Entrance to Birkenau Concentration Camp.

64
The Holocaust “Sacrificed by fire” Entrance to Birkenau Concentration Camp.

description

Early Persecution

Transcript of Entrance to Birkenau Concentration Camp.

Page 1: Entrance to Birkenau Concentration Camp.

The Holocaust“Sacrificed by fire”

Entrance to Birkenau Concentration Camp.

Page 2: Entrance to Birkenau Concentration Camp.

Early Persecution

Page 3: Entrance to Birkenau Concentration Camp.

Chart illustrating

the Nuremberg laws. The

figures represent Germans, Jews, and

Mischlinge. Germany,

1935.

Jewish lawyers line up to apply for permission to appear before the Berlin courts. New regulations set forth in the Aryan Paragraph (a series of laws enacted in April 1933 to purge Jews from various spheres of state and society) allowed only 35 to appear before the court. Berlin, Germany, April 11, 1933.

Page 4: Entrance to Birkenau Concentration Camp.

"Aryanization" of Jewish-owned businesses: a formerly Jewish-owned store (Gummi

Weil) expropriated and transferred to non-Jewish

ownership (Stamm and Bassermann). Frankfurt,

Germany, 1938.

Passports issued to a German Jewish couple, with "J" for "Jude" stamped on the cards. Karlsruhe,

Germany, December 29, 1938.

Page 5: Entrance to Birkenau Concentration Camp.

Kristallnacht – “Night of Broken Glass”

Page 6: Entrance to Birkenau Concentration Camp.

Germans pass by the broken shop window of a Jewish-owned business that was destroyed

during Kristallnacht in Berlin, Germany.

Page 7: Entrance to Birkenau Concentration Camp.

Euthanasia Program

Page 8: Entrance to Birkenau Concentration Camp.

Buses used to transport patients to Hadamar euthanasia center. The windows were painted to prevent people from seeing those inside. Germany, between May and September 1941. A victim of the Nazi Euthanasia

Program: hospitalized in a psychiatric ward for her nonconformist beliefs and writings, she was murdered on January 26, 1944. Germany.

Page 9: Entrance to Birkenau Concentration Camp.

This image originates from a film produced by the Reich Propaganda Ministry. It is captioned: "A moral and religious conception of life demands the prevention of hereditarily ill offspring." Nazi propaganda aimed to create public support for the compulsory sterilization effort.

Page 10: Entrance to Birkenau Concentration Camp.

Slide taken from a Nazi propaganda filmstrip, promoting "euthanasia," prepared for the Hitler Youth. The caption says: "Mentally ill Negro (English) 16 years in an institution costing 35,000 RM [Reichsmarks]." Place and date uncertain.

Page 11: Entrance to Birkenau Concentration Camp.

This image originates from a film produced by the Reich Propaganda Ministry. It shows patients in an unidentified asylum. Their existence is described as "life without hope." The Nazis sought, through propaganda, to develop public sympathy for the Euthanasia Program.

Page 12: Entrance to Birkenau Concentration Camp.

Smoke rising from the chimney at Hadamar, one of six facilities which carried out the Nazis' Euthanasia

Program. Hadamar, Germany, probably 1941.

Page 13: Entrance to Birkenau Concentration Camp.

Early Concentration Camps

Page 14: Entrance to Birkenau Concentration Camp.

Arrival of political prisoners at the Oranienburg concentration camp. Oranienburg, Germany, 1933.

Page 15: Entrance to Birkenau Concentration Camp.

Roll call for newly arrived prisoners, mostly Jews arrested during Kristallnacht (the "Night of Broken Glass"), at the Buchenwald concentration camp. Buchenwald, Germany, 1938.

Page 16: Entrance to Birkenau Concentration Camp.

Many of the early concentration camps were improvised. Here, roll call is held for political prisoners aboard a ship used as a floating concentration camp. Ochstumsand camp, near Bremen, Germany, 1933 or 1934.

Page 17: Entrance to Birkenau Concentration Camp.

Ghettos

Page 18: Entrance to Birkenau Concentration Camp.

Deportation of Jews from Hanau, near Frankfurt am Main, to the Theresienstadt ghetto. Hanau,

Germany, May 30, 1942.

