How would you feel if every moment of your life was uncertainty of life or death ? In the Flossenburg Concentration Camp every second of your day was watched! No, you did not have your own say in anything that you wanted to partaken in. You were treated like mindless animals. Every prisoner in the Flossenburg Camp was owned by a German SS soldier , they came to the Ghettos where less fortunate people lived at the time and took them from their homes. The site lays near the northeastern Bavaria near the Czech border. The concentration Camp was established to be a site on March 24, 1938. Flossenburg served as one of the many concentration camps, which were unsuitable for human habitation. It would be a start to a horrible era. In the late 1930’s the owner of the quarry -- and also the Mayor of the village and loyal nazi -- persuaded Heinrich Himmler to establish a major camp at the site. In 1941- 1942, about 1,500 Polish prisoners, mostly members of the polish resistance, …show more content…
The usually rounded them up between Winter and Spring. The Germans planned to do force labor s with the prisoners. The first set of prisoners returned in 1940 but were soon replaced with a new set of prisoners. The camp was located near a small town in Flossenburg. Some of the commanders in the Camp were, Jacob Weisborn , Egon Zill, Max Keogel, Karl Kunster. The Conditions of the camp were pretty poor. One Jewish Prisoner described his working in a factory sub - camp “ At this camp there was a factory that made bazookas. There was one SS man for every four prisoners. Every day 15 men died, aside from those who died from “ natural causes”. Prisoners slept naked in the mud most of the time. Many prisoners died from infections or hunger. Other Notable SS men who served at Flossenburg were , Hans Aumeier, Ludwig Baumgartner, Josef Becker, Herbert Czepiczka, Eduard
There are unexpected aspects of life in the camp depicted in “This Way for the Gas, Ladies and Gentlement” by Tadeusz Borowski. The prisoners were able to make very obvious improvements to their lived in the camp, without reaction by the SS officers; the market was even made with the support of the camp. The prisoners actually hoped for a transport of prisoners, so as to gain some supplies. The true nature of the camp is never forgotten, even in better moments at the camp.
The conditions were OK as a concentration camp, however as more prisoners came, it drastically worsened. There was “overcrowding, poor sanitary conditions, the lack of adequate food, water, and shelter.” Near “1945, the food was a watery soup with rotten vegetables.” (Bauer, Yehuda p.359) People were “dumped behind barbed wire without food or water and left to die.” (ushmm.org) It was so overcrowded that corpses were piled out in the open without being buried.
“If there is a God, he will have to beg my forgiveness.” (Quote from concentration) This quote was carved into the wall by a Jewish prisoner. Kaiserwald was one of many concentration camps used for the destruction of the Jewish race during the holocaust.
Imagine people who don’t trust you, like you, or care about you, asking you and your family to leave home for the safety of others. You don’t know when or if you are getting back. That seems pretty unfair and rude, right? Well, that is exactly what happened to Japanese Americans during WWII, except they weren’t imagining it. With forces of the Axis on the rise in the 1940’s, America was struggling to keep everyone safe. National security was at stake, so the United States acted poorly to reverse problems. During WWII, the Japanese Americans were interned for reasons of national security because the war made the U.S. act foolishly, the U.S. government didn’t trust them, and the U.S. also didn’t care about them.
Imagine the worst torture possible. Now imagine the same thing only ten times worse; In Auschwitz that is exactly what it was like. During the time of the Holocaust thousands of Jewish people were sent to this very concentration camp which consisted of three camps put into one. Here they had one camp; Auschwitz I; the main camp, Auschwitz II; Birkenau, and last is Auschwitz III; Monowitz. Each camp was responsible for a different part but all were after the same thing; elimination of the Jewish race. In these camps they had cruel punishments, harsh housing, and they had Nazi guards watching them and killing them on a daily basis.
The camp was divided into two sections — the camp area and the crematoria area. The camp area consisted of 32 barracks, including one for clergy imprisoned for opposing the Nazi regime and one reserved for medical experiments. The camp administration was located in the gatehouse at the main entrance. The camp area had a group of support buildings, containing the kitchen, laundry,
The Plaszow concentration camp had many distinct physical features. Before Plaszow was a concentration camp it was two Jewish cemeteries (Plaszow-Krakow Forced Labour Camp). The camp was twenty-five acres large and was originally meant to hold 2,000 to 4,000 prisoners (Plaszow-Krakow Forced Labour Camp). Plaszow was surrounded by barbed wire and the camp was broken up into many different sections (Plaszow). The camp had barracks designated for the Germans, factories, warehouses, a woman’s and men’s camp, and an educational labor camp for prisoners that broke the rules (Plaszow).
