smile; they seemed oppressed not only by compassion but by a confused restraint, which sealed their lips and bound their eyes to the funereal scene. It was that shame we knew so well, the shame that drowned us after the selections, and every time we had to watch, or submit to, some outrage: the shame the Germans did not know, that the just man experiences at another man's crime; the feeling of guilt that such a crime should exist, that it should have been introduced irrevocably into the world of things that exist, and that his will for good should have proved too weak or null, and should not have availed in defence.[294]

Georgii Elisavetskii, a Soviet soldier who entered one of the barracks, said in 1980 that he could hear other soldiers telling the inmates: "You are free, comrades!" But they did not respond, so he tried in Russian, Polish, German, Ukrainian. Then he used some Yiddish: "They think that I am provoking them. They begin to hide. And only when I said to them: 'Do not be afraid, I am a colonel of Soviet Army and a Jew. We have come to liberate you' ... Finally, as if the barrier collapsed ... they rushed toward us shouting, fell on their knees, kissed the flaps of our overcoats, and threw their arms around our legs."[291]

The Soviet military medical service and Polish Red Cross (PCK) set up field hospitals that looked after 4,500 prisoners suffering from the effects of starvation (mostly diarrhea) and tuberculosis. Local volunteers helped until the Red Cross team arrived from Kraków in early February.[295] In Auschwitz II, the layers of excrement on the barracks floors had to be scraped off with shovels. Water was obtained from snow and from fire-fighting wells. Before more help arrived, 2,200 patients there were looked after by a few doctors and 12 PCK nurses. All the patients were later moved to the brick buildings in Auschwitz I, where several blocks became a hospital, with medical personnel working 18-hour shifts.[296]

The liberation of Auschwitz received little press attention at the time; the Red Army was focusing on its advance toward Germany and liberating the camp had not been one of its key aims. Boris Polevoi reported on the liberation in Pravda on 2 February 1945 but made no mention of Jews;[297] inmates were described collectively as "victims of Fascism".[298] It was when the Western Allies arrived in Buchenwald, Bergen-Belsen, and Dachau in April 1945 that the liberation of the camps received extensive coverage.[299]

After the war

Trials of war criminals

 
Gallows in Auschwitz I where Rudolf Höss was executed on 16 April 1947

Only 789 Auschwitz staff, up to 15 percent, ever stood trial;[8] most of the cases were pursued in Poland and the Federal Republic of Germany.[300] According to Aleksander Lasik, female SS officers were treated more harshly than male; of the 17 women sentenced, four received the death penalty and the others longer prison terms than the men. He writes that this may have been because there were only 200 women overseers, and therefore they were more visible and memorable to the inmates.[301]

Camp commandant Rudolf Höss was arrested by the British on 11 March 1946 near Flensburg, northern Germany, where he had been working as a farmer under the pseudonym Franz Lang. He was imprisoned in Heide, then transferred to Minden for interrogation, part of the British occupation zone. From there he was taken to Nuremberg to testify for the defense in the trial of SS-Obergruppenführer Ernst Kaltenbrunner. Höss was straightforward about his own role in the mass murder and said he had followed the orders of Heinrich Himmler.[302][j] Extradited to Poland on 25 May 1946,[303] he wrote his memoirs in custody, first published in Polish in 1951 then in German in 1958 as Kommandant in Auschwitz.[304] His trial before the Supreme National Tribunal in Warsaw opened on 11 March 1947; he was sentenced to death on 2 April and hanged in Auschwitz I on 16 April, near crematorium I.[305]

On 25 November 1947, the Auschwitz trial began in Kraków, when Poland's Supreme National Tribunal brought to court 40 former Auschwitz staff, including commandant Arthur Liebehenschel, women's camp leader Maria Mandel, and camp leader Hans Aumeier. The trials ended on 22 December 1947, with 23 death sentences, seven life sentences, and nine prison sentences ranging from three to 15 years. Hans Münch, an SS doctor who had several former prisoners testify on his behalf, was the only person to be acquitted.[306]

Other former staff were hanged for war crimes in the Dachau Trials and the Belsen Trial, including camp leaders Josef Kramer, Franz Hössler, and Vinzenz Schöttl; doctor Friedrich Entress; and guards Irma Grese and Elisabeth Volkenrath.[307] Bruno Tesch and Karl Weinbacher, the owner and chief executive officer of the firm Tesch & Stabenow, one of the suppliers of Zyklon B, were arrested by the British after the war and executed for knowingly supplying the chemical for use on humans.[308] The 180-day Frankfurt Auschwitz trials, held in West Germany from 20 December 1963 to 20 August 1965, tried 22 defendants, including two dentists, a doctor, two camp adjudants and the camp's pharmacist. The 700-page indictment, presenting the testimony of 254 witnesses, was accompanied by a 300-page report about the camp, Nationalsozialistische Konzentrationslager, written by historians from the Institut für Zeitgeschichte in Germany, including Martin Broszat and Helmut Krausnick. The report became the basis of their book, Anatomy of the SS State (1968), the first comprehensive study of the camp and the SS. The court convicted 19 of the defendants, giving six of them life sentences and the others between three and ten years.[309] East Germany also held trials against several former staff members of Auschwitz. One of the defendants they tried was Horst Fischer. Fischer, one of the highest ranking SS physicians in the camp, had personally selected at least 75,000 men, women, and children to be gassed. He was arrested in 1965. The following year, he was convicted of crimes against humanity, sentenced to death, and guillotined. Fischer was the highest-ranking SS physician from Auschwitz to ever be tried by a German court.[310]

Legacy

 
Barracks at Auschwitz II
 
Auschwitz II gate in 1959

In the decades since its liberation, Auschwitz has become a primary symbol of the Holocaust. Historian Timothy D. Snyder attributes this to the camp's high death toll and "unusual combination of an industrial camp complex and a killing facility", which left behind far more witnesses than single-purpose killing facilities such as Chełmno or Treblinka.[311] In 2005 the United Nations General Assembly designated 27 January, the date of the camp's liberation, as International Holocaust Remembrance Day.[312] Helmut Schmidt visited the site in November 1977, the first West German chancellor to do so, followed by his successor, Helmut Kohl, in November 1989.[313] In a statement on the 50th anniversary of the liberation, Kohl said that "[t]he darkest and most awful chapter in German history was written at Auschwitz."[314] In January 2020, world leaders gathered at Yad Vashem in Jerusalem to commemorate the 75th anniversary.[315] It was the city's largest-ever political gathering, with over 45 heads of state and world leaders, including royalty.[316] At Auschwitz itself, Reuven Rivlin and Andrzej Duda, the presidents of Israel and Poland, laid wreaths.[317]

Notable memoirists of the camp include Primo Levi, Elie Wiesel, and Tadeusz Borowski.[237] Levi's If This is a Man, first published in Italy in 1947 as Se questo è un uomo, became a classic of Holocaust literature, an "imperishable masterpiece".[318][k] Wiesel wrote about his imprisonment at Auschwitz in Night (1960) and other works, and became a prominent spokesman against ethnic violence; in 1986, he was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize.[320] Camp survivor Simone Veil was elected President of the European Parliament, serving from 1979 to 1982.[321] Two Auschwitz victims—Maximilian Kolbe, a priest who volunteered to die by starvation in place of a stranger, and Edith Stein, a Jewish convert to Catholicism—were named saints of the Catholic Church.[322]

In 2017, a Körber Foundation survey found that 40 percent of 14-year-olds in Germany did not know what Auschwitz was.[323][324] The following year a survey organized by the Claims Conference, United States Holocaust Memorial Museum and others found that 41 percent of 1,350 American adults surveyed, and 66 percent of millennials, did not know what Auschwitz was, while 22 percent said they had never heard of the Holocaust.[325] A CNN-ComRes poll in 2018 found a similar situation in Europe.[326]

Auschwitz-Birkenau State Museum

 
Czesława Kwoka, photographed in Auschwitz by Wilhelm Brasse of the camp's Erkennungsdienst
 
Museum exhibit, 2016
 
Israeli Air Force F-15 Eagles fly over Auschwitz II-Birkenau, 2003
 
End of the rail track inside Auschwitz II

On 2 July 1947, the Polish government passed a law establishing a state memorial to remember "the martyrdom of the Polish nation and other nations in Oswiecim".[327] The museum established its exhibits at Auschwitz I; after the war, the barracks in Auschwitz II-Birkenau had been mostly dismantled and moved to Warsaw to be used on building sites. Dwork and van Pelt write that, in addition, Auschwitz I played a more central role in the persecution of the Polish people, in opposition to the importance of Auschwitz II to the Jews, including Polish Jews.[328] An exhibition opened in Auschwitz I in 1955, displaying prisoner mug shots; hair, suitcases, and shoes taken from murdered prisoners; canisters of Zyklon B pellets; and other objects related to the killings.[329] UNESCO added the camp to its list of World Heritage Sites in 1979.[330] All the museum's directors were, until 1990, former Auschwitz prisoners. Visitors to the site have increased from 492,500 in 2001, to over one million in 2009,[331] to two million in 2016.[332]

There have been protracted disputes over the perceived Christianization of the site. Pope John Paul II celebrated mass over the train tracks leading to Auschwitz II-Birkenau on 7 June 1979[333] and called the camp "the Golgotha of our age", referring to the crucifixion of Jesus.[334] More controversy followed when Carmelite nuns founded a convent in 1984 in a former theater outside the camp's perimeter, near block 11 of Auschwitz I,[335] after which a local priest and some survivors erected a large cross—one that had been used during the pope's mass—behind block 11 to commemorate 152 Polish inmates shot by the Germans in 1941.[336][337] After a long dispute, Pope John Paul II intervened and the nuns moved the convent elsewhere in 1993.[338] The cross remained, triggering the "War of the Crosses", as more crosses were erected to commemorate Christian victims, despite international objections. The Polish government and Catholic Church eventually agreed to remove all but the original.[339]

On 4 September 2003, despite a protest from the museum, three Israeli Air Force F-15 Eagles performed a fly-over of Auschwitz II-Birkenau during a ceremony at the camp below. All three pilots were descendants of Holocaust survivors, including the man who led the flight, Major-General Amir Eshel.[340] On 27 January 2015, some 300 Auschwitz survivors gathered with world leaders under a giant tent at the entrance to Auschwitz II to commemorate the 70th anniversary of the camp's liberation.[341][l]

Museum curators consider visitors who pick up items from the ground to be thieves, and local police will charge them as such; the maximum penalty is a 10-year prison sentence.[343] In 2017 two British youths from the Perse School were fined in Poland after picking up buttons and shards of decorative glass in 2015 from the "Kanada" area of Auschwitz II, where camp victims' personal effects were stored.[344] The 16-foot (4.9 m) Arbeit Macht Frei sign over the main camp's gate was stolen in December 2009 by a Swedish former neo-Nazi and two Polish men. The sign was later recovered.[345]

In 2018 the Polish government passed an amendment to its Act on the Institute of National Remembrance, making it a criminal offence to violate the "good name" of Poland by accusing it of crimes committed by Germany in the Holocaust, which would include referring to Auschwitz and other camps as "Polish death camps".[346] Staff at the museum were accused by nationalist media in Poland of focusing too much on the fate of the Jews in Auschwitz at the expense of ethnic Poles. The brother of the museum's director, Piotr Cywiński, wrote that Cywiński had experienced "50 days of incessant hatred".[347] After discussions with Israel's prime minister, amid international concern that the new law would stifle research, the Polish government adjusted the amendment so that anyone accusing Poland of complicity would be guilty only of a civil offence.[348]

See also

Sources

Notes

  1. ^ The Law for the Restoration of the Professional Civil Service, passed on 7 April 1933, excluded most Jews from the legal profession and civil service. Similar legislation deprived Jewish members of other professions of the right to practise.[12]
  2. ^ Danuta Czech (Auschwitz 1940–1945, Volume V, Auschwitz-Birkenau State Museum, 2000): "June 14 [1940]: The first transport of Polish political prisoners arrived from the Tarnów prison: 728 men sent to Auschwitz by the commander of the Sipo u. SD (Security Police and Security Service) in Cracow. These prisoners were given camp serial numbers 31 to 758. The transport included many healthy young men fit for military service, who had been caught trying to cross the Polish southern border in order to make their way to the Polish Armed Forces being formed in France. The organizers of this illegal emigration operation were also in this transport, along with resistance organizers, political and community activists, members of the Polish intelligentsia, Catholic priests, and Jews, arrested in the 'AB' (Außerordentliche Befriedungsaktion) operation organized by Hans Frank in the spring of 1940. At the same time, a further 100 SS men—officers and SS enlisted men—were sent to reinforce the camp garrison."[28]
  3. ^ Franciszek Piper writes that, according to post-war testimony from several inmates, as well as from Rudolf Höss (Auschwitz commandant from May 1940), the gas chamber at Auschwitz I could hold 1,000 people.[34]
  4. ^ Danuta Czech (Auschwitz 1940–1945, Volume V, Auschwitz-Birkenau State Museum, 2000): "February 15, 1942: "The first transport of Jews arrested by the Stapo (State Police) in Katowice and fated to die at Auschwitz arrived from Beuthen. They were unloaded at the ramp on the camp railroad siding and ordered to leave their baggage there. The camp SS flying squad received the Jews from the Stapo and led the victims to the gas chamber in the camp crematorium. There, they were killed with the use of Zyklon B gas."[39]
  5. ^ Mary Fulbrook (A Small Town Near Auschwitz: Ordinary Nazis and the Holocaust, Oxford University Press, 2012): "Gunter Faerber, for example, recalled the moment in February 1942 when the Jews of Beuthen (Bytom in Polish), where his grandmother lived, were brought through Bedzin on their way to Auschwitz. ... Two large army trucks of Jewish women from Beuthen were brought 'straight to the station, they were queuing at the station ... I was still given a chance to say goodbye because we knew already ... that the women of Beuthen are arriving' ... I went down to the station, I saw the long queue of women.' Faerber asked permission of a Gestapo guard to go up to his grandmother, who was with her sister, 'and I said goodbye, and that was the last I saw of them and the whole transport was moved out by train ...'"[41]
  6. ^ Danuta Czech (Auschwitz 1940–1945, Volume V, 2000): "March 26, 1942: Nine hundred ninety-nine Jewish women from Poprad in Slovakia arrived, and were assigned numbers 1000–1998. This was the first registered transport sent to Auschwitz by RSHA IV B4 (the Jewish Office, directed by SS-Obersturmbannführer Adolf Eichmann)."[46]
  7. ^ This was the third set of serial numbers started in the camp.[117]
  8. ^ Robert Jan van Pelt (The Case for Auschwitz, 2002): "This figure [1.1 million] has been endorsed by all serious, professional historians who have studied the complex history of Auschwitz in some detail, by the Holocaust research institute at Yad Vashem in Jerusalem, and by the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum in Washington, D.C."[228]

    Earlier estimates included Raul Hilberg's 1961 work, The Destruction of the European Jews, which estimated that up to one million Jews had died in the camp.[229] In 1983 French scholar George Wellers was one of the first to use German data on deportations to calculate the death toll; he arrived at a figure of 1,471,595 deaths, including 1.35 million Jews and 86,675 non-Jewish Poles.[230]

  9. ^ The escapees included 396 Polish men and 10 Polish women; 164 men from the Soviet Union (including 50 prisoners of war), and 15 women; 112 Jewish men and three Jewish women; 36 Romani/Sinti men and two women; 22 German men and nine women; 19 Czech men and four women; two Austrian men; one Yugoslav woman and one man; and 15 other men and one woman.[257]
  10. ^ In his testimony, according to Polish historian Aleksander Lasik, "Höss neither protected anyone nor evaded his own responsibility. His stance came as a surprise to many, especially those who viewed him as a bloodthirsty beast. Instead, he viewed his crimes in terms of the technical obstacles and challenges with which he had to cope. Höss stated that he led the killings in Auschwitz on express orders of Reichsführer Himmler."[303]
  11. ^ In The Drowned and the Saved (1986), Levi wrote that the concentration camps represented the epitome of the totalitarian system: "[N]ever has there existed a state that was really "totalitarian" ... Never has some form of reaction, a corrective of the total tyranny, been lacking, not even in the Third Reich or Stalin's Soviet Union: in both cases, public opinion, the magistrature, the foreign press, the churches, the feeling for justice and humanity that ten or twenty years of tyranny were not enough to eradicate, have to a greater or lesser extent acted as a brake. Only in the Lager [camp] was the restraint from below nonexistent, and the power of these small satraps absolute."[319]
  12. ^ Attendees included the president of the World Jewish Congress, Ronald Lauder, Polish president Bronisław Komorowski, French President François Hollande, German President Joachim Gauck, the film director Steven Spielberg, and King Willem-Alexander of the Netherlands.[341][342]

Citations

  1. ^ "The unloading ramps and selections". Auschwitz-Birkenau State. Archived from the original on 21 January 2019.
  2. ^ a b c Piper 2000b, p. 230.
  3. ^ "Auschwitz". encyclopedia.ushmm.org. from the original on 13 June 2018. Retrieved 2 July 2021. Auschwitz is the German name for the Polish city Oświęcim. Oświęcim is located in Poland, approximately 40 miles (about 64 km) west of Kraków. Germany annexed this area of Poland in 1939.
  4. ^ "Auschwitz I, Auschwitz II-Birkenau, Auschwitz III-Monowitz". Auschwitz-Birkenau State Museum. Archived from the original on 22 January 2019.
  5. ^ Dwork & van Pelt 2002, p. 166.
  6. ^ Auschwitz-Birkenau, Former German Nazi Concentration and Extermination Camp - Memorial and Museum. "Poles in Auschwitz". auschwitz.org. from the original on 12 August 2020. Retrieved 8 July 2021. The first transport of political prisoners to Auschwitz consisted almost exclusively of Poles. It was for them that the camp was founded, and the majority of prisoners were Polish for the first two years. They died of starvation, brutal mistreatment, beating, and sickness, and were executed and killed in the gas chambers.
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Works cited

Further reading

  • Borowski, Tadeusz (1992) [1976]. This Way for the Gas, Ladies and Gentlemen. Trans. from the Polish by Barbara Vedder. East Rutherford: Penguin Books. ISBN 0-14-018624-7
  • Glenday, James (23 February 2018). "Life next to the world's most notorious concentration camp". ABC News (Australia).
  • Huener, Jonathan (2003). Auschwitz, Poland, and the Politics of Commemoration, 1945–1979. Athens: Ohio University Press. ISBN 0-8214-1506-9.
  • Pilecki, Witold (2012). The Auschwitz Volunteer: Beyond Bravery. Trans. from the Polish by Jarek Garlinski. Los Angeles: Aquila Polonica. ISBN 978-1-60772-010-2
  • Polish Ministry of Information (1942). The Black Book of Poland. New York: G.P. Putnam's Sons. pp. 87–88. OCLC 489805.
  • Raczyński, Edward (1941). German Occupation of Poland, Extract of note addressed to the allied and neutral powers. London and New York: Republic of Poland Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Greystone Press.
  • Trial of the Major War Criminals before the International Military Tribunal. Nuremberg, 14 November 1945 – 1 October 1946.