Page 19: Entrance to Birkenau Concentration Camp.

A sign, in both German and Latvian, warning that people attempting to cross the fence or to contact inhabitants of the Riga ghetto will be shot. Riga, Latvia, 1941-1943.

Page 20: Entrance to Birkenau Concentration Camp.

450,000 Jews lived in the Warsaw Ghetto alone, approx. the

population of Portland. They were

all confined in an area smaller than the

square mileage of Woodburn.

Page 21: Entrance to Birkenau Concentration Camp.

Child forced laborer in a ghetto factory. Kovno, Lithuania, between 1941 and 1944.

Page 22: Entrance to Birkenau Concentration Camp.

Dead man lying in the street in the Warsaw

ghetto, probably dead of starvation

Children eating in the ghetto streets. Warsaw, Poland,

between 1940 and 1943.

Page 23: Entrance to Birkenau Concentration Camp.

Vendor of bread in the Warsaw ghetto. This photograph was probably taken in 1941. By then, hunger was so relentless

that the bread had to be protected by a cage so that it would not be stolen. (Courtesy Dr. B. Wisniewski)

Page 24: Entrance to Birkenau Concentration Camp.

The Pianist

(14:45 – 20:40 and 39:15 – 41:00)

Page 25: Entrance to Birkenau Concentration Camp.

Resistance

Page 26: Entrance to Birkenau Concentration Camp.

Jewish resistance fighters captured by SS troops during the Warsaw ghetto uprising. Warsaw, Poland, April 19-May 16, 1943.

Page 27: Entrance to Birkenau Concentration Camp.

SS and Police Leader Juergen Stroop interrogates two Jews arrested during the Warsaw ghetto uprising. Poland, April 19-

May 16, 1943.

Page 28: Entrance to Birkenau Concentration Camp.

Jewish homes in flames after the Nazis set residential buildings on fire in an effort to force Jews out of hiding during the Warsaw ghetto uprising.

Poland, April 19-May 16, 1943.

Page 29: Entrance to Birkenau Concentration Camp.

Jewish partisans, survivors of the Warsaw ghetto uprising, at a family camp in Wyszkow forest. Poland, 1944.

Page 30: Entrance to Birkenau Concentration Camp.

The Final Solution: Einzatsgruppen and Extermination

Camps

Page 31: Entrance to Birkenau Concentration Camp.

Einzatsgruppen

Page 32: Entrance to Birkenau Concentration Camp.

Roundup of the Jews of Lubny, shortly before they were massacred by Einsatzgruppe detachments. This photo, originally in color, was part of a

series taken by a German military photographer. Copies from this collection were later used as evidence in war crimes trials. Lubny, Soviet

Union, October 16, 1941.

Page 33: Entrance to Birkenau Concentration Camp.

Members of an Einsatzkommando (mobile killing squad) before shooting a Jewish youth. The boy's murdered family lies in front of him; the men to the left are ethnic Germans

aiding the squad. Slarow, Soviet Union, July 4, 1941.

Page 34: Entrance to Birkenau Concentration Camp.

Ukrainian Jews who were forced to undress before they were massacred by Einsatzgruppe detachments. This photo, originally in color, was part of

a series taken by a German military photographer. Copies from this collection were later used as evidence in war crimes trials. Lubny, Soviet

Union, October 16, 1941.

Page 35: Entrance to Birkenau Concentration Camp.
Page 36: Entrance to Birkenau Concentration Camp.
Page 37: Entrance to Birkenau Concentration Camp.
Page 38: Entrance to Birkenau Concentration Camp.
Page 39: Entrance to Birkenau Concentration Camp.
Page 40: Entrance to Birkenau Concentration Camp.
Page 41: Entrance to Birkenau Concentration Camp.

Auschwitz

Page 42: Entrance to Birkenau Concentration Camp.

SS chief Heinrich Himmler leads an inspection of the Mauthausen concentration camp. Austria, April 27, 1941.

Page 43: Entrance to Birkenau Concentration Camp.

Forced labor in the quarry of the Mauthausen

concentration camp. Austria, date uncertain.

Prisoners at forced labor in the Siemens factory. Auschwitz camp,

Poland, 1940-1944.

