Auschwitz-Birkenau
The largest Nazi extermination camp.
Reprinted with
permission from Encyclopedia of the Holocaust (Yad Vashem).
Auschwitz-Birkenau
was the largest Nazi extermination and concentration camp, located in the
Polish town of Oswiecim, 37 miles west of Cracow. One sixth of all Jews
murdered by the Nazis were gassed at Auschwitz. In April 1940 SS chief Heinrich
Himmler ordered the establishment of a new concentration camp in Oswiecim, a
town located within the portion of Poland that was annexed to Germany at the
beginning of World War II. The first Polish political prisoners arrived in
Auschwitz in June 1940, and by March 1941 there were 10,900 prisoners, the
majority of whom were Polish. Auschwitz soon became known as the most brutal of
the Nazi concentration camps.
Building a Murder Complex
In
March 1941 Himmler ordered a second, much larger section of the camp to be
built right near the original camp. This site was to be used as an
extermination camp and was named Birkenau, or Auschwitz II.
Eventually,
Birkenau held the majority of prisoners in the Auschwitz complex, including Jews,
Poles, Germans, and Gypsies. Furthermore, it maintained the most degrading and
inhumane conditions--inclusive of the complex's gas chambers and crematoria. A
third section, Auschwitz III, was constructed in nearby Monowitz, and consisted
of a forced labor camp called Buna-Monowitz.
This
complex incorporated 45 forced labor sub-camps. The name Buna was based on the Buna
synthetic rubber factory on site, owned by I.G. Farben, Germany's largest
chemical company. Most workers at this and other German-owned factories were
Jewish inmates. The labor would push inmates to the point of total exhaustion,
at which time new laborers replaced them.
Auschwitz
was first run by camp commandant Rudolf Hess, and was guarded by a cruel
regiment of the SS Death Head Units. The staff was assisted by several
privileged prisoners who were given better food, conditions, and opportunity to
survive, if they agreed to enforce the brutal order of the camp.
Auschwitz
I and II were surrounded by electrically charged four-meter high barbed wire
fences, guarded by SS men armed with machine guns and rifles. The two camps
were further closed in by a series of guard posts located two thirds of a mile
beyond the fences.
In
March 1942, trains carrying Jews commenced arriving daily. In many instances,
several trains would arrive on the same day, each carrying one thousand or more
victims coming from the ghettos of Eastern Europe, as well as from Western and
Southern European countries.
Throughout
1942, transports arrived from Poland, Slovakia, the Netherlands, Belgium,
Yugoslavia, and Theresienstadt. Jews, as well as Gypsies, continued to arrive
throughout 1943. Hungarian Jews were brought to Auschwitz in 1944, alongside
Jews from the remaining Polish ghettos, yet to be liquidated.
No Longer Individuals, But Numbers
By
August 1944 there were 105,168 prisoners in Auschwitz whilst another 50,000
Jewish prisoners lived in Auschwitz's satellite camps. The camp's population grew
constantly, despite the high mortality rate caused by exterminations,
starvation, hard labor, and contagious diseases. Upon arrival at the platform
in Birkenau, Jews were thrown out of their train cars without their belongings
and forced to form two lines, men and women separately.
SS
officers, including the infamous Dr. Josef Mengele, would conduct selections
among these lines, sending most victims to one side and thus condemning them to
death in the gas chambers. A minority was sent to the other side, destined for
forced labor. Those who were sent to their deaths were killed that same day and
their corpses were burnt in the crematoria. Those not sent to the gas chambers
were taken to "quarantine," where their hair was shaved, striped
prison uniforms distributed, and registration took place. Prisoners' individual
registration numbers were tattooed onto their left arm.
Most
prisoners were then sent to perform forced labor in Auschwitz I, III,
sub-camps, or other concentration camps, where their life expectancy was
usually only a few months. Prisoners who stayed in quarantine had a life
expectancy of a few weeks.
The
prisoners' camp routine consisted of many duties. The daily schedule included
waking at dawn, straightening one's sleep area, morning roll call, the trip to
work, long hours of hard labor, standing in line for a pitiful meal, the return
to camp, block inspection, and evening roll call. During roll call, prisoners
were made to stand completely motionless and quiet for hours, in extremely thin
clothing, irrespective of the weather. Whoever fell or even stumbled was
killed. Prisoners had to focus all their energy merely on surviving the day's
tortures.
Survival & Resistance
The
gas chambers in the Auschwitz complex constituted the largest and most efficient
extermination method employed by the Nazis. Four chambers were in use at
Birkenau, each with the potential to kill 6,000 people daily. They were built
to look like shower rooms in order to confuse the victims. New arrivals at Birkenau
were told that they were being sent to work, but first needed to shower and be
disinfected. They would be led into the shower-like chambers, where they were
quickly gassed to death with the highly poisonous Zyklon B gas.
Some
prisoners at Auschwitz, including twins and dwarfs, were used as the subjects
of torturous medical experiments. They were tested for endurance under terrible
conditions such as extreme heat and cold, or were sterilized.
Despite
the horrible conditions, prisoners in Auschwitz managed to resist the Nazis,
including some instances of escape and armed resistance. In October 1944,
members of the Sonderkommando, who worked in the crematoria, succeeded
in killing several SS men and destroying one gas chamber. All of the rebels
died, leaving behind diaries that provided authentic documentation of the
atrocities committed at Auschwitz.
By
January 1945 Soviet troops were advancing towards Auschwitz. In desperation to withdraw,
the Nazis sent most of the 58,000 remaining prisoners on a death march to Germany,
and most prisoners were killed en route. When the Soviet army liberated
Auschwitz on January 27, soldiers found only 7,650 barely living prisoners
throughout the entire camp complex. In all, approximately one million Jews had
been murdered there.