Sunday, October 13, 2019
Concentration Camps Essay -- essays research papers
 A concentration camp is where prisoners of war, enemy aliens, and   political prisoners are detained and confined, typically under harsh   conditions, or place or situation characterized by extremely harsh   conditions. The first concentration camps were established in 1933 for   confinement of opponents of the Nazi Party. The supposed opposition soon   included all Jews, Gypsies, and certain other groups. By 1939 there were six   camps: Dachau, Sachsenhausen, Buchenwald, Mauthausen, Flossenburg, and   Ravensbruck.     Auschwitz   Auschwitz, or Auschwitz-Birkenau, is the best-known of all Nazi death   camps, though Auschwitz was just one of six extermination camps. It was also   a labor concentration camp, extracting prisoners' value from them, in the   form of hard labor, for weeks or months. Auschwitz was the end of the line   for millions of Jews, gypsies, Jehovah's Witnesses, and other innocents.   Some spend almost two years in this most infamous of concentration camps. The   average prisoner only survived eight weeks in Auschwitz. Some learned the ins   and outs of survival in Auschwitz. Auschwitz was the largest concentration   and extermination camp constructed in the Third Reich. Located 37 miles west   of Krakow, Poland, Auschwitz was home to both the greatest number of forced   laborers and deaths.   The history of the camp began on April 27, 1940 when Heinrich Himmler,   the head of the SS and Gestapo, ordered the construction of the camp in   northeast Silesia, a region captured by the Nazis in September 1939. The camp   was built by three-hundred Jewish prisoners from the local town of Oswiecim   and its surrounding area. In June of 1940 the camp opened for Polish   political prisoners. By 1941 there were about 11,000 prisoners, most of whom   were Polish. From May 1940 to the end of 1943, Rudolf Hess was head   commander of Auschwitz. Under his leadership, Auschwitz quickly became known   as the harshest prison camp in the Nazi regime. Polish prisoners were forced   to stand at attention for roll call for hours on end naked in the cold, snowy   tundra of Polish winter. Following its first year of existence, Heinrich   Himmler visited Auschwitz and told Hess that its labor resource was to be   expanded to 100,000 prisoners, making it one of the largest of the   concentration camps. In order to accommodate this many people, a second, much   larger, section of Auschwitz (Auschwit...              ...as   chambers built in nearby Hartheim castle. Forced labor in SS Stone Works and   Messerschmidt aircraft factory. 120,000 people killed.   Ravensbruck:   Created on May 15, 1939. First Commandant: Max Koegel. 70,000 inmates at   peak. 107,000 inmates passed through. Used for killing sick prisoners and for   medical experiments on Jewish women, especially sterilization. Forced labor   for Siemens corporation.   Sachsenhausen:   Created on April 23, 1936. First Commandant: Herman Baranowski. 35,000   inmates at peak. 135,000 people passed through camp. Separate sub-camps for   Jews, political prisoners, homosexuals, draft evaders, etc. Contained gas   chamber and crematorium. Used for mass murder of 11,000 Soviet POW's. Forced   labor for Heinkel aircraft works. 30-35,000 total deaths.   Crematorium II:  Functioned as a homicidal gas chamber and incineration installation from 15th   March 1943, before its officially coming into service on March 31st, to   November 27th, 1944, annihilating a total of approximately 400,000 people.   Most of them Jewish women, children and old men.   Crematorium III:  Was used in similar fashion from June 25th 1943 to November 27th ,1944,   killing about 350,000 victims.                       
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