Many medical experiments went on during the holocaust, mostly in concentration camps. These subjects included Jews, Gypsies, twins, and political prisoners. The experiments included many of these people never survived many were killed for further examination. The Jewish people got the full wrath of the injections, inhumane surgeries, and other experimentations. Twins were also desirable in these experiments to show a controlled group. Gypsies and political prisoners were experimented with, because they were there for the Germans disposal. Thousands of people died in these horrible experiments. These experiments were performed to show how the Jewish race was inferior to the Aryan race.
Bodies were often thrown into huge ditches located east of the chambers. Containing nothing but filthy, scrawny, and hopeless bodies. Five thousand to seven thousand Jews arrived each day increases to about 12,000 a day, though thousands were dead on arrival. This camp was the the last camp whose sole purpose was “extermination”. It was only fifty miles from the large city of warsaw, which blows my mind that people will still fully confidently try to convince people that the camps never happened. It became known as Treblinka I when the death camp, Treblinka II, was built. The camp was laid out in an irregular rectangle, 400 m by 600 m, surrounded by barbed wire and anti- tank spanish hors...
“Concentration camps (Konzentrationslager; abbreviated as KL or KZ) were an integral feature of the regime in Nazi Germany between 1933 and 1945. The term concentration camp refers to a camp in which people are detained or confined, usually under harsh conditions and without regard to legal norms of arrest and imprisonment that are acceptable in a constitutional democracy” (United States Holocaust Memorial Museum). The living conditions in these camps were absolutely horrible. The amount of people being kept in one space, amongst being unsanitary, was harsh on the body. “A typical concentration camp consisted of barracks that were secured from escape by barbed wire, watchtowers and guards.
Having such large authority, Hitler persuaded the SS, police, SA, and the local civilian consultants to design and produce the first of many concentration camps located near Munich (Vasham). This building was used as a model for the other remaining 15,000 sites. These locations were constructed to conceal Jews, Homosexuals, gypsies, and the mentally ill along with Communist, Socialist, German liberals, and anyone who was considered an enemy of the Reich (Vasham). In 1939 there were six main sites, Dachau, Sachsenhausen, Buchenwald, Flossenbeurg, Mauthausen, and, for women, Ravensreuck. Each of these places held circa 25,000 prisoners that were surrounded by filth and bounded by barb wire on fences. The labor camps w...
Being confined in a concentration camp was beyond unpleasant. Mortality encumbered the prisons effortlessly. Every day was a struggle for food, survival, and sanity. Fear of being led into the gas chambers or lined up for shooting was a constant. Hard labor and inadequate amounts of rest and nutrition took a toll on prisoners. They also endured beatings from members of the SS, or they were forced to watch the killings of others. “I was a body. Perhaps less than that even: a starved stomach. The stomach alone was aware of the passage of time” (Night Quotes). Small, infrequent, rations of a broth like soup left bodies to perish which in return left no energy for labor. If one wasn’t killed by starvation or exhaustion they were murdered by fellow detainees. It was a survival of the fittest between the Jews. Death seemed to be inevitable, for there were emaciated corpses lying around and the smell...
Adolf Hitler was a callous dictator who controlled Germany in the 1930s and drove it to turn on its own citizens, creating a period we now call the Holocaust. Concentration camps were designed to incapacitate those deemed responsible for the country’s biggest problems. The most infamous of all the concentration camps was Auschwitz, in southern Poland. It was the largest of the camps, holding three separate camps inside of it; all using prisoners for forced labor and killing nearly 1 million of those prisoners. There were many famous writers that emerged out of the Holocaust, but arguably one of the most harrowing tales was that of Primo Levi, a Jewish Italian writer who was arrested during World War II and imprisoned in Auschwitz until its
Auschwitz I was built in 1940, as a site for Polish political prisoners. This was the original camp and administrative center. The prisoners’ living conditions were inhumane in every respect, and the death rate was quite high. Auschwitz I was not meant ...