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auschwitz, concentration, camp, auschwitz, redirects, here, city, oświęcim, other, uses, auschwitz, disambiguation, german, konzentrationslager, auschwitz, pronounced, kɔntsɛntʁaˈtsi, oːnsˌlaːɡɐ, ˈʔaʊʃvɪts, listen, also, auschwitz, auschwitz, complex, over, co. Auschwitz redirects here For the city see Oswiecim For other uses see Auschwitz disambiguation Auschwitz concentration camp German Konzentrationslager Auschwitz pronounced kɔntsɛntʁaˈtsi oːnsˌlaːɡɐ ˈʔaʊʃvɪts listen also KL Auschwitz or KZ Auschwitz was a complex of over 40 concentration and extermination camps operated by Nazi Germany in occupied Poland in a portion annexed into Germany in 1939 3 during World War II and the Holocaust It consisted of Auschwitz I the main camp Stammlager in Oswiecim Auschwitz II Birkenau a concentration and extermination camp with gas chambers Auschwitz III Monowitz a labor camp for the chemical conglomerate IG Farben and dozens of subcamps 4 The camps became a major site of the Nazis final solution to the Jewish question AuschwitzKonzentrationslager Auschwitz German Nazi concentration and extermination camp 1940 1945 Top Gate to Auschwitz I with its Arbeit macht frei sign work sets you free Bottom Auschwitz II Birkenau gatehouse the train track in operation May October 1944 led directly to the gas chambers 1 Coordinates50 02 09 N 19 10 42 E 50 03583 N 19 17833 E 50 03583 19 17833Known forThe HolocaustLocationGerman occupied PolandOperated byNazi Germany and the SchutzstaffelCommandantSee listOriginal useArmy barracksOperationalMay 1940 January 1945InmatesMainly Jews Poles Romani Soviet prisoners of warNumber of inmatesAt least 1 3 million 2 KilledAt least 1 1 million 2 Liberated bySoviet Union 27 January 1945Notable inmatesAuschwitz prisoners Adolf Burger Edith Eger Anne Frank Viktor Frankl Imre Kertesz Maximilian Kolbe Primo Levi Fritz Lohner Beda Irene Nemirovsky Tadeusz Pietrzykowski Witold Pilecki Liliana Segre Edith Stein Simone Veil Rudolf Vrba Alfred Wetzler Elie Wiesel Else Ury Eddie Jaku Wladyslaw BartoszewskiNotable booksMan s Search for Meaning 1946 If This Is a Man 1947 Night 1960 Maus 1980 1991 Websiteauschwitz wbr org wbr en wbr UNESCO World Heritage SiteOfficial nameAuschwitz Birkenau German Nazi Concentration and Extermination Camp 1940 1945 TypeCulturalCriteriaviDesignated1979 3rd session Reference no 31RegionEurope and North AmericaAfter Germany sparked World War II by invading Poland in September 1939 the Schutzstaffel SS converted Auschwitz I an army barracks into a prisoner of war camp 5 The initial transport of political detainees to Auschwitz consisted almost solely of Poles for whom the camp was initially established The bulk of inmates were Polish for the first two years 6 In May 1940 German criminals brought to the camp as functionaries established the camp s reputation for sadism Prisoners were beaten tortured and executed for the most trivial reasons The first gassings of Soviet and Polish prisoners took place in block 11 of Auschwitz I around August 1941 Construction of Auschwitz II began the following month and from 1942 until late 1944 freight trains delivered Jews from all over German occupied Europe to its gas chambers Of the 1 3 million people sent to Auschwitz 1 1 million were murdered The number of victims includes 960 000 Jews 865 000 of whom were gassed on arrival 74 000 ethnic Poles 21 000 Roma 15 000 Soviet prisoners of war and up to 15 000 other Europeans 7 Those not gassed were murdered via starvation exhaustion disease individual executions or beatings Others were killed during medical experiments At least 802 prisoners tried to escape 144 successfully and on 7 October 1944 two Sonderkommando units consisting of prisoners who operated the gas chambers launched an unsuccessful uprising Only 789 Schutzstaffel personnel no more than 15 percent ever stood trial after the Holocaust ended 8 several were executed including camp commandant Rudolf Hoss The Allies failure to act on early reports of atrocities by bombing the camp or its railways remains controversial As the Soviet Red Army approached Auschwitz in January 1945 toward the end of the war the SS sent most of the camp s population west on a death march to camps inside Germany and Austria Soviet troops entered the camp on 27 January 1945 a day commemorated since 2005 as International Holocaust Remembrance Day In the decades after the war survivors such as Primo Levi Viktor Frankl and Elie Wiesel wrote memoirs of their experiences and the camp became a dominant symbol of the Holocaust In 1947 Poland founded the Auschwitz Birkenau State Museum on the site of Auschwitz I and II and in 1979 it was named a World Heritage Site by UNESCO Contents 1 Background 2 Camps 2 1 Auschwitz I 2 1 1 Growth 2 1 2 First mass transport 2 1 3 Crematorium I first gassings 2 1 4 First mass transport of Jews 2 2 Auschwitz II Birkenau 2 2 1 Construction 2 2 2 Crematoria II V 2 3 Auschwitz III Monowitz 2 4 Subcamps 3 Life in the camps 3 1 SS garrison 3 2 Functionaries and Sonderkommando 3 3 Tattoos and triangles 3 4 Transports 3 5 Life for the inmates 3 6 Women s camp 3 7 Medical experiments block 10 3 8 Punishment block 11 3 9 Death wall 3 10 Family camps 3 10 1 Gypsy family camp 3 10 2 Theresienstadt family camp 4 Selection and extermination process 4 1 Gas chambers 4 2 Selection 4 3 Inside the crematoria 4 4 Use of corpses 4 5 Death toll 5 Resistance escapes and liberation 5 1 Camp resistance flow of information 5 2 Escapes Auschwitz Protocols 5 3 Bombing proposal 5 4 Sonderkommando revolt 5 5 Evacuation and death marches 5 6 Liberation 6 After the war 6 1 Trials of war criminals 6 2 Legacy 6 3 Auschwitz Birkenau State Museum 7 See also 8 Sources 8 1 Notes 8 2 Citations 8 3 Works cited 9 Further reading 10 External linksBackground Camps and ghettos in German occupied Europe 1944 Auschwitz I II and III The ideology of National Socialism Nazism combined elements of racial hygiene eugenics antisemitism pan Germanism and territorial expansionism Richard J Evans writes 9 Adolf Hitler and his Nazi Party became obsessed by the Jewish question 10 Both during and immediately after the Nazi seizure of power in Germany in 1933 acts of violence against German Jews became ubiquitous 11 and legislation was passed excluding them from certain professions including the civil service and the law a Harassment and economic pressure encouraged Jews to leave Germany their businesses were denied access to markets forbidden from advertising in newspapers and deprived of government contracts 13 On 15 September 1935 the Reichstag passed the Nuremberg Laws One the Reich Citizenship Law defined as citizens those of German or related blood who demonstrate by their behaviour that they are willing and suitable to serve the German People and Reich faithfully and the Law for the Protection of German Blood and German Honor prohibited marriage and extramarital relations between those with German or related blood and Jews 14 When Germany invaded Poland in September 1939 triggering World War II Hitler ordered that the Polish leadership and intelligentsia be destroyed 15 The area around Auschwitz was annexed to the German Reich as part of first Gau Silesia and from 1941 Gau Upper Silesia 16 The camp at Auschwitz was established in April 1940 at first as a quarantine camp for Polish political prisoners On 22 June 1941 in an attempt to obtain new territory Hitler invaded the Soviet Union 17 The first gassing at Auschwitz of a group of Soviet prisoners of war took place around August 1941 18 By the end of that year during what most historians regard as the first phase of the Holocaust 500 000 800 000 Soviet Jews had been murdered in mass shootings by a combination of German Einsatzgruppen ordinary German soldiers and local collaborators 19 At the Wannsee Conference in Berlin on 20 January 1942 Reinhard Heydrich outlined the Final Solution to the Jewish Question to senior Nazis 20 and from early 1942 freight trains delivered Jews from all over occupied Europe to German extermination camps in Poland Auschwitz Belzec Chelmno Majdanek Sobibor and Treblinka Most prisoners were gassed on arrival 21 CampsAuschwitz I Growth Auschwitz I 2013 50 01 39 N 19 12 11 E 50 027606 N 19 203088 E 50 027606 19 203088 Auschwitz I Auschwitz I 2009 the prisoner reception center of Auschwitz I became the visitor reception center of the Auschwitz Birkenau State Museum 22 Former prisoner reception center the building on the far left with the row of chimneys was the camp kitchen An aerial reconnaissance photograph of the Auschwitz concentration camp showing the Auschwitz I camp 4 April 1944 A former World War I camp for transient workers and later a Polish army barracks Auschwitz I was the main camp Stammlager and administrative headquarters of the camp complex Fifty km southwest of Krakow the site was first suggested in February 1940 as a quarantine camp for Polish prisoners by Arpad Wigand the inspector of the Sicherheitspolizei security police and deputy of Erich von dem Bach Zelewski the Higher SS and Police Leader for Silesia Richard Glucks head of the Concentration Camps Inspectorate sent Walter Eisfeld former commandant of the Sachsenhausen concentration camp in Oranienburg Germany to inspect it 23 Around 1 000 m long and 400 m wide 24 Auschwitz consisted at the time of 22 brick buildings eight of them two story A second story was added to the others in 1943 and eight new blocks were built 25 Reichsfuhrer SS Heinrich Himmler head of the SS approved the site in April 1940 on the recommendation of SS Obersturmbannfuhrer Rudolf Hoss of the camps inspectorate Hoss oversaw the development of the camp and served as its first commandant The first 30 prisoners arrived on 20 May 1940 from the Sachsenhausen camp German career criminals Berufsverbrecher the men were known as greens Grunen after the green triangles on their prison clothing Brought to the camp as functionaries this group did much to establish the sadism of early camp life which was directed particularly at Polish inmates until the political prisoners took over their roles 26 Bruno Brodniewicz the first prisoner who was given serial number 1 became Lageralteste camp elder The others were given positions such as kapo and block supervisor 27 First mass transport Further information First mass transport to Auschwitz concentration camp The first mass transport of 728 Polish male political prisoners including Catholic priests and Jews arrived on 14 June 1940 from Tarnow Poland They were given serial numbers 31 to 758 b In a letter on 12 July 1940 Hoss told Glucks that the local population was fanatically Polish ready to undertake any sort of operation against the hated SS men 29 By the end of 1940 the SS had confiscated land around the camp to create a 40 square kilometer 15 sq mi zone of interest Interessengebiet patrolled by the SS Gestapo and local police 30 By March 1941 10 900 were imprisoned in the camp most of them Poles 24 An inmate s first encounter with Auschwitz if they were registered and not sent straight to the gas chamber was at the prisoner reception center near the gate with the Arbeit macht frei sign where they were tattooed shaved disinfected and given a striped prison uniform Built between 1942 and 1944 the center contained a bathhouse laundry and 19 gas chambers for delousing clothes The prisoner reception center of Auschwitz I became the visitor reception center of the Auschwitz Birkenau State Museum 22 Crematorium I first gassings Further information Gas chambers Crematorium I photographed in 2016 reconstructed after the war 31 Construction of crematorium I began at Auschwitz I at the end of June or beginning of July 1940 32 Initially intended not for mass murder but for prisoners who had been executed or had otherwise died in the camp the crematorium was in operation from August 1940 until July 1943 by which time the crematoria at Auschwitz II had taken over 33 By May 1942 three ovens had been installed in crematorium I which together could burn 340 bodies in 24 hours 34 The first experimental gassing took place around August 1941 when Lagerfuhrer Karl Fritzsch at the instruction of Rudolf Hoss murdered a group of Soviet prisoners of war by throwing Zyklon B crystals into their basement cell in block 11 of Auschwitz I A second group of 600 Soviet prisoners of war and around 250 sick Polish prisoners were gassed on 3 5 September 35 The morgue was later converted to a gas chamber able to hold at least 700 800 people 34 c Zyklon B was dropped into the room through slits in the ceiling 34 First mass transport of Jews Further information Bytom Synagogue and Beuthen Jewish Community Historians have disagreed about the date the all Jewish transports began arriving in Auschwitz At the Wannsee Conference in Berlin on 20 January 1942 the Nazi leadership outlined in euphemistic language its plans for the Final Solution 36 According to Franciszek Piper the Auschwitz commandant Rudolf Hoss offered inconsistent accounts after the war suggesting the extermination began in December 1941 January 1942 or before the establishment of the women s camp in March 1942 37 In Kommandant in Auschwitz he wrote In the spring of 1942 the first transports of Jews all earmarked for extermination arrived from Upper Silesia 38 On 15 February 1942 according to Danuta Czech a transport of Jews from Beuthen Upper Silesia Bytom Poland arrived at Auschwitz I and was sent straight to the gas chamber d 40 In 1998 an eyewitness said the train contained the women of Beuthen e Saul Friedlander wrote that the Beuthen Jews were from the Organization Schmelt labor camps and had been deemed unfit for work 42 According to Christopher Browning transports of Jews unfit for work were sent to the gas chamber at Auschwitz from autumn 1941 43 The evidence for this and the February 1942 transport was contested in 2015 by Nikolaus Wachsmann 44 Around 20 March 1942 according to Danuta Czech a transport of Polish Jews from Silesia and Zaglebie Dabrowskie was taken straight from the station to the Auschwitz II gas chamber which had just come into operation 45 On 26 and 28 March two transports of Slovakian Jews were registered as prisoners in the women s camp where they were kept for slave labour these were the first transports organized by Adolf Eichmann s department IV B4 the Jewish office in the Reich Security Head Office RSHA f On 30 March the first RHSA transport arrived from France 46 Selection where new arrivals were chosen for work or the gas chamber began in April 1942 and was conducted regularly from July Piper writes that this reflected Germany s increasing need for labor Those selected as unfit for work were gassed without being registered as prisoners 47 There is also disagreement about how many were gassed in Auschwitz I Perry Broad an SS Unterscharfuhrer wrote that transport after transport vanished in the Auschwitz I crematorium 48 In the view of Filip Muller one of the Auschwitz I Sonderkommando tens of thousands of Jews were murdered there from France Holland Slovakia Upper Silesia and Yugoslavia and from the Theresienstadt Ciechanow and Grodno ghettos 49 Against this Jean Claude Pressac estimated that up to 10 000 people had been murdered in Auschwitz I 48 The last inmates gassed there in December 1942 were around 400 members of the Auschwitz II Sonderkommando who had been forced to dig up and burn the remains of that camp s mass graves thought to hold over 100 000 corpses 50 Auschwitz II Birkenau Birkenau redirects here For other uses see Birkenau disambiguation Construction Auschwitz II Birkenau gate from inside the camp 2007 Same scene May June 1944 with the gate in the background Selection of Hungarian Jews for work or the gas chamber From the Auschwitz Album taken by the camp s Erkennungsdienst Gate with the camp remains in the background 2009 After visiting Auschwitz I in March 1941 it appears that Himmler ordered that the camp be expanded 51 although Peter Hayes notes that on 10 January 1941 the Polish underground told the Polish government in exile in London the Auschwitz concentration camp can accommodate approximately 7 000 prisoners at present and is to be rebuilt to hold approximately 30 000 52 Construction of Auschwitz II Birkenau called a Kriegsgefangenenlager prisoner of war camp on blueprints began in October 1941 in Brzezinka about three kilometers from Auschwitz I 53 The initial plan was that Auschwitz II would consist of four sectors Bauabschnitte I IV each consisting of six subcamps BIIa BIIf with their own gates and fences The first two sectors were completed sector BI was initially a quarantine camp but the construction of BIII began in 1943 and stopped in April 1944 and the plan for BIV was abandoned 54 SS Sturmbannfuhrer Karl Bischoff an architect was the chief of construction 51 Based on an initial budget of RM 8 9 million his plans called for each barracks to hold 550 prisoners but he later changed this to 744 per barracks which meant the camp could hold 125 000 rather than 97 000 55 There were 174 barracks each measuring 35 4 by 11 0 metres 116 by 36 ft divided into 62 bays of 4 square metres 43 sq ft The bays were divided into roosts initially for three inmates and later for four With personal space of 1 square metre 11 sq ft to sleep and place whatever belongings they had inmates were deprived Robert Jan van Pelt wrote of the minimum space needed to exist 56 The prisoners were forced to live in the barracks as they were building them in addition to working they faced long roll calls at night As a result most prisoners in BIb the men s camp in the early months died of hypothermia starvation or exhaustion within a few weeks 57 Some 10 000 Soviet prisoners of war arrived at Auschwitz I between 7 and 25 October 1941 58 but by 1 March 1942 only 945 were still registered they were transferred to Auschwitz II 39 where most of them had died by May 59 Crematoria II V Further information Gas chambers The first gas chamber at Auschwitz II was operational by March 1942 On or around 20 March a transport of Polish Jews sent by the Gestapo from Silesia and Zaglebie Dabrowskie was taken straight from the Oswiecim freight station to the Auschwitz II gas chamber then buried in a nearby meadow 45 The gas chamber was located in what prisoners called the little red house known as bunker 1 by the SS a