THE
SEVENTY FIFTH ANNIVERSARY OF THE CLOSING OF THE DEATH CAMP IN POLAND
If you click your mouse on the underlined
words, you will get more information.
The death camp was
called Auschwitz and it comprised of two sites: Auschwitz I, in an abandoned Polish
military base and the larger Auschwitz II, also called Birkenau. An
estimated 1.3 million men, women and children were sent to Auschwitz, and 1.1
million of them died there including 960,000 Jews between 1940 and 1945.
Seventy-five years
ago (1945) Russian army soldiers arrived at that death camp and rescued the
remaining survivors. The Nazi’s largest death camp was liberated by the Soviet Red
Army on January 27, 1945.
Those survivors who
still had their strength, grabbed a number of camp guards and threw them into
the flaming crematorium ovens while they were still alive.
On January 26th
2020, hundreds of survivors while sitting at the back entrance of the camp (and
who were children in 1945) celebrated the seventy-fifth anniversary of the release
of the survivors from that death camp.
One of the
survivors said that when he was 17 years old, he and his family arrived at the
amp. He said that his mother and little sister were taken to the building where
the gas chamber was located. He said that he watched the women and children
being marched in a long line towards the gas chamber. He said he was able to watch
his mother and sister in the long line of the victims by looking at his little
sister`s bright red coat. Soon after, the red coat couldn`t be seen anymore since
his sister and mother were marched with the others into the gas chamber. He said that years later, whenever he saw a
little girl wearing a bright red coat, tears flowed from his eyes.
During the trials of the major war
criminals at the Nuremberg Tribunal hearings, the judges heard the testimony of
a German engineer. He said that while he
was walking in a forest, he heard gunfire and soon after, he witnessed the
slaughter of Jews. He said that when a man and his little daughter stood at the
edge of a large pit in the ground, the man was talking to his daughter who knew
that she too would also be shot to death just like the dead persons whose
bodies were lying in the pit below her.
The Nazis murdered one and a half million children while
they were still in power.
Nazi Germany built extermination camps (also called death camps or killing centers) during the Holocaust in World War II to
systematically murdered millions of Jews. Others were
murdered at the death camps as well, including Poles, homosexuals, Soviet
POWs, and Roma. (Gypsies) The
victims of death camps were primarily killed by gassing, either in
permanent installations constructed for this specific purpose or by means
of gas vans. Some Nazi camps, such as Auschwitz and Majdanek, served a dual
purpose before the end of
the war in 1945: extermination by poison gas and also
through extreme
work under starvation conditions.
It is ironic when you think about it. When their
Russian rescuers arrived at the camps, they fed the starving prisoners. Since
the inmates ‘stomachs had shrunk, their stomachs burst and many inmates died after
being fed. A holocaust survivor watched starving concentration camp
prisoners roast and eat the flesh of a dead child just to stay alive.
The concept of mass extermination with the use of stationary
facilities, to which the victims were taken by train, was the result of
earlier Nazi experimentation with chemically manufactured poison gas during the
secretive Aktion T4 euthanasia
programme against hospital patients with mental and physical
disabilities. The technology was adapted, expanded, and applied in wartime
to unsuspecting victims of many ethnic and national groups The Jews were the
primary target, accounting for over 90 percent of the extermination camp death
toll. The genocide of the Jews of Europe was
the Third Reich's "Final Solution to the Jewish question". It is
now collectively known as the Holocaust, during which 11 million victims were also
murdered including six million Jews.
Extermination camps were also set up by the fascist regime of
the Independent
State of Croatia, a puppet state of Germany,
which carried out genocide between 1941 and 1945 against Serbs, Jews, Roma and its Croat and Bosniak Muslim political opponents
.
After the invasion of Poland in September
1939, the secret Action (Action) T4 euthanasia program that
was the systematic murder of German, Austrian and Polish hospital patients with
mental or physical disabilities that was
initiated by the SS in order to eliminate "life
unworthy of life" (German: Lebensunwertes Leben), a Nazi designation for people who had
no right to life. In 1941, the
experience gained in the secretive killing of these hospital patients led to
the creation of extermination camps for the implementation of the Final Solution.