Page 44: Entrance to Birkenau Concentration Camp.

Prisoners at forced labor in the brick factory at Neuengamme concentration camp. Germany, date uncertain.

Concentration camp survivors recreating a picture of what it was

like for sleeping quarters.

Page 45: Entrance to Birkenau Concentration Camp.

Smokestacks from a concentration camp crematorium.

Page 46: Entrance to Birkenau Concentration Camp.

Hairbrushes

Page 47: Entrance to Birkenau Concentration Camp.

Entryway of Auschwitz gas chambers.

Page 48: Entrance to Birkenau Concentration Camp.

Ovens at Auschwitz

Page 49: Entrance to Birkenau Concentration Camp.

Death Marches

Page 50: Entrance to Birkenau Concentration Camp.

Prisoners on a death march from Dachau move towards the south along the Noerdliche Muenchner street in Gruenwald.

April 29th, 1945.

Page 51: Entrance to Birkenau Concentration Camp.

A view of the death march from Dachau passing through villages in the direction of Wolfratshausen. German civilians secretly photographed several death marches from the Dachau concentration camp as the prisoners moved slowly through the Bavarian towns of Gruenwald, Wolfratshausen, and Herbertshausen. Few civilians gave aid to the prisoners on the death marches. Germany, April 1945.

Page 52: Entrance to Birkenau Concentration Camp.

A view of a death march from Dachau. Germany, April 29, 1945.

Page 53: Entrance to Birkenau Concentration Camp.

An American soldier stands among the corpses of prisoners exhumed from a mass grave in a ravine near Nammering. On April 19, 1945, a

freight train with nearly 4,500 prisoners from Buchenwald pulled onto the railroad siding at Nammering. Hundreds of prisoners who had died on the

train were buried in the mass grave along with the prisoners who were forced to carry the corpses to the ravine and were then shot. Germany,

ca. May 6, 1945.

Page 54: Entrance to Birkenau Concentration Camp.

An American soldier looks at the corpses of Polish, Russian, and Hungarian Jews found in the woods near Neunburg vorm Wald. The

victims were prisoners from Flossenbürg who were shot near Neunburg while on a death march. Germany, April 29, 1945.

Page 55: Entrance to Birkenau Concentration Camp.

Burned bodies of former prisoners of Rottleberode, a subcamp of Dora-Mittelbau, lie near the entrance to a barn

that had been set afire by SS troops while the prisoners were on a death march. Gardelegen, Germany, April 18, 1945.

Page 56: Entrance to Birkenau Concentration Camp.

U.S. troops and German civilians from Neunburg vorm Wald attend a funeral service for Polish, Hungarian, and Russian Jews found in the

forest near their town. The victims were shot by the SS while on a death march from Flossenbürg. Neunburg, Germany, April 29, 1945.

Page 57: Entrance to Birkenau Concentration Camp.

German civilians from Volary attend burial services for the Jewish women exhumed from a mass grave in the town. The victims died at the end of a

death march from Helmbrechts, a subcamp of Flossenbürg. Volary, Czechoslovakia, May 11, 1945.

Page 58: Entrance to Birkenau Concentration Camp.

Liberation

Page 59: Entrance to Birkenau Concentration Camp.

Soon after liberation, a Soviet physician examines Auschwitz camp survivors. Poland, February 18, 1945.

Page 60: Entrance to Birkenau Concentration Camp.

Soon after liberation, camp survivors cook in a field. Bergen-Belsen, Germany, after April 15, 1945.

Page 61: Entrance to Birkenau Concentration Camp.

Emaciated survivors of the Buchenwald concentration camp soon after the liberation of the camp. Germany, after April 11, 1945.

Page 62: Entrance to Birkenau Concentration Camp.

Piles of corpses, soon after the liberation of the Mauthausen camp. Austria, after May 5, 1945.

Page 63: Entrance to Birkenau Concentration Camp.

An inmate of the Bergen-Belsen camp, after liberation. Bergen-Belsen, Germany, after April 15, 1945.

Page 64: Entrance to Birkenau Concentration Camp.

Band of Brothers “Why We Fight” (33:30-45:32)

Aftermath of the Holocaust