brick cottage that had been turned into a gassing facility the windows had been bricked up and its four rooms converted into two insulated rooms the doors of which said Zur Desinfektion to disinfection A second brick cottage the little white house or bunker 2 was converted and operational by June 1942 60 When Himmler visited the camp on 17 and 18 July 1942 he was given a demonstration of a selection of Dutch Jews a mass murder in a gas chamber in bunker 2 and a tour of the building site of Auschwitz III the new IG Farben plant being constructed at Monowitz 61 Use of bunkers I and 2 stopped in spring 1943 when the new crematoria were built although bunker 2 became operational again in May 1944 for the murder of the Hungarian Jews Bunker I was demolished in 1943 and bunker 2 in November 1944 62 Plans for crematoria II and III show that both had an oven room 30 by 11 24 metres 98 4 by 36 9 ft on the ground floor and an underground dressing room 49 43 by 7 93 metres 162 2 by 26 0 ft and gas chamber 30 by 7 metres 98 by 23 ft The dressing rooms had wooden benches along the walls and numbered pegs for clothing Victims would be led from these rooms to a five yard long narrow corridor which in turn led to a space from which the gas chamber door opened The chambers were white inside and nozzles were fixed to the ceiling to resemble showerheads 63 The daily capacity of the crematoria how many bodies could be burned in a 24 hour period was 340 corpses in crematorium I 1 440 each in crematoria II and III and 768 each in IV and V 64 By June 1943 all four crematoria were operational but crematorium I was not used after July 1943 This made the total daily capacity 4 416 although by loading three to five corpses at a time the Sonderkommando were able to burn some 8 000 bodies a day This maximum capacity was rarely needed the average between 1942 and 1944 was 1 000 bodies burned every day 65 Auschwitz III Monowitz Main article Monowitz concentration camp Detailed map of Buna Werke Monowitz and nearby subcamps After examining several sites for a new plant to manufacture Buna N a type of synthetic rubber essential to the war effort the German chemical conglomerate IG Farben chose a site near the towns of Dwory and Monowice Monowitz in German about 7 kilometres 4 3 mi east of Auschwitz I 66 Tax exemptions were available to corporations prepared to develop industries in the frontier regions under the Eastern Fiscal Assistance Law passed in December 1940 In addition to its proximity to the concentration camp a source of cheap labor the site had good railway connections and access to raw materials 67 In February 1941 Himmler ordered that the Jewish population of Oswiecim be expelled to make way for skilled laborers that all Poles able to work remain in the town and work on building the factory and that Auschwitz prisoners be used in the construction work 68 Auschwitz inmates began working at the plant known as Buna Werke and IG Auschwitz in April 1941 demolishing houses in Monowitz to make way for it 69 By May because of a shortage of trucks several hundred of them were rising at 3 am to walk there twice a day from Auschwitz I 70 Because a long line of exhausted inmates walking through the town of Oswiecim might harm German Polish relations the inmates were told to shave daily make sure they were clean and sing as they walked From late July they were taken to the factory by train on freight wagons 71 Given the difficulty of moving them including during the winter IG Farben decided to build a camp at the plant The first inmates moved there on 30 October 1942 72 Known as KL Auschwitz III Aussenlager Auschwitz III subcamp and later as the Monowitz concentration camp 73 it was the first concentration camp to be financed and built by private industry 74 Heinrich Himmler second left visits the IG Farben plant in Auschwitz III July 1942 Measuring 270 by 490 metres 890 ft 1 610 ft the camp was larger than Auschwitz I By the end of 1944 it housed 60 barracks measuring 17 5 by 8 metres 57 ft 26 ft each with a day room and a sleeping room containing 56 three tiered wooden bunks 75 IG Farben paid the SS three or four Reichsmark for nine to eleven hour shifts from each worker 76 In 1943 1944 about 35 000 inmates worked at the plant 23 000 32 a day on average were killed through malnutrition disease and the workload Within three to four months at the camp Peter Hayes writes the inmates were reduced to walking skeletons 77 Deaths and transfers to the gas chambers at Auschwitz II reduced the population by nearly a fifth each month 78 Site managers constantly threatened inmates with the gas chambers and the smell from the crematoria at Auschwitz I and II hung heavy over the camp 79 Although the factory had been expected to begin production in 1943 shortages of labor and raw materials meant start up was postponed repeatedly 80 The Allies bombed the plant in 1944 on 20 August 13 September 18 December and 26 December On 19 January 1945 the SS ordered that the site be evacuated sending 9 000 inmates most of them Jews on a death march to another Auschwitz subcamp at Gliwice 81 From Gliwice prisoners were taken by rail in open freight wagons to the Buchenwald and Mauthausen concentration camps The 800 inmates who had been left behind in the Monowitz hospital were liberated along with the rest of the camp on 27 January 1945 by the 1st Ukrainian Front of the Red Army 82 Subcamps Further information List of subcamps of Auschwitz Several other German industrial enterprises such as Krupp and Siemens Schuckert built factories with their own subcamps 83 There were around 28 camps near industrial plants each camp holding hundreds or thousands of prisoners 84 Designated as Aussenlager external camp Nebenlager extension camp Arbeitslager labor camp or Aussenkommando external work detail 85 camps were built at Blechhammer Jawiszowice Jaworzno Lagisze Myslowice Trzebinia and as far afield as the Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia in Czechoslovakia 86 Industries with satellite camps included coal mines foundries and other metal works and chemical plants Prisoners were also made to work in forestry and farming 87 For example Wirtschaftshof Budy in the Polish village of Budy near Brzeszcze was a farming subcamp where prisoners worked 12 hour days in the fields tending animals and making compost by mixing human ashes from the crematoria with sod and manure 88 Incidents of sabotage to decrease production took place in several subcamps including Charlottengrube Gleiwitz II and Rajsko 89 Living conditions in some of the camps were so poor that they were regarded as punishment subcamps 90 Life in the campsSS garrison Main articles SS command of Auschwitz concentration camp and SS Totenkopfverbande From the Hocker Album left to right Richard Baer Auschwitz commandant from May 1944 Josef Mengele camp physician and Rudolf Hoss first commandant in Solahutte an SS resort near Auschwitz summer 1944 91 The commandant s and administration building Auschwitz I Rudolf Hoss born in Baden Baden in 1900 92 was named the first commandant of Auschwitz when Heinrich Himmler ordered on 27 April 1940 that the camp be established 93 Living with his wife and children in a two story stucco house near the commandant s and administration building 94 he served as commandant until 11 November 1943 93 with Josef Kramer as his deputy 24 Succeeded as commandant by Arthur Liebehenschel 93 Hoss joined the SS Business and Administration Head Office in Oranienburg as director of Amt DI 93 a post that made him deputy of the camps inspectorate 95 Richard Baer became commandant of Auschwitz I on 11 May 1944 and Fritz Hartjenstein of Auschwitz II from 22 November 1943 followed by Josef Kramer from 15 May 1944 until the camp s liquidation in January 1945 Heinrich Schwarz was commandant of Auschwitz III from the point at which it became an autonomous camp in November 1943 until its liquidation 96 Hoss returned to Auschwitz between 8 May and 29 July 1944 as the local SS garrison commander Standortaltester to oversee the arrival of Hungary s Jews which made him the superior officer of all the commandants of the Auschwitz camps 93 According to Aleksander Lasik about 6 335 people 6 161 of them men worked for the SS at Auschwitz over the course of the camp s existence 97 4 2 percent were officers 26 1 percent non commissioned officers and 69 7 percent rank and file 98 In March 1941 there were 700 SS guards in June 1942 2 000 and in August 1944 3 342 At its peak in January 1945 4 480 SS men and 71 SS women worked in Auschwitz the higher number is probably attributable to the logistics of evacuating the camp 99 Female guards were known as SS supervisors SS Aufseherinnen 100 Most of the staff were from Germany or Austria but as the war progressed increasing numbers of Volksdeutsche from other countries including Czechoslovakia Poland Yugoslavia and the Baltic states joined the SS at Auschwitz Not all were ethnically German Guards were also recruited from Hungary Romania and Slovakia 101 Camp guards around three quarters of the SS personnel were members of the SS Totenkopfverbande death s head units 102 Other SS staff worked in the medical or political departments or in the economic administration which was responsible for clothing and other supplies including the property of dead prisoners 103 The SS viewed Auschwitz as a comfortable posting being there meant they had avoided the front and had access to the victims property 104 Functionaries and Sonderkommando Auschwitz I 2009 Certain prisoners at first non Jewish Germans but later Jews and non Jewish Poles 105 were assigned positions of authority as Funktionshaftlinge functionaries which gave them access to better housing and food The Lagerprominenz camp elite included Blockschreiber barracks clerk Kapo overseer Stubendienst barracks orderly and Kommandierte trusties 106 Wielding tremendous power over other prisoners the functionaries developed a reputation as sadists 105 Very few were prosecuted after the war because of the difficulty of determining which atrocities had been performed by order of the SS 107 Although the SS oversaw the murders at each gas chamber the forced labor portion of the work was done by prisoners known from 1942 as the Sonderkommando special squad 108 These were mostly Jews but they included groups such as Soviet POWs In 1940 1941 when there was one gas chamber there were 20 such prisoners in late 1943 there were 400 and by 1944 during the Holocaust in Hungary the number had risen to 874 109 The Sonderkommando removed goods and corpses from the incoming trains guided victims to the dressing rooms and gas chambers removed their bodies afterwards and took their jewelry hair dental work and any precious metals from their teeth all of which was sent to Germany Once the bodies were stripped of anything valuable the Sonderkommando burned them in the crematoria 110 Because they were witnesses to the mass murder the Sonderkommando lived separately from the other prisoners although this rule was not applied to the non Jews among them 111 Their quality of life was further improved by their access to the property of new arrivals which they traded within the camp including with the SS 112 Nevertheless their life expectancy was short they were regularly murdered and replaced 113 About 100 survived to the camp s liquidation They were forced on a death march and by train to the camp at Mauthausen where three days later they were asked to step forward during roll call No one did and because the SS did not have their records several of them survived 114 Tattoos and triangles Further information Nazi concentration camp badge Auschwitz clothing Uniquely at Auschwitz prisoners were tattooed with a serial number on their left breast for Soviet prisoners of war 115 and on the left arm for civilians 116 117 Categories of prisoner were distinguishable by triangular pieces of cloth German Winkel sewn onto on their jackets below their prisoner number Political prisoners Schutzhaftlinge or Sch mostly Poles had a red triangle while criminals Berufsverbrecher or BV were mostly German and wore green Asocial prisoners Asoziale or Aso which included vagrants prostitutes and the Roma wore black Purple was for Jehovah s Witnesses Internationale Bibelforscher Vereinigung or IBV s and pink for gay men who were mostly German 118 An estimated 5 000 15 000 gay men prosecuted under German Penal Code Section 175 proscribing sexual acts between men were detained in concentration camps of whom an unknown number were sent to Auschwitz 119 Jews wore a yellow badge the shape of the Star of David overlaid by a second triangle if they also belonged to a second category The nationality of the inmate was indicated by a letter stitched onto the cloth A racial hierarchy existed with German prisoners at the top Next were non Jewish prisoners from other countries Jewish prisoners were at the bottom 120 Transports Freight car inside Auschwitz II Birkenau near the gatehouse used to transport deportees 2014 121 Deportees were brought to Auschwitz crammed in wretched conditions into goods or cattle wagons arriving near a railway station or at one of several dedicated trackside ramps including one next to Auschwitz I The Altejudenrampe old Jewish ramp part of the Oswiecim freight railway station was used from 1942 to 1944 for Jewish transports 121 122 Located between Auschwitz I and Auschwitz II arriving at this ramp meant a 2 5 km journey to Auschwitz II and the gas chambers Most deportees were forced to walk accompanied by SS men and a car with a Red Cross symbol that carried the Zyklon B as well as an SS doctor in case officers were poisoned by mistake Inmates arriving at night or who were too weak to walk were taken by truck 123 Work on a new railway line and ramp right between sectors BI and BII in Auschwitz II was completed in May 1944 for the arrival of Hungarian Jews 122 between May and early July 1944 124 The rails led directly to the area around the gas chambers 121 Life for the inmates The day began at 4 30 am for the men an hour later in winter and earlier for the women when the block supervisor sounded a gong and started beating inmates with sticks to make them wash and use the latrines quickly 125 Sanitary arrangements were atrocious with few latrines and a lack of clean water Each washhouse had to service thousands of prisoners In sectors BIa and BIb in Auschwitz II two buildings containing latrines and washrooms were installed in 1943 These contained troughs for washing and 90 faucets the toilet facilities were sewage channels covered by concrete with 58 holes for seating There were three barracks with washing facilities or toilets to serve 16 residential barracks in BIIa and six washrooms latrines for 32 barracks in BIIb BIIc BIId and BIIe 126 Primo Levi described a 1944 Auschwitz III washroom Latrine in the men s quarantine camp sector BIIa Auschwitz II 2003 It is badly lighted full of draughts with the brick floor covered by a layer of mud The water is not drinkable it has a revolting smell and often fails for many hours The walls are covered by curious didactic frescoes for example there is the good Haftling prisoner portrayed stripped to the waist about to diligently soap his sheared and rosy cranium and the bad Haftling with a strong Semitic nose and a greenish colour bundled up in his ostentatiously stained clothes with a beret on his head who cautiously dips a finger into the water of the washbasin Under the first is written So bist du rein like this you are clean and under the second So gehst du ein like this you come to a bad end and lower down in doubtful French but in Gothic script La proprete c est la sante cleanliness is health 127 Prisoners received half a liter of coffee substitute or a herbal tea in the morning but no food 128 A second gong heralded roll call when inmates lined up outside in rows of ten to be counted No matter the weather they had to wait for the SS to arrive for the count how long they stood there depended on the officers mood and whether there had been escapes or other events attracting punishment 129 Guards might force the prisoners to squat for an hour with their hands above their heads or hand out beatings or detention for infractions such as having a missing button or an improperly cleaned food bowl The inmates were counted and re counted 130 Auschwitz II brick barracks sector BI 2006 four prisoners slept in each partition known as a buk 131 Auschwitz II wooden barracks 2008 After roll call to the sound of Arbeitskommandos formieren form work details prisoners walked to their place of work five abreast to begin a working day that was normally 11 hours long longer in summer and shorter in winter 132 A prison orchestra such as the Women s Orchestra of Auschwitz was forced to play cheerful music as the workers left the camp Kapos were responsible for the prisoners behavior while they worked as was an SS escort Much of the work took place outdoors at construction sites gravel pits and lumber yards No rest periods were allowed One prisoner was assigned to the latrines to measure the time the workers took to empty their bladders and bowels 133 Lunch was three quarters of a liter of watery soup at midday reportedly foul tasting with meat in the soup four times a week and vegetables mostly potatoes and rutabaga three times The evening meal was 300 grams of bread often moldy part of which the inmates were expected to keep for breakfast the next day with a tablespoon of cheese or marmalade or 25 grams of margarine or sausage Prisoners engaged in hard labor were given extra rations 134 A second roll call took place at seven in the evening in the course of which prisoners might be hanged or flogged If a prisoner was missing the others had to remain standing until the absentee was found or the reason for the absence discovered even if it took hours On 6 July 1940 roll call lasted 19 hours because a Polish prisoner Tadeusz Wiejowski had escaped following an escape in 1941 a group of prisoners was picked out from the escapee s barracks and sent to block 11 to be starved to death 135 After roll call prisoners retired to their blocks for the night and received their bread rations Then they had some free time to use the washrooms and receive their mail unless they were Jews Jews were not allowed to receive mail Curfew nighttime