By then, the Jews were
already confined
to new ghettos and interned in Nazi
concentration camps along with other targeted groups,
including Roma, and the Soviet POWs. The Nazi Endlösung der Judenfrage (The Final Solution of the Jewish Question), based on the
systematic killing of Europe's Jews by gassing, began during Operation Reinhard, after the
onset of the Nazi-Soviet
war of June 1941. The adoption of the gassing technology by
Nazi Germany was preceded by a wave of hands-on killings carried out by the
SS Einsatzgruppen, who followed the Wehrmacht army
during Operation
Barbarossa on the Eastern Front.
The camps designed
specifically for the mass gassings of Jews were established in the months
following the Wannsee Conference chaired
by Reinhard Heydrich in
January 1942 in which the principle was made clear that the Jews of Europe were
to be exterminated. Responsibility for the logistics were to be executed by the
programme administrator, Adolf Eichmann. He was later hanged in Israel years later
On the 13th
of October 1941, the SS and Police Leader Odilo Globocnik who was stationing
in Lublin received
an oral order from Reichsführer-SS Heinrich Himmler (who was also the head of the Gestapo) anticipating
the fall of Moscow to
start immediate construction work on the killing centre at Bełżec in
the General Government territory
of occupied Poland. Notably, the order preceded the Wannsee Conference by three
months but the gassings at Kulmhof north of Łódź using gas vans began already in December of
that same year.
Incidentally, I
wrote a play that was published about a group of Jews who were put in one of
those gas vans.
Under Sturmbannführer (leader)
Herbert Lange. a camp camp at Bełżec was
operational by March 1942, with leadership brought in from Germany under the
guise of Organization Todt (OT).
By mid-1942, two more death camps had been built on Polish lands for Operation
Reinhard called Sobibór (ready
in May 1942) under the command of Hauptsturmführer 9(equivalent to a major)
Franz Stangl, and Treblinka (operational by July 1942
under Obersturmführer (senior
assault or storm leader) Irmfried Eberl from T4, who was only doctor to have served in such
a capacity. Auschwitz
concentration camp was fitted with new gassing bunkers in March
1942 Majdanek had
them built in September of that same year.
Here is a breakdown
of the victims of the holocaust.
Jews: six
million. Soviet civilians:
seven million including the Jews living
in Russia. Soviet prisoners: including
Jewish soldiers.
Non-Jewish Polish civilians: three million including 50,00
Jewish soldiers. Serb
civilians (on the territory of Croatia, Bosnia and Herzegovina: 312,000. People
with disabilities living in institutions: 250,00. Roma (Gypsies): 25000. Jehovah's
Witnesses:1,90. Repeat criminal offenders and
so-called asocials: 70.000. German political opponents and resistance activists in
Axis-occupied territory: undetermined.
The murders of the victims took
place in the following extermination camps:
Auschwitz
com Treblinka 2 plex (including Birkenau, Monowitz,
and sub-camps) 1 million. Treblinka: 925,oo0. Belzec: 434500. Sobibor: 167,000. Sobibor : 720,000.
Deaths in other facilities that the
Germans designated as concentration camps:
150,000. Shooting operations and gas
wagons at hundreds of locations in the German-occupied Soviet Union: 1.3
million. Shooting operations in the Soviet Union
(German, Austrian, Czech Jews deported to the Soviet Union: 55,000. Shooting
operations and gas wagons in Serbia: 15,88.
shot or tortured to death in Croatia under the
Ustaša regime: 25,000. Deaths in
ghettos: 800.000.
The
leaders who brought about the deaths of so many human beings were for the most
part, hunted down and executed.
S-Obersturmbannführer Rudolf Höss (1940–1943/1944 was the head
of Auschwitz.
On
the 25th of May 1946, Höss was handed over to Polish authorities,
and the Supreme National Tribunal in Poland tried him for murder. His trial
lasted from the 11th to the 29th of March 1947. During
his trial, when accused of murdering three and a half million people, Höss
replied, "No. Only two and one half million—the rest died from disease and
starvation." Höss was sentenced to death by hanging on the
2nd of April 1947. He was
executed on the 16th of April next to the crematorium of the former
Auschwitz concentration camp. He was hanged on a gallows built
specifically for his execution, at the location of the camp's office of
the Gestapo
and a short distance from the
house he and his family loved in. Today, a board marks the site. Incidentally, he
was dropped a few inches so that he could die slowly. As he was hanging by his neck, he could hear
the voices of the surviving inmates cheering his death.
My next article will be about this
particular war criminal. I am convinced
that you will find it really interesting.
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