quiet was marked by a gong at nine o clock 136 Inmates slept in long rows of brick or wooden bunks or on the floor lying in and on their clothes and shoes to prevent them from being stolen 137 The wooden bunks had blankets and paper mattresses filled with wood shavings in the brick barracks inmates lay on straw 138 According to Miklos Nyiszli Eight hundred to a thousand people were crammed into the superimposed compartments of each barracks Unable to stretch out completely they slept there both lengthwise and crosswise with one man s feet on another s head neck or chest Stripped of all human dignity they pushed and shoved and bit and kicked each other in an effort to get a few more inches space on which to sleep a little more comfortably For they did not have long to sleep 139 Sunday was not a work day but prisoners had to clean the barracks and take their weekly shower 140 and were allowed to write in German to their families although the SS censored the mail Inmates who did not speak German would trade bread for help 141 Observant Jews tried to keep track of the Hebrew calendar and Jewish holidays including Shabbat and the weekly Torah portion No watches calendars or clocks were permitted in the camp Only two Jewish calendars made in Auschwitz survived to the end of the war Prisoners kept track of the days in other ways such as obtaining information from newcomers 142 Women s camp See also Women s Orchestra of Auschwitz Women in Auschwitz II May 1944 Roll call in front of the kitchen building Auschwitz II About 30 percent of the registered inmates were female 143 The first mass transport of women 999 non Jewish German women from the Ravensbruck concentration camp arrived on 26 March 1942 Classified as criminal asocial and political they were brought to Auschwitz as founder functionaries of the women s camp 144 Rudolf Hoss wrote of them It was easy to predict that these beasts would mistreat the women over whom they exercised power Spiritual suffering was completely alien to them 145 They were given serial numbers 1 999 46 g The women s guard from Ravensbruck Johanna Langefeld became the first Auschwitz women s camp Lagerfuhrerin 144 A second mass transport of women 999 Jews from Poprad Slovakia arrived on the same day According to Danuta Czech this was the first registered transport sent to Auschwitz by the Reich Security Head Office RSHA office IV B4 known as the Jewish Office led by SS Obersturmbannfuhrer Adolf Eichmann 46 Office IV was the Gestapo 146 A third transport of 798 Jewish women from Bratislava Slovakia followed on 28 March 46 Women were at first held in blocks 1 10 of Auschwitz I 147 but from 6 August 1942 148 13 000 inmates were transferred to a new women s camp Frauenkonzentrationslager or FKL in Auschwitz II This consisted at first of 15 brick and 15 wooden barracks in sector Bauabschnitt BIa it was later extended into BIb 149 and by October 1943 it held 32 066 women 150 In 1943 1944 about 11 000 women were also housed in the Gypsy family camp as were several thousand in the Theresienstadt family camp 151 Conditions in the women s camp were so poor that when a group of male prisoners arrived to set up an infirmary in October 1942 their first task according to researchers from the Auschwitz museum was to distinguish the corpses from the women who were still alive 150 Gisella Perl a Romanian Jewish gynecologist and inmate of the women s camp wrote in 1948 There was one latrine for thirty to thirty two thousand women and we were permitted to use it only at certain hours of the day We stood in line to get in to this tiny building knee deep in human excrement As we all suffered from dysentry we could barely wait until our turn came and soiled our ragged clothes which never came off our bodies thus adding to the horror of our existence by the terrible smell that surrounded us like a cloud The latrine consisted of a deep ditch with planks thrown across it at certain intervals We squatted on those planks like birds perched on a telegraph wire so close together that we could not help soiling one another 152 Langefeld was succeeded as Lagerfuhrerin in October 1942 by SS Oberaufseherin Maria Mandl who developed a reputation for cruelty Hoss hired men to oversee the female supervisors first SS Obersturmfuhrer Paul Muller then SS Hauptsturmfuhrer Franz Hossler 153 Mandl and Hossler were executed after the war Sterilization experiments were carried out in barracks 30 by a German gynecologist Carl Clauberg and another German doctor Horst Schumann 150 Medical experiments block 10 Main articles Block 10 and Nazi human experimentation Block 10 Auschwitz I where medical experiments were performed on women German doctors performed a variety of experiments on prisoners at Auschwitz SS doctors tested the efficacy of X rays as a sterilization device by administering large doses to female prisoners Carl Clauberg injected chemicals into women s uteruses in an effort to glue them shut Prisoners were infected with spotted fever for vaccination research and exposed to toxic substances to study the effects 154 In one experiment Bayer then part of IG Farben paid RM 150 each for 150 female inmates from Auschwitz the camp had asked for RM 200 per woman who were transferred to a Bayer facility to test an anesthetic A Bayer employee wrote to Rudolf Hoss The transport of 150 women arrived in good condition However we were unable to obtain conclusive results because they died during the experiments We would kindly request that you send us another group of women to the same number and at the same price The Bayer research was led at Auschwitz by Helmuth Vetter of Bayer IG Farben who was also an Auschwitz physician and SS captain and by Auschwitz physicians Friedrich Entress and Eduard Wirths 155 Defendants during the Doctors trial Nuremberg 1946 1947 The most infamous doctor at Auschwitz was Josef Mengele the Angel of Death who worked in Auschwitz II from 30 May 1943 at first in the gypsy family camp 156 Interested in performing research on identical twins dwarfs and those with hereditary disease Mengele set up a kindergarten in barracks 29 and 31 for children he was experimenting on and for all Romani children under six where they were given better food rations 157 From May 1944 he would select twins and dwarfs from among the new arrivals during selection 158 reportedly calling for twins with Zwillinge heraus twins step forward 159 He and other doctors the latter prisoners would measure the twins body parts photograph them and subject them to dental sight and hearing tests x rays blood tests surgery and blood transfusions between them 160 Then he would have them killed and dissected 158 Kurt Heissmeyer another German doctor and SS officer took 20 Polish Jewish children from Auschwitz to use in pseudoscientific experiments at the Neuengamme concentration camp near Hamburg where he injected them with the tuberculosis bacilli to test a cure for tuberculosis In April 1945 the children were murdered by hanging to conceal the project 161 A Jewish skeleton collection was obtained from among a pool of 115 Jewish inmates chosen for their perceived stereotypical racial characteristics Rudolf Brandt and Wolfram Sievers general manager of the Ahnenerbe a Nazi research institute delivered the skeletons to the collection of the Anatomy Institute at the Reichsuniversitat Strassburg in Alsace Lorraine The collection was sanctioned by Heinrich Himmler and under the direction of August Hirt Ultimately 87 of the inmates were shipped to Natzweiler Struthof and murdered in August 1943 162 Brandt and Sievers were executed in 1948 after being convicted during the Doctors trial part of the Subsequent Nuremberg trials 163 Punishment block 11 Main article Block 11 Block 11 and left the death wall Auschwitz I 2000 Prisoners could be beaten and killed by guards and kapos for the slightest infraction of the rules Polish historian Irena Strzelecka writes that kapos were given nicknames that reflected their sadism Bloody Iron The Strangler The Boxer 164 Based on the 275 extant reports of punishment in the Auschwitz archives Strzelecka lists common infractions returning a second time for food at mealtimes removing your own gold teeth to buy bread breaking into the pigsty to steal the pigs food putting your hands in your pockets 165 Flogging during roll call was common A flogging table called the goat immobilized prisoners feet in a box while they stretched themselves across the table Prisoners had to count out the lashes 25 mit besten Dank habe ich erhalten 25 received with many thanks and if they got the figure wrong the flogging resumed from the beginning 165 Punishment by the post involved tying prisoners hands behind their backs with chains attached to hooks then raising the chains so the prisoners were left dangling by the wrists If their shoulders were too damaged afterwards to work they might be sent to the gas chamber Prisoners were subjected to the post for helping a prisoner who had been beaten and for picking up a cigarette butt 166 To extract information from inmates guards would force their heads onto the stove and hold them there burning their faces and eyes 167 Known as block 13 until 1941 block 11 of Auschwitz I was the prison within the prison reserved for inmates suspected of resistance activities 168 Cell 22 in block 11 was a windowless standing cell Stehbunker Split into four sections each section measured less than 1 0 m2 11 sq ft and held four prisoners who entered it through a hatch near the floor There was a 5 cm x 5 cm vent for air covered by a perforated sheet Strzelecka writes that prisoners might have to spend several nights in cell 22 Wieslaw Kielar spent four weeks in it for breaking a pipe 169 Several rooms in block 11 were deemed the Polizei Ersatz Gefangnis Myslowitz in Auschwitz Auschwitz branch of the police station at Myslowice 170 There were also Sonderbehandlung cases special treatment for Poles and others regarded as dangerous to Nazi Germany 171 Death wall The death wall showing the death camp flag the blue and white stripes with a red triangle signifying the Auschwitz uniform of political prisoners The courtyard between blocks 10 and 11 known as the death wall served as an execution area including for Poles in the General Government area who had been sentenced to death by a criminal court 171 The first executions by shooting inmates in the back of the head took place at the death wall on 11 November 1941 Poland s National Independence Day The 151 accused were led to the wall one at a time stripped naked and with their hands tied behind their backs Danuta Czech noted that a clandestine Catholic mass was said the following Sunday on the second floor of Block 4 in Auschwitz I in a narrow space between bunks 172 An estimated 4 500 Polish political prisoners were executed at the death wall including members of the camp resistance An additional 10 000 Poles were brought to the camp to be executed without being registered About 1 000 Soviet prisoners of war died by execution although this is a rough estimate A Polish government in exile report stated that 11 274 prisoners and 6 314 prisoners of war had been executed 173 Rudolf Hoss wrote that execution orders arrived in an unbroken stream 170 According to SS officer Perry Broad s ome of these walking skeletons had spent months in the stinking cells where not even animals would be kept and they could barely manage to stand straight And yet at that last moment many of them shouted Long live Poland or Long live freedom 174 The dead included Colonel Jan Karcz and Major Edward Gott Getynski executed on 25 January 1943 with 51 others suspected of resistance activities Jozef Noji the Polish long distance runner was executed on 15 February that year 175 In October 1944 200 Sonderkommando were executed for their part in the Sonderkommando revolt 176 Family camps Gypsy family camp Main articles Gypsy family camp Auschwitz and Romani genocide Romani children Mulfingen Germany 1943 the children were studied by Eva Justin and later sent to Auschwitz 177 A separate camp for the Roma the Zigeunerfamilienlager Gypsy family camp was set up in the BIIe sector of Auschwitz II Birkenau in February 1943 For unknown reasons they were not subject to selection and families were allowed to stay together The first transport of German Roma arrived on 26 February that year There had been a small number of Romani inmates before that two Czech Romani prisoners Ignatz and Frank Denhel tried to escape in December 1942 the latter successfully and a Polish Romani woman Stefania Ciuron arrived on 12 February 1943 and escaped in April 178 Josef Mengele the Holocaust s most infamous physician worked in the gypsy family camp from 30 May 1943 when he began his work in Auschwitz 156 The Auschwitz registry Hauptbucher shows that 20 946 Roma were registered prisoners 179 and another 3 000 are thought to have entered unregistered 180 On 22 March 1943 one transport of 1 700 Polish Sinti and Roma was gassed on arrival because of illness as was a second group of 1 035 on 25 May 1943 179 The SS tried to liquidate the camp on 16 May 1944 but the Roma fought them armed with knives and iron pipes and the SS retreated Shortly after this the SS removed nearly 2 908 from the family camp to work and on 2 August 1944 gassed the other 2 897 Ten thousand remain unaccounted for 181 Theresienstadt family camp Main article Theresienstadt family camp The SS deported around 18 000 Jews to Auschwitz from the Theresienstadt ghetto in Terezin Czechoslovakia 182 beginning on 8 September 1943 with a transport of 2 293 male and 2 713 female prisoners 183 Placed in sector BIIb as a family camp they were allowed to keep their belongings wear their own clothes and write letters to family they did not have their hair shaved and were not subjected to selection 182 Correspondence between Adolf Eichmann s office and the International Red Cross suggests that the Germans set up the camp to cast doubt on reports in time for a planned Red Cross visit to Auschwitz that mass murder was taking place there 184 The women and girls were placed in odd numbered barracks and the men and boys in even numbered An infirmary was set up in barracks 30 and 32 and barracks 31 became a school and kindergarten 182 The somewhat better living conditions were nevertheless inadequate 1 000 members of the family camp were dead within six months 185 Two other groups of 2 491 and 2 473 Jews arrived from Theresienstadt in the family camp on 16 and 20 December 1943 186 On 8 March 1944 3 791 of the prisoners men women and children were sent to the gas chambers the men were taken to crematorium III and the women later to crematorium II 187 Some of the group were reported to have sung Hatikvah and the Czech national anthem on the way 188 Before they were murdered they had been asked to write postcards to relatives postdated to 25 27 March Several twins were held back for medical experiments 189 The Czechoslovak government in exile initiated diplomatic manoeuvers to save the remaining Czech Jews after its representative in Bern received the Vrba Wetzler report written by two escaped prisoners Rudolf Vrba and Alfred Wetzler which warned that the remaining family camp inmates would be gassed soon 190 The BBC also became aware of the report its German service broadcast news of the family camp murders during its women s programme on 16 June 1944 warning All those responsible for such massacres from top downwards will be called to account 191 The Red Cross visited Theresienstadt in June 1944 and were persuaded by the SS that no one was being deported from there 184 The following month about 2 000 women from the family camp were selected to be moved to other camps and 80 boys were moved to the men s camp the remaining 7 000 were gassed between 10 and 12 July 192 Selection and extermination processGas chambers A reconstruction of crematorium I Auschwitz I 2014 193 The first gassings at Auschwitz took place in early September 1941 when around 850 inmates Soviet prisoners of war and sick Polish inmates were killed with Zyklon B in the basement of block 11 in Auschwitz I The building proved unsuitable so gassings were conducted instead in crematorium I also in Auschwitz I which operated until December 1942 There more than 700 victims could be killed at once 194 Tens of thousands were killed in crematorium I 49 To keep the victims calm they were told they were to undergo disinfection and de lousing they were ordered to undress outside then were locked in the building and gassed After its decommissioning as a gas chamber the building was converted to a storage facility and later served as an SS air raid shelter 195 The gas chamber and crematorium were reconstructed after the war Dwork and van Pelt write that a chimney was recreated four openings in the roof were installed to show where the Zyklon B had entered and two of the three furnaces were rebuilt with the original components 31 Hungarian Jews arriving at Auschwitz II May June 1944 Crematoria II and III and their chimneys are visible in the background left and right Jewish women and children from Hungary walking toward the gas chamber Auschwitz II May June 1944 The gate on the left leads to sector BI the oldest part of the camp 196 In early 1942 mass exterminations were moved to two provisional gas chambers the red house and white house known as bunkers 1 and 2 in Auschwitz II while the larger crematoria II III IV and V were under construction Bunker 2 was temporarily reactivated from May to November 1944 when large numbers of Hungarian Jews were gassed 197 In summer 1944 the combined capacity of the crematoria and outdoor incineration pits was 20 000 bodies per day 198 A planned sixth facility crematorium VI was never built 199 From 1942 Jews were being transported to Auschwitz from all over German occupied Europe by rail arriving in daily convoys 200 The gas chambers worked to their fullest capacity from May to July 1944 during the Holocaust in Hungary 201 A rail spur leading to crematoria II and III in Auschwitz II was completed that May and a new ramp was built between sectors BI and BII to deliver the victims closer to the gas chambers images top right On 29 April the first 1 800 Jews from Hungary arrived at the camp 202 From 14 May until early July 1944 437 000 Hungarian Jews half the pre war population were deported to Auschwitz at a rate of 12 000 a day for a considerable part of that period 124 The crematoria had to be overhauled Crematoria II and III were given new elevators leading from the stoves to the gas chambers new grates were fitted and several of the dressing rooms and gas chambers were painted Cremation pits were dug behind crematorium V 202 The incoming volume was so great that the Sonderkommando resorted to burning corpses in open air pits as well as in the crematoria 203 Selection According to Polish historian Franciszek Piper of the 1 095 000 Jews deported to Auschwitz around 205 000 were registered in the camp and given serial numbers 25 000 were sent to other camps and 865 000 were murdered soon after arrival 204 Adding non Jewish victims gives a figure of 900 000 who were murdered without being registered 205 During selection on arrival those deemed able to work were sent to the right and admitted into the camp registered and the rest were sent to the left to be gassed The group selected to die included almost all children women with small children the elderly and others who appeared on brief and superficial inspection by an SS doctor not to be fit for work 206 Practically any fault scars bandages boils and emaciation might provide reason enough to be deemed unfit 207 Children might be made to walk toward a stick held at a certain height those who could walk under it were selected for the gas 208 Inmates unable to walk or who arrived at night were taken to the crematoria on trucks otherwise the new arrivals were marched there 209 Their belongings were seized and sorted by inmates in the Kanada warehouses an area of the camp in sector BIIg that housed 30 barracks used as storage facilities for plundered goods it derived its name from the inmates view of Canada as a land of plenty 210 Inside the crematoria Entrance to crematorium III Auschwitz II 2008 211 The crematoria consisted of a dressing room gas chamber and furnace room In crematoria II and III the dressing room and gas chamber were underground in IV and V they were on the ground floor The dressing room had numbered hooks on the wall to hang clothes In crematorium II there was also a dissection room Sezierraum 212 SS officers told the victims they had to take a shower and undergo delousing The victims undressed in the dressing room and walked into the gas chamber signs said Bade bath or Desinfektionsraum disinfection room A former prisoner testified that the language of the signs changed depending on who was being killed 213 Some inmates were given soap and a towel 214 A gas chamber could hold up to 2 000 one former prisoner said it was around 3 000 215 The Zyklon B was delivered to the crematoria by a special SS bureau known as the Hygiene Institute 216 After the doors were shut SS men dumped in the Zyklon B pellets through vents in the roof or holes in the side of the chamber The victims were usually dead within 10 minutes Rudolf Hoss testified that it took up to 20 minutes 217 Leib Langfus a member of the Sonderkommando buried his diary written in Yiddish near crematorium III in Auschwitz II It was found in 1952 signed A Y R A 218 It would be difficult to even imagine that so many people would fit in such a small room Anyone who did not want to go inside was shot or torn apart by the dogs They would have suffocated from the lack of air within several hours Then all the doors were sealed tight and the gas thrown in by way of a small hole in the ceiling There was nothing more that the people inside could do And so they only screamed in bitter lamentable voices Others complained in voices full of despair and others still sobbed spasmodically and sent up a dire heart rending weeping And in the meantime their voices grew weaker and weaker Because of the great crowding people fell one atop another as they died until a heap arose consisting of five or six layers atop the other reaching a height of one meter Mothers froze in a seated position on the ground embracing their children in their arms and husbands and wives died hugging each other Some of the people made up a formless mass Others stood in a leaning position while the upper parts from the stomach up were in a lying position Some of the people had turned completely blue under the influence of the gas while others looks entirely fresh as if they were asleep 219 Use of corpses One of the Sonderkommando photographs Women on their way to the gas chamber Auschwitz II August 1944 Sonderkommando wearing gas masks dragged the bodies from the chamber They removed glasses and artificial limbs and shaved off the women s hair 217 women s hair was removed before they entered the gas chamber at Belzec Sobibor and Treblinka but at Auschwitz it was done after death 220 By 6 February 1943 the Reich Economic Ministry had received 3 000 kg of women s hair from Auschwitz and Majdanek 220 The hair was first cleaned in a solution of sal ammoniac dried on the brick floor of the crematoria combed and placed in paper bags 221 The hair was shipped to various companies including one manufacturing plant in Bremen Bluementhal where workers found tiny coins with Greek letters on some of the braids possibly from some of the 50 000 Greek Jews deported to Auschwitz in 1943 222 When they liberated the camp in January 1945 the Red Army found 7 000 kg of human hair in bags ready to ship 221 Just before cremation jewelry was removed along with dental work and teeth containing precious metals 223 Gold was removed from the teeth of dead prisoners from 23 September 1940 onwards by order of Heinrich Himmler 224 The work was carried out by members of the Sonderkommando who were dentists anyone overlooking dental work might themselves be cremated alive 223 The gold was sent to the SS Health Service and used by dentists to treat the SS and their families 50 kg had been collected by 8 October 1942 224 By early 1944 10 12 kg of gold were being extracted monthly from victims teeth 225 The corpses were burned in the nearby incinerators and the ashes were buried thrown in the Vistula river or used as fertilizer Any bits of bone that had not burned properly were ground down in wooden mortars 226 Death toll New arrivals Auschwitz II Birkenau May June 1944 At least 1 3 million people were sent to Auschwitz between 1940 and 1945 and at least 1 1 million died 7 Overall 400 207 prisoners were registered in the camp 268 657 male and 131 560 female 143 A study in the late 1980s by Polish historian Franciszek Piper published by Yad Vashem in 1991 227 used timetables of train arrivals combined with deportation records to calculate that of the 1 3 million sent to the camp 1 082 000 had died there a figure rounded up to 1 1 million that Piper regarded as a minimum 7 That figure came to be widely accepted h The Germans tried to conceal how many they had murdered In July 1942 according to Rudolf Hoss s post war memoir Hoss received an order from Heinrich Himmler via Adolf Eichmann s office and SS commander Paul Blobel that a ll mass graves were to be opened and the corpses burned In addition the ashes were to be disposed of in such a way that it would be impossible at some future time to calculate the number of corpses burned 231 Earlier estimates of the death toll were higher than Piper s Following the camp s liberation the Soviet government issued a statement on 8 May 1945 that four million people had been murdered on the site a figure based on the capacity of the crematoria 232 Hoss told prosecutors at Nuremberg that at least 2 500 000 people had been gassed there and that another 500 000 had died of starvation and disease 233 He testified that the figure of over two million had come from Eichmann 234 In his memoirs written in custody Hoss wrote that Eichmann had given the figure of 2 5 million to Hoss s superior officer Richard Glucks based on records that had been destroyed 235 Hoss regarded this figure as far too high Even Auschwitz had limits to its destructive possibilities he wrote 236 Nationality ethnicity Source Franciszek Piper 2 Registered deaths Auschwitz Unregistered deaths Auschwitz TotalJews 95 000 865 000 960 000Ethnic Poles 64 000 10 000 74 000 70 000 75 000 Roma and Sinti 19 000 2 000 21 000Soviet prisoners of war 12 000 3 000 15 000Other Europeans Soviet citizens Byelorussians Russians Ukrainians Czechs Yugoslavs French Germans Austrians 10 000 15 000 n a 10 000 15 000Total deaths in Auschwitz 1940 1945 200 000 205 000 880 000 1 080 000 1 085 000Around one in six Jews murdered in the Holocaust died in Auschwitz 237 By nation the greatest number of Auschwitz s Jewish victims originated from Hungary accounting for 430 000 deaths followed by Poland 300 000 France 69 000 Netherlands 60 000 Greece 55 000 Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia 46 000 Slovakia 27 000 Belgium 25 000 Germany and Austria 23 000 Yugoslavia 10 000 Italy 7 500 Norway 690 and others 34 000 238 Timothy Snyder writes that fewer than one percent of the million Soviet Jews murdered in the Holocaust were murdered in Auschwitz 239 Of the at least 387 Jehovah s Witnesses who were imprisoned at Auschwitz 132 died in the camp 240 Resistance escapes and liberationCamp resistance flow of information See also Resistance movement in Auschwitz Witold Report Responsibility for the Holocaust Allied knowledge of the atrocities and The Holocaust Flow of information about the mass murder Camp of Death pamphlet 1942 by Natalia Zarembina 241 Halina Krahelska report from Auschwitz Oswiecim pamietnik wieznia Auschwitz Diary of a prisoner 1942 242 The Mass Extermination of Jews in German Occupied Poland a paper issued by the Polish government in exile addressed to the United Nations 1942Information about Auschwitz became available to the Allies as a result of reports by Captain Witold Pilecki of the Polish Home Army 243 who as Tomasz Serafinski serial number 4859 244 allowed himself to be arrested in Warsaw and taken to Auschwitz 243 He was imprisoned there from 22 September 1940 245 until his escape on 27 April 1943 244 Michael Fleming writes that Pilecki was instructed to sustain morale organize food clothing and resistance prepare to take over the camp if possible and smuggle information out to the Polish military 243 Pilecki called his resistance movement Zwiazek Organizacji Wojskowej ZOW Union of Military Organization 245 Captain Witold Pilecki The resistance sent out the first oral message about Auschwitz with Dr Aleksander Wielkopolski a Polish engineer who was released in October 1940 246 The following month the Polish underground in Warsaw prepared a report on the basis of that information The camp in Auschwitz part of which was published in London in May 1941 in a booklet The German Occupation of Poland by the Polish Ministry of Foreign Affairs The report said of the Jews in the camp that scarcely any of them came out alive According to Fleming the booklet was widely circulated amongst British officials The Polish Fortnightly Review based a story on it writing that three crematorium furnaces were insufficient to cope with the bodies being cremated as did The Scotsman on 8 January 1942 the only British news organization to do so 247 On 24 December 1941 the resistance groups representing the various prisoner factions met in block 45 and agreed to cooperate Fleming writes that it has not been possible to track Pilecki s early intelligence from the camp Pilecki compiled two reports after he escaped in April 1943 the second Raport W detailed his life in Auschwitz I and estimated that 1 5 million people mostly Jews had been murdered 248 On 1 July 1942 the Polish Fortnightly Review published a report describing Birkenau writing that prisoners call this supplementary camp Paradisal presumably because there is only one road leading to Paradise Reporting that inmates were being killed through excessive work torture and medical means it noted the gassing of the Soviet prisoners of war and Polish inmates in Auschwitz I in September 1941 the first gassing in the camp It said It is estimated that the Oswiecim camp can accommodate fifteen thousand prisoners but as they die on a mass scale there is always room for new arrivals 249 The camp badge for non Jewish Polish political prisoners The Polish government in exile in London first reported the gassing of prisoners in Auschwitz on 21 July 1942 250 and reported the gassing of Soviet POWs and Jews on 4 September 1942 251 In 1943 the Kampfgruppe Auschwitz Combat Group Auschwitz was organized within the camp with the aim of sending out information about what was happening 252 The Sonderkommando buried notes in the ground hoping they would be found by the camp s liberators 253 The group also smuggled out photographs the Sonderkommando photographs of events around the gas chambers in Auschwitz II were smuggled out of the camp in September 1944 in a toothpaste tube 254 According to Fleming the British press responded in 1943 and the first half of 1944 either by not publishing reports about Auschwitz or by burying them on the inside pages The exception was the Polish Jewish Observer a City and East London Observer supplement edited by Joel Cang a former Warsaw correspondent for the Manchester Guardian The British reticence stemmed from a Foreign Office concern that the public might pressure the government to respond or provide refuge for the Jews and that British actions on behalf of the Jews might affect its relationships in the Middle East There was similar reticence in the United States and indeed within the Polish government in exile and the Polish resistance According to Fleming the scholarship suggests that the Polish resistance distributed information about the Holocaust in Auschwitz without challenging the Allies reluctance to highlight it 255 Escapes Auschwitz Protocols Further information Vrba Wetzler report and Auschwitz Protocols Telegram dated 8 April 1944 from KL Auschwitz reporting the escape of Rudolf Vrba and Alfred Wetzler From the first escape on 6 July 1940 of Tadeusz Wiejowski at least 802 prisoners 757 men and 45 women tried to escape from the camp according to Polish historian Henryk Swiebocki 256 i He writes that most escapes were attempted from work sites outside the camp s perimeter fence 258 Of the 802 escapes 144 were successful 327 were caught and the fate of 331 is unknown 257 Four Polish prisoners Eugeniusz Bendera pl serial number 8502 Kazimierz Piechowski no 918 Stanislaw Gustaw Jaster pl no 6438 and Jozef Lempart no 3419 escaped successfully on 20 June 1942 After breaking into a warehouse three of them dressed as SS officers and stole rifles and an SS staff car which they drove out of the camp with the fourth handcuffed as a prisoner They wrote later to Rudolf Hoss apologizing for the loss of the vehicle 259 On 21 July 1944 Polish inmate Jerzy Bielecki dressed in an SS uniform and using a faked pass managed to cross the camp s gate with his Jewish girlfriend Cyla Cybulska pretending that she was wanted for questioning Both survived the war For having saved her Bielecki was recognized by Yad Vashem as Righteous Among the Nations 260 Jerzy Tabeau no 27273 registered as Jerzy Wesolowski and Roman Cieliczko no 27089 both Polish prisoners escaped on 19 November 1943 Tabeau made contact with the Polish underground and between December 1943 and early 1944 wrote what became known as the Polish Major s report about the situation in the camp 261 On 27 April 1944 Rudolf Vrba no 44070 and Alfred Wetzler no 29162 escaped to Slovakia carrying detailed information to the Slovak Jewish Council about the gas chambers The distribution of the Vrba Wetzler report and publication of parts of it in June 1944 helped to halt the deportation of Hungarian Jews to Auschwitz On 27 May 1944 Arnost Rosin no 29858 and Czeslaw Mordowicz no 84216 also escaped to Slovakia the Rosin Mordowicz report was added to the Vrba Wetzler and Tabeau reports to become what is known as the Auschwitz Protocols 262 The reports were first published in their entirety in November 1944 by the United States War Refugee Board as The Extermination Camps of Auschwitz Oswiecim and Birkenau in Upper Silesia 263 Bombing proposal Main article Auschwitz bombing debate Aerial view of Auschwitz II Birkenau taken by the RAF on 23 August 1944 In January 1941 the Commander in Chief of the Polish Army and prime minister in exile Wladyslaw Sikorski arranged for a report to be forwarded to Air Marshal Richard Pierse head of RAF Bomber Command 264 Written by Auschwitz prisoners in or around December 1940 the report described the camp s atrocious living conditions and asked the Polish government in exile to bomb it The prisoners implore the Polish Government to have the camp bombed The destruction of the electrified barbed wire the ensuing panic and darkness prevailing the chances of escape would be great The local population will hide them and help them to leave the neighbourhood The prisoners are confidently awaiting the day when Polish planes from Great Britain will enable their escape This is the prisoners unanimous demand to the Polish Government in London 265 Pierse replied that it was not technically feasible to bomb the camp without harming the prisoners 264 In May 1944 Slovak rabbi Michael Dov Weissmandl suggested that the Allies bomb the rails leading to the camp 266 Historian David Wyman published an essay in Commentary in 1978 entitled Why Auschwitz Was Never Bombed arguing that the United States Army Air Forces could and should have attacked Auschwitz In his book The Abandonment of the Jews America and the Holocaust 1941 1945 1984 Wyman argued that since the IG Farben plant at Auschwitz III had been bombed three times between August and December 1944 by the US Fifteenth Air Force in Italy it would have been feasible for the other camps or railway lines to be bombed too Bernard Wasserstein s Britain and the Jews of Europe 1979 and Martin Gilbert s Auschwitz and the Allies 1981 raised similar questions about British inaction 267 Since the 1990s other historians have argued that Allied bombing accuracy was not sufficient for Wyman s proposed attack and that counterfactual history is an inherently problematic endeavor 268 Sonderkommando revolt Further information Sonderkommando Auschwitz Sonderkommando member Zalmen Gradowski pictured with his wife Sonia buried his notebooks near crematorium III Sonia Gradowski was gassed on 8 December 1942 269 The Sonderkommando who worked in the crematoria were witnesses to the mass murder and were therefore regularly murdered themselves 270 On 7 October 1944 following an announcement that 300 of them were to be sent to a nearby town to clear away rubble transfers were a common ruse for the murder of prisoners the group mostly Jews from Greece and Hungary staged an uprising 271 They attacked the SS with stones and hammers killing three of them and set crematorium IV on fire with rags soaked in oil that they had hidden 272 Hearing the commotion the Sonderkommando at crematorium II believed that a camp uprising had begun and threw their Oberkapo into a furnace After escaping through a fence using wirecutters they managed to reach Rajsko where they hid in the granary of an Auschwitz satellite camp but the SS pursued and killed them by setting the granary on fire 273 By the time the rebellion at crematorium IV had been suppressed 212 members of the Sonderkommando were still alive and 451 had been killed 274 The dead included Zalmen Gradowski who kept notes of his time in Auschwitz and buried them near crematorium III after the war another Sonderkommando member showed the prosecutors where to dig 275 The notes were published in several formats including in 2017 as From the Heart of Hell 276 Evacuation and death marches Further information Death marches during the Holocaust Ruins of crematorium IV Auschwitz II blown up during the revolt The last mass transports to arrive in Auschwitz were 60 000 70 000 Jews from the Lodz Ghetto some 2 000 from Theresienstadt and 8 000 from Slovakia 277 The last selection took place on 30 October 1944 198 On 1 or 2 November 1944 Heinrich Himmler ordered the SS to halt the mass murder by gas 278 why On 25 November he ordered that Auschwitz s gas chambers and crematoria be destroyed The Sonderkommando and other prisoners began the job of dismantling the buildings and cleaning up the site 279 On 18 January 1945 Engelbert Marketsch a German criminal transferred from Mauthausen became the last prisoner to be assigned a serial number in Auschwitz number 202499 280 According to Polish historian Andrzej Strzelecki the evacuation of the camp was one of its most tragic chapters 281 Himmler ordered the evacuation of all camps in January 1945 telling camp commanders The Fuhrer holds you personally responsible for making sure that not a single prisoner from the concentration camps falls alive into the hands of the enemy 282 The plundered goods from the Kanada barracks together with building supplies were transported to the German interior Between 1 December 1944 and 15 January 1945 over one million items of clothing were packed to be shipped out of Auschwitz 95 000 such parcels were sent to concentration camps in Germany 283 Beginning on 17 January some 58 000 Auschwitz detainees about two thirds Jews over 20 000 from Auschwitz I and II and over 30 000 from the subcamps were evacuated under guard at first heading west on foot then by open topped freight trains to concentration camps in Germany and Austria Bergen Belsen Buchenwald Dachau Flossenburg Gross Rosen Mauthausen Dora Mittelbau Ravensbruck and Sachsenhausen 284 Fewer than 9 000 remained in the camps deemed too sick to move 285 During the marches the SS shot or otherwise dispatched anyone unable to continue execution details followed the marchers killing prisoners who lagged behind 281 Peter Longerich estimated that a quarter of the detainees were thus killed 286 By December 1944 some 15 000 Jewish prisoners had made it from Auschwitz to Bergen Belsen where they were liberated by the British on 15 April 1945 287 On 20 January crematoria II and III were blown up and on 23 January the Kanada warehouses were set on fire they apparently burned for five days Crematorium IV had been partly demolished after the Sonderkommando revolt in October and the rest of it was destroyed later On 26 January one day ahead of the Red Army s arrival crematorium V was blown up 288 Liberation Main article Liberation of Auschwitz concentration camp Young survivors at the camp liberated by the Red Army in January 1945 Eyeglasses of victims 1945 The first in the camp complex to be liberated was Auschwitz III the IG Farben camp at Monowitz a soldier from the 100th Infantry Division of the Red Army entered the camp around 9 am on Saturday 27 January 1945 289 The 60th Army of the 1st Ukrainian Front also part of the Red Army arrived in Auschwitz I and II around 3 pm They found 7 000 prisoners alive in the three main camps 500 in the other subcamps and over 600 corpses 290 Items found included 837 000 women s garments 370 000 men s suits 44 000 pairs of shoes 291 and 7 000 kg of human hair estimated by the Soviet war crimes commission to have come from 140 000 people 221 Some of the hair was examined by the Forensic Science Institute in Krakow where it was found to contain traces of hydrogen cyanide the main ingredient of Zyklon B 292 Primo Levi described seeing the first four soldiers on horseback approach Auschwitz III where he had been in the sick bay They threw strangely embarrassed glances at the sprawling bodies at the battered huts and at us few still alive 293 They did not greet us nor did they smile they seemed oppressed not only by compassion but by a confused restraint which sealed their lips and bound their eyes to the funereal scene It was that shame we knew so well the shame that drowned us after the selections and every time we had to watch or submit to some outrage the shame the Germans did not know that the just man experiences at another man s crime the feeling of guilt that such a crime should exist that it should have been introduced irrevocably into the world of things that exist and that his will for good should have proved too weak or null and should not have availed in defence 294 Georgii Elisavetskii a Soviet soldier who entered one of the barracks said in 1980 that he could hear other soldiers telling the inmates You are free comrades But they did not respond so he tried in Russian Polish German Ukrainian Then he used some Yiddish They think that I am provoking them They begin to hide And only when I said to them Do not be afraid I am a colonel of Soviet Army and a Jew We have come to liberate you Finally as if the barrier collapsed they rushed toward us shouting fell on their knees kissed the flaps of our overcoats and threw their arms around our legs 291 The Soviet military medical service and Polish Red Cross PCK set up field hospitals that looked after 4 500 prisoners suffering from the effects of starvation mostly diarrhea and tuberculosis Local volunteers helped until the Red Cross team arrived from Krakow in early February 295 In Auschwitz II the layers of excrement on the barracks floors had to be scraped off with shovels Water was obtained from snow and from fire fighting wells Before more help arrived 2 200 patients there were looked after by a few doctors and 12 PCK nurses All the patients were later moved to the brick buildings in Auschwitz I where several blocks became a hospital with medical personnel working 18 hour shifts 296 The liberation of Auschwitz received little press attention at the time the Red Army was focusing on its advance toward Germany and liberating the camp had not been one of its key aims Boris Polevoi reported on the liberation in Pravda on 2 February 1945 but made no mention of Jews 297 inmates were described collectively as victims of Fascism 298 It was when the Western Allies arrived in Buchenwald Bergen Belsen and Dachau in April 1945 that the liberation of the camps received extensive coverage 299 After the warTrials of war criminals Further information End of World War II in Europe Auschwitz trial and Frankfurt Auschwitz trials Gallows in Auschwitz I where Rudolf Hoss was executed on 16 April 1947 Only 789 Auschwitz staff up to 15 percent ever stood trial 8 most of the cases were pursued in Poland and the Federal Republic of Germany 300 According to Aleksander Lasik female SS officers were treated more harshly than male of the 17 women sentenced four received the death penalty and the others longer prison terms than the men He writes that this may have been because there were only 200 women overseers and therefore they were more visible and memorable to the inmates 301 Camp commandant Rudolf Hoss was arrested by the British on 11 March 1946 near Flensburg northern Germany where he had been working as a farmer under the pseudonym Franz Lang He was imprisoned in Heide then transferred to Minden for interrogation part of the British occupation zone From there he was taken to Nuremberg to testify for the defense in the trial of SS Obergruppenfuhrer Ernst Kaltenbrunner Hoss was straightforward about his own role in the mass murder and said he had followed the orders of Heinrich Himmler 302 j Extradited to Poland on 25 May 1946 303 he wrote his memoirs in custody first published in Polish in 1951 then in German in 1958 as Kommandant in Auschwitz 304 His trial before the Supreme National Tribunal in Warsaw opened on 11 March 1947 he was sentenced to death on 2 April and hanged in Auschwitz I on 16 April near crematorium I 305 On 25 November 1947 the Auschwitz trial began in Krakow when Poland s Supreme National Tribunal brought to court 40 former Auschwitz staff including commandant Arthur Liebehenschel women s camp leader Maria Mandel and camp leader Hans Aumeier The trials ended on 22 December 1947 with 23 death sentences seven life sentences and nine prison sentences ranging from three to 15 years Hans Munch an SS doctor who had several former prisoners testify on his behalf was the only person to be acquitted 306 Other former staff were hanged for war crimes in the Dachau Trials and the Belsen Trial including camp leaders Josef Kramer Franz Hossler and Vinzenz Schottl doctor Friedrich Entress and guards Irma Grese and Elisabeth Volkenrath 307 Bruno Tesch and Karl Weinbacher the owner and chief executive officer of the firm Tesch amp Stabenow one of the suppliers of Zyklon B were arrested by the British after the war and executed for knowingly supplying the chemical for use on humans 308 The 180 day Frankfurt Auschwitz trials held in West Germany from 20 December 1963 to 20 August 1965 tried 22 defendants including two dentists a doctor two camp adjudants and the camp s pharmacist The 700 page indictment presenting the testimony of 254 witnesses was accompanied by a 300 page report about the camp Nationalsozialistische Konzentrationslager written by historians from the Institut fur Zeitgeschichte in Germany including Martin Broszat and Helmut Krausnick The report became the basis of their book Anatomy of the SS State 1968 the first comprehensive study of the camp and the SS The court convicted 19 of the defendants giving six of them life sentences and the others between three and ten years 309 East Germany also held trials against several former staff members of Auschwitz One of the defendants they tried was Horst Fischer Fischer one of the highest ranking SS physicians in the camp had personally selected at least 75 000 men women and children to be gassed He was arrested in 1965 The following year he was convicted of crimes against humanity sentenced to death and guillotined Fischer was the highest ranking SS physician from Auschwitz to ever be tried by a German court 310 Legacy Barracks at Auschwitz II Auschwitz II gate in 1959 In the decades since its liberation Auschwitz has become a primary symbol of the Holocaust Historian Timothy D Snyder attributes this to the camp s high death toll and unusual combination of an industrial camp complex and a killing facility which left behind far more witnesses than single purpose killing facilities such as Chelmno or Treblinka 311 In 2005 the United Nations General Assembly designated 27 January the date of the camp s liberation as International Holocaust Remembrance Day 312 Helmut Schmidt visited the site in November 1977 the first West German chancellor to do so followed by his successor Helmut Kohl in November 1989 313 In a statement on the 50th anniversary of the liberation Kohl said that t he darkest and most awful chapter in German history was written at Auschwitz 314 In January 2020 world leaders gathered at Yad Vashem in Jerusalem to commemorate the 75th anniversary 315 It was the city s largest ever political gathering with over 45 heads of state and world leaders including royalty 316 At Auschwitz itself Reuven Rivlin and Andrzej Duda the presidents of Israel and Poland laid wreaths 317 Notable memoirists of the camp include Primo Levi Elie Wiesel and Tadeusz Borowski 237 Levi s If This is a Man first published in Italy in 1947 as Se questo e un uomo became a classic of Holocaust literature an imperishable masterpiece 318 k Wiesel wrote about his imprisonment at Auschwitz in Night 1960 and other works and became a prominent spokesman against ethnic violence in 1986 he was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize 320 Camp survivor Simone Veil was elected President of the European Parliament serving from 1979 to 1982 321 Two Auschwitz victims Maximilian Kolbe a priest who volunteered to die by starvation in place of a stranger and Edith Stein a Jewish convert to Catholicism were named saints of the Catholic Church 322 In 2017 a Korber Foundation survey found that 40 percent of 14 year olds in Germany did not know what Auschwitz was 323 324 The following year a survey organized by the Claims Conference United States Holocaust Memorial Museum and others found that 41 percent of 1 350 American adults surveyed and 66 percent of millennials did not know what Auschwitz was while 22 percent said they had never heard of the Holocaust 325 A CNN ComRes poll in 2018 found a similar situation in Europe 326 Auschwitz Birkenau State Museum Main article Auschwitz Birkenau State Museum Czeslawa Kwoka photographed in Auschwitz by Wilhelm Brasse of the camp s Erkennungsdienst Museum exhibit 2016 Israeli Air Force F 15 Eagles fly over Auschwitz II Birkenau 2003 End of the rail track inside Auschwitz II On 2 July 1947 the Polish government passed a law establishing a state memorial to remember the martyrdom of the Polish nation and other nations in Oswiecim 327 The museum established its exhibits at Auschwitz I after the war the barracks in Auschwitz II Birkenau had been mostly dismantled and moved to Warsaw to be used on building sites Dwork and van Pelt write that in addition Auschwitz I played a more central role in the persecution of the Polish people in opposition to the importance of Auschwitz II to the Jews including Polish Jews 328 An exhibition opened in Auschwitz I in 1955 displaying prisoner mug shots hair suitcases and shoes taken from murdered prisoners canisters of Zyklon B pellets and other objects related to the killings 329 UNESCO added the camp to its list of World Heritage Sites in 1979 330 All the museum s directors were until 1990 former Auschwitz prisoners Visitors to the site have increased from 492 500 in 2001 to over one million in 2009 331 to two million in 2016 332 There have been protracted disputes over the perceived Christianization of the site Pope John Paul II celebrated mass over the train tracks leading to Auschwitz II Birkenau on 7 June 1979 333 and called the camp the Golgotha of our age referring to the crucifixion of Jesus 334 More controversy followed when Carmelite nuns founded a convent in 1984 in a former theater outside the camp s perimeter near block 11 of Auschwitz I 335 after which a local priest and some survivors erected a large cross one that had been used during the pope s mass behind block 11 to commemorate 152 Polish inmates shot by the Germans in 1941 336 337 After a long dispute Pope John Paul II intervened and the nuns moved the convent elsewhere in 1993 338 The cross remained triggering the War of the Crosses as more crosses were erected to commemorate Christian victims despite international objections The Polish government and Catholic Church eventually agreed to remove all but the original 339 On 4 September 2003 despite a protest from the museum three Israeli Air Force F 15 Eagles performed a fly over of Auschwitz II Birkenau during a ceremony at the camp below All three pilots were descendants of Holocaust survivors including the man who led the flight Major General Amir Eshel 340 On 27 January 2015 some 300 Auschwitz survivors gathered with world leaders under a giant tent at the entrance to Auschwitz II to commemorate the 70th anniversary of the camp s liberation 341 l Museum curators consider visitors who pick up items from the ground to be thieves and local police will charge them as such the maximum penalty is a 10 year prison sentence 343 In 2017 two British youths from the Perse School were fined in Poland after picking up buttons and shards of decorative glass in 2015 from the Kanada area of Auschwitz II where camp victims personal effects were stored 344 The 16 foot 4 9 m Arbeit Macht Frei sign over the main camp s gate was stolen in December 2009 by a Swedish former neo Nazi and two Polish men The sign was later recovered 345 In 2018 the Polish government passed an amendment to its Act on the Institute of National Remembrance making it a criminal offence to violate the good name of Poland by accusing it of crimes committed by Germany in the Holocaust which would include referring to Auschwitz and other camps as Polish death camps 346 Staff at the museum were accused by nationalist media in Poland of focusing too much on the fate of the Jews in Auschwitz at the expense of ethnic Poles The brother of the museum s director Piotr Cywinski wrote that Cywinski had experienced 50 days of incessant hatred 347 After discussions with Israel s prime minister amid international concern that the new law would stifle research the Polish government adjusted the amendment so that anyone accusing Poland of complicity would be guilty only of a civil offence 348 See alsoAuschwitz Album Auschwitz Birkenau Foundation Hocker Album List of Nazi concentration camps List of victims and survivors of Auschwitz Polish death camp controversySourcesNotes The Law for the Restoration of the Professional Civil Service passed on 7 April 1933 excluded most Jews from the legal profession and civil service Similar legislation deprived Jewish members of other professions of the right to practise 12 Danuta Czech Auschwitz 1940 1945 Volume V Auschwitz Birkenau State Museum 2000 June 14 1940 The first transport of Polish political prisoners arrived from the Tarnow prison 728 men sent to Auschwitz by the commander of the Sipo u SD Security Police and Security Service in Cracow These prisoners were given camp serial numbers 31 to 758 The transport included many healthy young men fit for military service who had been caught trying to cross the Polish southern border in order to make their way to the Polish Armed Forces being formed in France The organizers of this illegal emigration operation were also in this transport along with resistance organizers political and community activists members of the Polish intelligentsia Catholic priests and Jews arrested in the AB Ausserordentliche Befriedungsaktion operation organized by Hans Frank in the spring of 1940 At the same time a further 100 SS men officers and SS enlisted men were sent to reinforce the camp garrison 28 Franciszek Piper writes that according to post war testimony from several inmates as well as from Rudolf Hoss Auschwitz commandant from May 1940 the gas chamber at Auschwitz I could hold 1 000 people 34 Danuta Czech Auschwitz 1940 1945 Volume V Auschwitz Birkenau State Museum 2000 February 15 1942 The first transport of Jews arrested by the Stapo State Police in Katowice and fated to die at Auschwitz arrived from Beuthen They were unloaded at the ramp on the camp railroad siding and ordered to leave their baggage there The camp SS flying squad received the Jews from the Stapo and led the victims to the gas chamber in the camp crematorium There they were killed with the use of Zyklon B gas 39 Mary Fulbrook A Small Town Near Auschwitz Ordinary Nazis and the Holocaust Oxford University Press 2012 Gunter Faerber for example recalled the moment in February 1942 when the Jews of Beuthen Bytom in Polish where his grandmother lived were brought through Bedzin on their way to Auschwitz Two large army trucks of Jewish women from Beuthen were brought straight to the station they were queuing at the station I was still given a chance to say goodbye because we knew already that the women of Beuthen are arriving I went down to the station I saw the long queue of women Faerber asked permission of a Gestapo guard to go up to his grandmother who was with her sister and I said goodbye and that was the last I saw of them and the whole transport was moved out by train 41 Danuta Czech Auschwitz 1940 1945 Volume V 2000 March 26 1942 Nine hundred ninety nine Jewish women from Poprad in Slovakia arrived and were assigned numbers 1000 1998 This was the first registered transport sent to Auschwitz by RSHA IV B4 the Jewish Office directed by SS Obersturmbannfuhrer Adolf Eichmann 46 This was the third set of serial numbers started in the camp 117 Robert Jan van Pelt The Case for Auschwitz 2002 This figure 1 1 million has been endorsed by all serious professional historians who have studied the complex history of Auschwitz in some detail by the Holocaust research institute at Yad Vashem in Jerusalem and by the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum in Washington D C 228 Earlier estimates included Raul Hilberg s 1961 work The Destruction of the European Jews which estimated that up to one million Jews had died in the camp 229 In 1983 French scholar George Wellers was one of the first to use German data on deportations to calculate the death toll he arrived at a figure of 1 471 595 deaths including 1 35 million Jews and 86 675 non Jewish Poles 230 The escapees included 396 Polish men and 10 Polish women 164 men from the Soviet Union including 50 prisoners of war and 15 women 112 Jewish men and three Jewish women 36 Romani Sinti men and two women 22 German men and nine women 19 Czech men and four women two Austrian men one Yugoslav woman and one man and 15 other men and one woman 257 In his testimony according to Polish historian Aleksander Lasik Hoss neither protected anyone nor evaded his own responsibility His stance came as a surprise to many especially those who viewed him as a bloodthirsty beast Instead he viewed his crimes in terms of the technical obstacles and challenges with which he had to cope Hoss stated that he led the killings in Auschwitz on express orders of Reichsfuhrer Himmler 303 In The Drowned and the Saved 1986 Levi wrote that the concentration camps represented the epitome of the totalitarian system N ever has there existed a state that was really totalitarian Never has some form of reaction a corrective of the total tyranny been lacking not even in the Third Reich or Stalin s Soviet Union in both cases public opinion the magistrature the foreign press the churches the feeling for justice and humanity that ten or twenty years of tyranny were not enough to eradicate have to a greater or lesser extent acted as a brake Only in the Lager camp was the restraint from below nonexistent and the power of these small satraps absolute 319 Attendees included the president of the World Jewish Congress Ronald Lauder Polish president Bronislaw Komorowski French President Francois Hollande German President Joachim Gauck the film director Steven Spielberg and King Willem Alexander of the Netherlands 341 342 Citations The unloading ramps and selections Auschwitz Birkenau State Archived from the original on 21 January 2019 a b c Piper 2000b p 230 Auschwitz encyclopedia ushmm org Archived from the original on 13 June 2018 Retrieved 2 July 2021 Auschwitz is the German name for the Polish city Oswiecim Oswiecim is located in Poland approximately 40 miles about 64 km west of Krakow Germany annexed this area of Poland in 1939 Auschwitz I Auschwitz II Birkenau Auschwitz III Monowitz Auschwitz Birkenau State Museum Archived from the original on 22 January 2019 Dwork amp van Pelt 2002 p 166 Auschwitz Birkenau Former German Nazi Concentration and Extermination Camp Memorial and Museum Poles in Auschwitz auschwitz org Archived from the original on 12 August 2020 Retrieved 8 July 2021 The first transport of political prisoners to Auschwitz consisted almost exclusively of Poles It was for them that the camp was founded and the majority of prisoners were Polish for the first two years They died of starvation brutal mistreatment beating and sickness and were executed and killed in the gas chambers a b c Piper 2000b pp 230 231 also see Piper 1998b pp 71 72 a b Lasik 2000b p 116 n 19 Evans 2005 p 7 Browning 2004 p 424 Longerich 2010 pp 32 35 41 Longerich 2010 pp 38 39 Longerich 2010 pp 41 67 69 Longerich 2010 p 60 Browning 2004 pp 24 26 Longerich 2010 p 144 Haar 2009 pp 41 46 Cesarani 2016 p xxxiii Piper 2000b p 117 Matthaus 2004 p 244 Gerlach 2016 pp 84 85 Killing Centers An Overview Holocaust Encyclopedia United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Archived from the original on 14 September 2017 a b Dwork amp van Pelt 2002 p 362 Piper 2000a pp 52 53 Dwork amp van Pelt 2002 p 166 a b c Gutman 1998 p 16 Piper 2000a pp 52 53 also see Iwaszko 2000b p 51 Dwork amp van Pelt 2002 p 166 Iwaszko 2000a p 15 Czech 2000 p 121 for serial number 1 Strzelecka amp Setkiewicz 2000 p 65 Czech 2000 pp 121 122 Strzelecka amp Setkiewicz 2000 p 71 Strzelecka amp Setkiewicz 2000 pp 72 73 a b Dwork amp van Pelt 2002 p 364 Piper 2000b p 121 Piper 2000b pp 121 133 Piper 1998c pp 158 159 a b c d Piper 2000b p 128 Dwork amp van Pelt 2002 p 292 Piper 1998c pp 157 158 Piper 2000b p 117 Czech 2000 p 142 Swiebocki 2002 pp 126 127 n 50 Piper 2000a p 61 Hoss 2003 p 148 a b Czech 2000 p 142 van Pelt 1998 p 145 Piper 2000a p 61 Steinbacher 2005 p 107 Anniversary of the First Transport of Polish Jews to Auschwitz Auschwitz Birkenau State Museum 13 February 2006 Fulbrook 2012 pp 220 221 396 n 49 Friedlander 2007 p 359 Browning 2004 p 357 Wachsmann 2015 p 707 a b Czech 2000 p 143 a b c d e Czech 2000 p 144 Piper 2000a p 62 a b Piper 2000b p 133 n 419 a b Muller 1999 p 31 Piper 2000b p 133 Piper 2000b p 132 for more on the corpses p 140 for 400 prisoners and over 107 000 corpses see Czech 2000 p 165 a b Piper 2000b p 144 Hayes 2003 p 335 Piper 2000b pp 144 155 for Kriegsgefangenenlager Strzelecka amp Setkiewicz 2000 pp 80 83 van Pelt 1998 pp 118 119 van Pelt 1998 pp 122 123 Strzelecka amp Setkiewicz 2000 p 87 Czech 2000 pp 138 139 Steinbacher 2005 p 94 Piper 2000b pp 134 136 also see Piper 1998c p 161 Pressac amp van Pelt 1998 pp 214 215 also see Piper 2000b p 138 Piper 2000b p 143 Piper 2000b pp 165 166 Piper 2000b p 159 Piper 2000b p 164 Steinbacher 2005 p 45 Hilberg 1998 pp 81 82 Steinbacher 2005 p 49 Strzelecka amp Setkiewicz 2000 p 108 for IG Auschwitz see Hayes 2001 p xii Strzelecka amp Setkiewicz 2000 p 108 Strzelecka amp Setkiewicz 2000 pp 109 110 Strzelecka amp Setkiewicz 2000 pp 111 112 Lasik 2000a pp 151 152 Steinbacher 2005 p 53 Strzelecka amp Setkiewicz 2000 p 112 Hayes 2001 p 353 Hayes 2001 p 359 Krakowski 1998 p 57 Hayes 2001 p 364 Steinbacher 2005 pp 52 56 Hayes 2001 p 367 Strzelecka amp Setkiewicz 2000 p 115 that when the camp was evacuated 9 054 of the 9 792 inmates were Jews see Strzelecka amp Setkiewicz 2000 p 113 Strzelecka amp Setkiewicz 2000 p 115 Steinbacher 2005 p 57 Strzelecka amp Setkiewicz 2000 pp 103 104 Strzelecka amp Setkiewicz 2000 pp 103 119 Gutman 1998 p 17 Gutman 1998 p 18 Piper 1998a p 45 Steinbacher 2005 p 58 Gutman 1998 pp 17 18 Strzelecka amp Setkiewicz 2000 p 106 Kubica 2009 pp 233 234 Also see The Budy Massacre A grim anniversary Auschwitz Birkenau State Museum 10 October 2007 Dunin Wasowicz 1984 p 139 Strzelecka amp Setkiewicz 2000 p 104 Wilkinson Alec 17 March 2008 Picturing Auschwitz The New Yorker Archived from the original on 8 December 2012 Retrieved 3 January 2020 Lasik 1998b p 288 Lasik 2000b p 154 a b c d e Lasik 2000a p 154 Harding 2013 p 100 Lasik 1998b pp 294 295 Lasik 2000a pp 153 157 Lasik 2000b p 314 Lasik 1998a p 282 Lasik 2000b p 299 Lasik 1998a p 274 Lasik 2000b pp 323 324 Lasik 1998a p 273 Lasik 1998a pp 272 273 Lasik 1998a p 285 a b Strzelecka 2000a p 49 Steinbacher 2005 pp 35 36 Wittmann 2003 pp 519 520 Piper 2000b p 180 Piper 2000b pp 180 181 184 Piper 2000b pp 170 171 Piper 2000b p 189 Piper 2000b pp 190 191 Piper 2000b pp 180 181 Piper 2000b pp 188 189 Steinbacher 2005 pp 90 91 Gutman 1998 p 20 a b Tattoos and Numbers The System of Identifying Prisoners at Auschwitz United States Holocaust Memorial Museum System of triangles Auschwitz Birkenau State Museum Archived from the original on 5 July 2018 Persecution of Homosexuals in the Third Reich United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Steinbacher 2005 pp 31 32 a b c An Original German Train Car at the Birkenau Ramp Auschwitz Birkenau State Museum 14 October 2009 Archived from the original on 25 January 2019 a b Iwaszko 2000a p 17 Piper 1998c p 162 a b Longerich 2010 p 408 Strzelecka 2000b pp 65 66 Iwaszko 2000b p 56 Levi 2001 p 45 Iwaszko 2000b p 60 Strzelecka 2000b p 66 Steinbacher 2005 p 33 Life in the camp living conditions Auschwitz Birkenau State Museum Archived from the original on 19 March 2016 Retrieved 3 January 2020 Strzelecka 2000b p 67 Steinbacher 2005 p 33 Gutman 1998 pp 20 21 Iwaszko 2000b pp 60 61 Strzelecka 2000b pp 68 69 Strzelecka 2000b p 69 Gutman 1998 p 21 Iwaszko 2000b p 55 for the floor see Strzelecka 2000b p 70 Iwaszko 2000b p 55 Nyiszli 2011 p 25 Gutman 1998 p 21 Steinbacher 2005 p 34 Rosen 2014 p 18 a b Strzelecka 2000c p 171 a b Czech 2000 pp 143 144 Strzelecka 2000c p 177 Stangneth 2014 p 22 Strzelecka 2000c p 172 Czech 2000 p 155 Strzelecka 2000c pp 172 173 a b c Strzelecka amp Setkiewicz 2000 p 88 Strzelecka 2000c p 174 Perl 1948 pp 32 33 van Pelt 1998 p 133 Strzelecka 2000c p 176 Steinbacher 2005 pp 114 115 Strzelecka 2000d p 362 a b Kubica 1998 p 319 Czech 2000 p 178 Kubica 1998 pp 320 323 a b Kubica 1998 p 325 Friedlander 2007 p 505 Kubica 1998 pp 323 324 Kater 2000 pp 124 125 Spitz 2005 pp 232 234 Mehring 2015 pp 161 163 Strzelecka 2000d pp 371 372 a b Strzelecka 2000e pp 373 376 Strzelecka 2000e pp 384 385 Strzelecka 2000e p 389 Strzelecka 2000e p 381 Strzelecka 2000e pp 382 384 a b Piper 2000b p 77 a b Piper 2000b p 79 Czech 2000 p 139 Piper 2000b p 102 Piper 2000b p 87 Piper 2000b p 89 Piper 2000b pp 89 90 Romani children in an orphanage in Germany United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Bauer 1998 pp 447 448 a b Bauer 1998 p 448 Piper 2000b p 55 note 145 Bauer 1998 pp 449 450 a b c Strzelecka amp Setkiewicz 2000 p 96 Czech 2000 p 185 a b Keren 1998 p 429 Keren 1998 p 428 Czech 2000 pp 190 191 Czech 2000 p 194 Keren 1998 p 439 Strzelecka amp Setkiewicz 2000 p 97 Fleming 2014 pp 231 232 Fleming 2014 p 215 Czech 2000 p 203 Dwork amp van Pelt 2002 p 363 Piper 1998c pp 157 159 Piper 1998c pp 159 160 Jewish women and children who have been selected for death walk in a line towards the gas chambers United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Piper 1998c pp 161 162 a b Piper 1998c p 174 Piper 1998c p 175 Piper 2000b pp 12 13 Browning 2004 p 421 Longerich 2010 p 407 a b Dwork amp van Pelt 2002 p 338 Dwork amp van Pelt 2002 pp 341 343 Piper 2000b p 227 Piper 2000b p 229 Piper 2000b p 103ff Piper 2000b pp 109 110 Piper 2000b p 111 Piper 1998c pp 162 169 Strzelecka amp Setkiewicz 2000 pp 97 98 Baxter 2017 p 241 Piper 1998c pp 166 168 Piper 2000b p 169 n 489 Piper 2000b p 169 n 490 Piper 2000b p 169 Piper 1998c p 162 also see Piper 2000b p 170 a b Piper 2000b p 170 Cohen 1998 pp 529 531 Langfus 2000 p 357 a b Strzelecki 2000b p 408 a b c Strzelecki 2000b p 409 Strzelecki 2000b p 411 a b Piper 2000b p 171 a b Strzelecki 2000b p 400 Strzelecki 2000b p 406 Piper 1998c p 171 Piper 1991 pp 49 103 van Pelt 2016 p 109 also see Stets Dan 7 May 1992 Fixing the numbers at Auschwitz Chicago Tribune van Pelt 2016 p 109 Hilberg 1961 p 958 also see Piper 2000b p 214 Piper 1998b p 67 Piper 2000b p 214 Hoss 2003 p 188 also see Friedlander 2007 p 404 Piper 2000b pp 210 213 The International Military Tribunal Nuremberg 1946 p 415 The International Military Tribunal Nuremberg 1946 p 397 Hoss 2003 p 193 Hoss 2003 p 194 a b Snyder 2010 p 383 Ethnic origins and number of victims of Auschwitz Auschwitz Birkenau State Museum Archived from the original on 2 February 2019 Snyder 2010 p 275 Jehovah s Witnesses Auschwitz Birkenau State Museum Fleming 2014 p 194 Zarembina amp Harriman 1944 Krahelska 1985 a b c Fleming 2014 p 131 a b Czech 2000 p 177 a b Bartrop 2016 p 210 Swiebocki 2000 pp 68 69 n 115 Fleming 2014 pp 131 132 Fleming 2014 p 132 Fleming 2014 p 133 Steinbacher 2005 p 116 Fleming 2014 p 135 Mais Engel amp Fogelman 2007 p 73 Nyiszli 2011 p 124 Didi Huberman 2008 p 16 Fleming 2016 pp 63 65 For Wiejowski Swiebocki 2000 p 194 for the rest pp 232 233 a b Swiebocki 2000 p 233 Swiebocki 2000 p 192 Czech 2000 p 150 also see Khaleeli Homa 11 April 2011 I escaped from Auschwitz The Guardian Swiebocki 2000 pp 203 204 Swiebocki 2002 p 12 13 23 Szabo 2011 p 94 Fleming 2014 p 230 Swiebocki 2002 p 58 The Extermination Camps of Auschwitz Oswiecim and Birkenau in Upper Silesia War Refugee Board 26 November 1944 a b Biddle 2000 p 36 Westermann 2004 p 197 Kitchens 2000 pp 80 81 Neufeld 2000 pp 1 2 Neufeld 2000 pp 4 5 9 10 Gradowski 1989 p 548 Piper 2000b pp 181 187 Friedlander 2007 p 581 Muller 1999 pp 153 154 Muller 1999 pp 155 156 for three killed SS men see Greif 2005 p 43 Greif 2005 p 44 Greif 2005 p 44 also see Piper 2000b p 187 Strzelecki 2000a p 54 Gradowski 1989 Gradowski 2017 From the Heart of Hell Publication with manuscripts of Zalmen Gradowski a member of Sonderkommando at Auschwitz Auschwitz Birkenau State Museum 27 February 2018 Steinbacher 2005 p 109 Evans 2008 p 655 Piper 2000b p 173 Cesarani 2016 p 747 Piper 2000b pp 173 174 Czech 2000 p 227 a b Strzelecki 2000a p 30 Friedlander 2007 p 648 Strzelecki 2000a pp 41 42 Strzelecki 2000a pp 27 36 for an estimated two thirds were Jews see Longerich 2010 p 415 Strzelecki 2000a pp 27 29 Longerich 2010 p 415 Wachsmann 2015 pp 335 597 598 Strzelecki 2000a p 44 Piper 2000b p 174 Czech 2000 p 230 Strzelecki 2000a pp 47 48 a b Stone 2015 p 45 Strzelecki 2000b p 410 Levi 2001 p 187 Levi 2001 p 188 Strzelecki 2000a p 48 Strzelecki 2000a pp 49 50 also see First help Auschwitz Birkenau State Museum Stone 2015 p 46 Rees 2005 p 262 Wachsmann 2015 p 10 Lasik 2000b pp 108 113 Lasik 2000b p 110 Lasik 1998b p 296 for Franz Lang and Flensburg see Hoss 2003 p 173 for Hoss s testimony see The International Military Tribunal Nuremberg 1946 p 396ff a b Lasik 1998b p 296 Hoss 2003 Publisher s Note Lasik 1998b pp 296 297 Lasik 2000a pp 296 297 Steinbacher 2005 pp 138 139 Steinbacher 2005 p 140 Evans 2008 p 744 Wittmann 2005 p 3 Wollheim Memorial www wollheim memorial de Retrieved 1 October 2022 Snyder 2010 pp 382 383 General Assembly designates International Holocaust Remembrance Day UN News 1 November 2005 Archived from the original on 5 September 2018 Butturini Paula 15 November 1989 Kohl visits Auschwitz vows no repetition of unspeakable harm Chicago Tribune Archived from the original on 20 July 2019 Kinzer Stephen 28 January 1995 Germans Reflect on Meaning of Auschwitz The New York Times Archived from the original on 10 April 2019 Halbfinger David M 22 January 2020 World Leaders Gathering to Mark Holocaust Are Urged to Fight Deadly Cancer The New York Times Archived from the original on 22 January 2020 Holmes Oliver 22 January 2020 Jerusalem hosts largest ever political gathering for Holocaust forum The Guardian Auschwitz 75 years on Holocaust Day prompts new anti Semitism warnings BBC News 27 January 2020 Simpson Mona June 2007 If This Is a Man The Atlantic Levi 2017 pp 35 36 Norwegian Nobel Committee 1986 Simone Veil Holocaust survivor and first female President of the European Parliament 1927 2017 Archived 21 November 2019 at the Wayback Machine European Commission Espin 2008 for Kolbe see p 139 Auschwitz Birkenau 4 out of 10 German students don t know what it was Deutsche Welle 28 September 2017 Archived from the original on 28 September 2017 Posener Alan 9 April 2018 German TV Is Sanitizing History Foreign Policy New Survey by Claims Conference Finds Significant Lack of Holocaust Knowledge in the United States Claims Conference 2018 Archived from the original on 12 April 2018 Astor Maggie 12 April 2018 Holocaust Is Fading From Memory Survey Finds The New York Times Archived from the original on 18 April 2018 Greene Richard Allen November 2018 CNN poll reveals depth of anti Semitism in Europe CNN Archived from the original on 27 November 2018 Dwork amp van Pelt 2002 p 364 Steinbacher 2005 p 132 Dwork amp van Pelt 2002 p 364ff Permanent exhibition Auschwitz I UNESCO World Heritage List Curry Andrew February 2010 Can Auschwitz Be Saved Smithsonian Auschwitz museum plans traveling exhibition Deutsche Welle 27 July 2017 Carroll 2002 Berger 2017 p 165 Dwork amp van Pelt 2002 pp 369 370 Carroll 2002 Berger 2017 p 166 Rabbi unhappy at Auschwitz cross decision BBC News 27 August 1998 Berger 2017 p 166 Berger 2017 p 167 Barkat Amiram and agencies 4 September 2003 IAF Pilots Perform Fly over at Auschwitz Death Camp Haaretz Archived from the original on 19 June 2018 a b BBC News 2015a Connolly Kate 27 January 2015 Auschwitz liberation ceremony will be the last for many survivors present The Guardian BBC 2016 Court fines UK teens for stealing from Auschwitz The Jewish News Jewish Telegraphic Agency 30 March 2017 Paterson Tom 31 December 2010 Former neo Nazi jailed for Auschwitz sign theft The Independent Henley Jen 1 February 2018 Poland provokes Israeli anger with Holocaust speech law The Guardian Davies Christian 7 May 2018 Poland s Holocaust law triggers tide of abuse against Auschwitz museum The Guardian Davies Christian 27 June 2018 Poland makes partial U turn on Holocaust law after Israel row The Guardian Works cited Auschwitz Birkenau German Nazi Concentration and Extermination Camp 1940 1945 World Heritage List UNESCO Archived from the original on 22 November 2019 Bartrop Paul R 2016 Resisting the Holocaust Upstanders Partisans and Survivors New York ABC CLIO ISBN 978 1 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Camps Jerusalem Yad Vashem pp 133 142 OCLC 11889621 Dwork Deborah van Pelt Robert Jan 2002 1996 Auschwitz 1270 to the Present New York W W Norton amp Company ISBN 0 393 32291 2 Fulbrook Mary 2012 A Small Town Near Auschwitz Ordinary Nazis and the Holocaust Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 967925 6 Espin Oliva M Spring 2008 The destiny of this people is my own Edith Stein s paradoxical sainthood CrossCurrents 58 1 117 148 doi 10 1111 j 1939 3881 2008 00008 x JSTOR 24461656 Evans Richard J 2005 The Third Reich in Power New York Penguin Books ISBN 1 59420 074 2 Evans Richard J 2008 The Third Reich at War New York Penguin ISBN 978 0 14 311671 4 Fleming Michael 2014 Auschwitz the Allies and Censorship of the Holocaust Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1 139 91727 8 Fleming Michael 30 August 2016 Geographies of obligation and the dissemination of news of the Holocaust Holocaust Studies 23 1 2 59 75 doi 10 1080 17504902 2016 1209834 S2CID 147829212 Friedlander Saul 2007 The Years of Extermination Nazi Germany and the Jews 1939 1945 New York HarperCollins ISBN 978 0 06 019043 9 Gerlach Christian 2016 The Extermination of the European Jews Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 88078 7 Gradowski Zalmen 1989 The Czech Transport A Chronicle of the Auschwitz Sonderkommando In Roskies David ed The Literature of Destruction Jewish Responses to Catastrophe Philadelphia The Jewish Publication Society pp 548 564 ISBN 978 0827603141 Gradowski Zalmen 2017 From the Heart of Hell Manuscripts of a Sonderkommando Prisoner Found in Auschwitz Oswiecim Auschwitz Birkenau State Museum ISBN 978 8377042465 Greif Gideon 2005 We Wept Without Tears Testimonies of the Jewish Sonderkommando from Auschwitz New Haven CT Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 13198 7 Gutman Yisrael 1998 1994 Auschwitz An Overview In Gutman Yisrael Berenbaum Michael eds Anatomy of the Auschwitz Death Camp Bloomington IN Indiana University Press pp 5 33 ISBN 0 253 32684 2 Haar Ingo 2009 Inklusion und Genozid Raum und Bevolkerungspolitik im besetzten Polen 1939 bis 1944 In Beer Mathias Beyrau Dietrich Rauh Cornelia eds Deutschsein als Grenzerfahrung Minderheitenpolitik in Europa zwischen 1914 und 1950 in German Klartext pp 35 59 ISBN 978 3837500974 Harding Thomas 2013 Hanns and Rudolf The German Jew and the Hunt for the Kommandant of Auschwitz New York Simon amp Schuster ISBN 978 1 4767 1184 3 Hayes Peter 2001 1987 Industry and Ideology IG Farben in the Nazi Era Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 78110 8 Hayes Peter 2003 Auschwitz Capital of the Holocaust Holocaust and Genocide Studies 17 2 330 350 doi 10 1093 hgs dcg005 S2CID 144058870 Hilberg Raul 1961 The Destruction of the European Jews New Haven London Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 09592 0 Hilberg Raul 1998 1994 Auschwitz and the Final Solution In Gutman Yisrael Berenbaum Michael eds Anatomy of the Auschwitz Death Camp Bloomington IN Indiana University Press pp 81 92 ISBN 0 253 32684 2 Hoess Rudolf 2003 1951 Commandant of Auschwitz The Autobiography of Rudolf Hoess Translated by Constantine FitzGibbon London Phoenix Press ISBN 1 84212 024 7 One Hundredth and Eighth Day Monday 15 April 1946 Morning Session PDF Nuremberg The International Military Tribunal 15 April 1946 pp 396 422 Archived PDF from the original on 9 October 2022 Iwaszko Tadeusz 2000a Reasons for confinement in the camp and categories of prisoners In Dlugoborski Waclaw Piper Franciszek eds Auschwitz 1940 1945 Central Issues in the History of the Camp Vol I The Establishment and Organization of the Camp Oswiecim Auschwitz Birkenau State Museum pp 11 43 ISBN 978 8385047872 OCLC 874340863 Iwaszko Tadeusz 2000b The Housing Clothing and Feeding of the Prisoners In Dlugoborski Waclaw Piper Franciszek eds Auschwitz 1940 1945 Central Issues in the History of the Camp Vol II The Prisoners Their Life and Work Oswiecim Auschwitz Birkenau State Museum pp 51 63 ISBN 978 8385047872 OCLC 874337926 Kater Michael H 2000 Doctors Under Hitler Chapel Hill University of North Carolina Press ISBN 978 0 8078 4858 6 Keren Nili 1998 1994 The Family Camp In Gutman Yisrael Berenbaum Michael eds Anatomy of the Auschwitz Death Camp Bloomington IN Indiana University Press pp 428 440 ISBN 0 253 32684 2 Kitchens James H 2000 The Bombing of Auschwitz Re examined In Neufeld Michael J Berenbaum Michael eds The Bombing of Auschwitz Should the Allies Have Attempted It New York St Martin s Press pp 80 100 ISBN 0 312 19838 8 Krahelska Halina January 1985 1942 Oswiecim Pamietnik wieznia Auschwitz Diary of a prisoner WIeZ in Polish Warsaw Towarzystwo WIeZ 1 3 315 5 47 Archived from the original on 9 August 2017 Retrieved 27 April 2014 Krakowski Shmuel 1998 1994 The Satellite Camps In Gutman Yisrael Berenbaum Michael eds Anatomy of the Auschwitz Death Camp Bloomington IN Indiana University Press pp 50 60 ISBN 0 253 32684 2 Kubica Helena 1998 1994 The Crimes of Josef Mengele In Gutman Yisrael Berenbaum Michael eds Anatomy of the Auschwitz Death Camp Bloomington IN Indiana University Press pp 317 337 ISBN 0 253 32684 2 Kubica Helena 2009 Budy In Megargee Geoffrey P ed Encyclopedia of Camps and Ghettos 1933 1945 Volume 1 Indiana University Press in association with the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum pp 233 234 ISBN 978 0 253 35328 3 Langfus Leib 2000 Appendix 3 Notes by Members of the Sonderkommando The Extermination Procedure in the Bunker In Dlugoborski Waclaw Piper Franciszek eds Auschwitz 1940 1945 Central Issues in the History of the Camp Vol IV The Resistance Movement Oswiecim Auschwitz Birkenau State Museum ISBN 978 8385047872 OCLC 874233579 Lasik Aleksander 1998a 1994 Historical Sociological Profile of the Auschwitz SS In Gutman Yisrael Berenbaum Michael eds Anatomy of the Auschwitz Death Camp Bloomington IN Indiana University Press pp 271 287 ISBN 0 253 32684 2 Lasik Aleksander 1998b 1994 Rudolf Hoss Manager of Crime In Gutman Yisrael Berenbaum Michael eds Anatomy of the Auschwitz Death Camp Bloomington IN Indiana University Press pp 288 300 ISBN 0 253 32684 2 Lasik Aleksander 2000a Organizational Structure of Auschwitz Concentration Camp In Dlugoborski Waclaw Piper Franciszek eds Auschwitz 1940 1945 Central Issues in the History of the Camp Vol I The Establishment and Organization of the Camp Oswiecim Auschwitz Birkenau State Museum pp 145 279 ISBN 978 8385047872 OCLC 874340863 Lasik Aleksander 2000b The Apprehension and Punishment of the Auschwitz Concentration Camp Staff In Dlugoborski Waclaw Piper Franciszek eds Auschwitz 1940 1945 Central Issues in the History of the Camp Vol V Epilogue Oswiecim Auschwitz Birkenau State Museum pp 99 117 ISBN 978 8385047872 OCLC 929235229 Levi Primo 2001 1947 and 1963 If This is a Man and The Truce London Little Brown Abacus ISBN 0 349 10013 6 Levi Primo 2017 1986 The Drowned and the Saved New York Simon amp Schuster Paperbacks ISBN 978 1 5011 6763 8 Longerich Peter 2010 Holocaust The Nazi Persecution and Murder of the Jews Oxford and New York Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 280436 5 Mais Yitzchak Engel David Fogelman Eva 2007 Daring to Resist Jewish Defiance in the Holocaust New York Museum of Jewish Heritage ISBN 978 0 9716859 2 5 Matthaus Jurgen 2004 Operation Barbarossa and the Onset of the Holocaust June December 1941 In Browning Christopher ed The Origins of the Final Solution The Evolution of Nazi Jewish Policy September 1939 March 1942 Lincoln and Jerusalem University of Nebraska Press and Yad Vashem pp 244 308 ISBN 0 8032 1327 1 Mehring Sigrid 2015 First Do No Harm Medical Ethics in International Humanitarian Law Leiden Brill ISBN 978 90 04 27916 2 Muller Filip 1999 1979 Eyewitness Auschwitz Three Years in the Gas Chambers Chicago Ivan R Dee ISBN 978 1566632713 Neufeld Michael J 2000 Introduction to the Controversy In Neufeld Michael J Berenbaum Michael eds The Bombing of Auschwitz Should the Allies Have Attempted It New York St Martin s Press pp 1 9 ISBN 0 312 19838 8 The Nobel Peace Prize for 1986 Norwegian Nobel Committee 14 October 1986 Retrieved 25 August 2013 Nyiszli Miklos 2011 1960 Auschwitz A Doctor s Eyewitness Account New York Arcade Publishing ISBN 978 1 61145 011 8 Perl Gisella 1948 I Was a Doctor in Auschwitz New York International Universities Press OCLC 937965417 Permanent exhibition grounds of former Auschwitz I Concentration Camp Auschwitz Birkenau State Museum Archived from the original on 1 May 2014 Retrieved 10 February 2016 Piper Franciszek 1991 Estimating the Number of Deportees to and Victims of the Auschwitz Birkenau Camp Yad Vashem Studies XXI 49 103 ISSN 0084 3296 Piper Franciszek 1998a 1994 The System of Prisoner Exploitation In Gutman Yisrael Berenbaum Michael eds Anatomy of the Auschwitz Death Camp Bloomington IN Indiana University Press pp 34 49 ISBN 0 253 32684 2 Piper Franciszek 1998b 1994 The Number of Victims In Gutman Yisrael Berenbaum Michael eds Anatomy of the Auschwitz Death Camp Bloomington IN Indiana University Press pp 61 76 ISBN 0 253 32684 2 Piper Franciszek 1998c 1994 Gas Chambers and Crematoria In Gutman Yisrael Berenbaum Michael eds Anatomy of the Auschwitz Death Camp Bloomington IN Indiana University Press pp 157 182 ISBN 0 253 32684 2 Piper Franciszek 2000a The Origins of the Camp In Dlugoborski Waclaw Piper Franciszek eds Auschwitz 1940 1945 Central Issues in the History of the Camp Vol I The Establishment and Organization of the Camp Oswiecim Auschwitz Birkenau State Museum pp 39 62 ISBN 978 8385047872 OCLC 929235229 Piper Franciszek 2000b Dlugoborski Waclaw Piper Franciszek eds Auschwitz 1940 1945 Central Issues in the History of the Camp Vol III Mass Murder Oswiecim Auschwitz Birkenau State Museum ISBN 978 8385047872 OCLC 929235229 Pressac Jean Claude van Pelt Robert Jan 1998 1994 The Machinery of Mass Murder at Auschwitz In Gutman Yisrael Berenbaum Michael eds Anatomy of the Auschwitz Death Camp Bloomington IN Indiana University Press pp 183 245 ISBN 0 253 32684 2 Rees Laurence 2005 Auschwitz A New History New York Public Affairs member of Perseus Books Group ISBN 1 58648 303 X Rosen Alan 2014 Tracking Jewish time in Auschwitz Yad Vashem Studies Yad Vashem 42 2 11 46 OCLC 1029349665 Snyder Timothy 2010 Bloodlands Europe Between Hitler and Stalin New York Basic Books ISBN 978 0 465 00239 9 Spitz Vivien 2005 Doctors from Hell the Horrific Account of Nazi Experiments on Humans Boulder Colorado Sentient ISBN 978 1 59181 032 2 Staff 27 January 2015 Auschwitz 70th anniversary Survivors warn of new crimes BBC News Retrieved 27 January 2015 Staff 9 September 2016 British school students stole Auschwitz artefacts BBC News Retrieved 10 September 2016 Stangneth Bettina 2014 Eichmann Before Jerusalem The Unexamined Life of a Mass Murderer New York Alfred A Knopf ISBN 978 0 307 95967 6 Steinbacher Sybille 2005 2004 Auschwitz A History New York Ecco Press ISBN 0 06 082581 2 Stone Dan 2015 The Liberation of the Camps The End of the Holocaust and Its Aftermath New Haven and London Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 20457 5 Strzelecka Irena Setkiewicz Piotr 2000 The Construction Expansion and Development of the Camp and its Branches In Dlugoborski Waclaw Piper Franciszek eds Auschwitz 1940 1945 Central Issues in the History of the Camp Vol I The Establishment and Organization of the Camp Oswiecim Auschwitz Birkenau State Museum pp 63 138 ISBN 978 8385047872 OCLC 874340863 Strzelecka Irena 2000a Quarantine on Arrival In Dlugoborski Waclaw Piper Franciszek eds Auschwitz 1940 1945 Central Issues in the History of the Camp Vol II The Prisoners Their Life and Work Oswiecim Auschwitz Birkenau State Museum pp 45 50 ISBN 978 8385047872 OCLC 874337926 Strzelecka Irena 2000b The Working Day for Auschwitz Prisoners In Dlugoborski Waclaw Piper Franciszek eds Auschwitz 1940 1945 Central Issues in the History of the Camp Vol II The Prisoners Their Life and Work Oswiecim Auschwitz Birkenau State Museum pp 65 70 ISBN 978 8385047872 OCLC 874337926 Strzelecka Irena 2000c Women in the Auschwitz Concentration Camp In Dlugoborski Waclaw Piper Franciszek eds Auschwitz 1940 1945 Central Issues in the History of the Camp Vol II The Prisoners Their Life and Work Oswiecim Auschwitz Birkenau State Museum pp 171 200 ISBN 978 8385047872 OCLC 874337926 Strzelecka Irena 2000d Experiments In Dlugoborski Waclaw Piper Franciszek eds Auschwitz 1940 1945 Central Issues in the History of the Camp Vol II The Prisoners Their Life and Work Oswiecim Auschwitz Birkenau State Museum pp 347 369 ISBN 978 8385047872 OCLC 874337926 Strzelecka Irena 2000e Punishment and Torture In Dlugoborski Waclaw Piper Franciszek eds Auschwitz 1940 1945 Central Issues in the History of the Camp Vol II The Prisoners Their Life and Work Oswiecim Auschwitz Birkenau State Museum pp 372 398 ISBN 978 8385047872 OCLC 874337926 Strzelecki Andrzej 2000a The Liquidation of the Camp In Dlugoborski Waclaw Piper Franciszek eds Auschwitz 1940 1945 Central Issues in the History of the Camp Vol V Epilogue Oswiecim Auschwitz Birkenau State Museum pp 9 85 ISBN 978 8385047872 OCLC 929235229 Strzelecki Andrzej 2000b Utilization of the Victims Corpses In Dlugoborski Waclaw Piper Franciszek eds Auschwitz 1940 1945 Central Issues in the History of the Camp Vol II The Prisoners Their Life and Work Oswiecim Auschwitz Birkenau State Museum pp 399 418 ISBN 978 8385047872 OCLC 929235229 Swiebocki Henryk 2000 Dlugoborski Waclaw Piper Franciszek eds Auschwitz 1940 1945 Central Issues in the History of the Camp Vol IV The Resistance Movement Oswiecim Auschwitz Birkenau State Museum ISBN 978 8385047872 OCLC 874233579 Swiebocki Henryk ed 2002 London Has Been Informed Reports by Auschwitz Escapees Oswiecim The Auschwitz Birkenau State Museum Szabo Zoltan Tibori 2011 The Auschwitz Reports Who Got Them and When In Braham Randolph L vanden Heuvel William eds The Auschwitz Reports and the Holocaust in Hungary New York Columbia University Press van Pelt Robert Jan 1998 1994 A Site in Search of a Mission In Gutman Yisrael Berenbaum Michael eds Anatomy of the Auschwitz Death Camp Bloomington IN Indiana University Press pp 93 156 ISBN 0 253 32684 2 van Pelt Robert Jan 2016 2002 The Case for Auschwitz Evidence from the Irving Trial Bloomington IN Indiana University Press ISBN 978 0 253 02298 1 Westermann Edward B 2004 The Royal Air Force and the bombing of Auschwitz first deliberations January 1941 In Cesarani David ed Holocaust Volume 5 Responses to the persecution and mass murder of the Jews London Routledge pp 195 211 ISBN 978 0415318716 Wachsmann Nikolaus 2015 KL A History of the Nazi Concentration Camps New York Farrar Straus and Giroux ISBN 978 0 374 11825 9 Wittmann Rebecca Elizabeth October 2003 Indicting Auschwitz The Paradox of the Frankfurt Auschwitz Trial German History 21 4 505 532 doi 10 1191 0266355403gh294oa Wittmann Rebecca 2005 Beyond Justice The Auschwitz Trial Cambridge MA Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0674016941 Zarembina Natalia Harriman Florence Jaffray 1944 Oswiecim Camp of Death Underground Report New York Poland Fights OCLC 3899327 Further readingBorowski Tadeusz 1992 1976 This Way for the Gas Ladies and Gentlemen Trans from the Polish by Barbara Vedder East Rutherford Penguin Books ISBN 0 14 018624 7 Glenday James 23 February 2018 Life next to the world s most notorious concentration camp ABC News Australia Huener Jonathan 2003 Auschwitz Poland and the Politics of Commemoration 1945 1979 Athens Ohio University Press ISBN 0 8214 1506 9 Pilecki Witold 2012 The Auschwitz Volunteer Beyond Bravery Trans from the Polish by Jarek Garlinski Los Angeles Aquila Polonica ISBN 978 1 60772 010 2 Polish Ministry of Information 1942 The Black Book of Poland New York G P Putnam s Sons pp 87 88 OCLC 489805 Raczynski Edward 1941 German Occupation of Poland Extract of note addressed to the allied and neutral powers London and New York Republic of Poland Ministry of Foreign Affairs Greystone Press Trial of the Major War Criminals before the International Military Tribunal Nuremberg 14 November 1945 1 October 1946 External links Wikiquote has quotations related to Auschwitz concentration camp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Auschwitz concentration camp Wikivoyage has a travel guide for Auschwitz Birkenau Drone footage 2015 on YouTube Google Earth Auschwitz Birkenau State Museum Auschwitz United States Holocaust Memorial Museum The Auschwitz Album Yad Vashem Auschwitz Birkenau photographs by Bill Hunt Portals Germany Poland World War II Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Auschwitz concentration camp amp oldid 1134374331, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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