Archive for the ‘Living conditions in Auschwitz Contentration Camp’ Category

Children in Auschwitz

August 10th, 2011

Upon their arrival in the death camp of Auschwitz in 1942, children had no chance of survival. Whether they were killed from the start for being too young or underwent vicious experimentation or overworked to the point of death, children did not stand a chance.

Records show that there were approximately 232 thousand children under the age of 18 deported to Auschwitz. At first, all children were sent to the gas chambers, though some were spared once laborers became limited. If a child managed to avoid the gas chambers, they were put to work doing heaving labor. Boys were chosen to work most often, and first assigned to be masons in the crematories. However in 1943, once the work was completed, the boys were all put to death through phenol injections. The boys that escaped that fate either died from malnutrition or were forced to endure sexual abuse by the German overseers.
Disease was also a common cause of death. Between the contaminated water and rats and desolate living conditions, children succumbing to illness became natural. They lived in barracks similar to the adults, though some were lucky enough to live in the camp hospital where they had access to blankets and medicine some of the time.

The children born in Auschwitz barely got a chance to live. Pregnant women were gassed until 1943, when the women registered in Auschwitz were allowed to bear children. These babies, unless of Aryan origin, were taken to be drowned. The babies who appeared to be of proper German descent were registered in the camp-card index by getting tattooed on their thighs. After two months, if the infants survived, they were taken away to be raised as Germans without any Jewish influence. If mothers refused to give them up, then they were gassed with their children.

Many children underwent experimentation during their time in Auschwitz. Josef Mengele was one of the many who tortured Jewish children by placing them in pressure chambers, drugging them or castrating them. Mengele also conducted violent studies on twins before killing them. Herta Oberhauser was another individual who killed children by injecting them with oils and removing their limbs and organs.

The 700 some odd children that survived until liberation suffered from exhaustion, vitamin deficiency, malnutrition, tuberculosis, and other diseases. Most had only spent a few months in the confines of Auschwitz, but it left its mark.

Living conditions in Auschwitz Concentration Camp

August 7th, 2009

Trying to describe an average day in the life of a prisoner at the Auschwitz concentration camp would be like trying to describe an average day in hell. Each day brought about new horrors for the unfortunate victims of the Holocaust interred in this Nazi operated extermination camp. Just under one million Jews were killed over the five year history of Auschwitz.

The “lucky” few who weren’t immediately sent to the gas chambers after being shipped to the concentration camp could expect a life of degradation and random punishment. Barracks were overcrowded with not enough beds to house the prisoners. Only the luckiest would receive blankets to keep warm during the cold Polish nights. Days were spent working the prisoners to exhaustion in factories providing materials for the war effort or doing pointless labors such as digging ditches. The unluckiest would have to deal with the remains of their fallen friends, family, and prison mates. Even amongst the prisoners, these prisoners were often reviled although they had little choice in the matter.

Every day, the victims of Nazi cruelty would see their peers taken in front of firing squads, taken away for medical experimentation, starved, beaten, and otherwise tortured. The understanding that it was only a matter of time loomed large in the thoughts of every prisoner. Until Soviet forces freed the prisoners in 1945, it seemed there was no hope of rescue as Allied forces ignored the reality of the situation.

Although the camp conditions were specifically designed to break the spirits of its inhabitants, the fighting spirit of the Jews, Poles, Gypsies, and Russians housed within the walls of Auschwitz did not falter. Over five years, nearly 300 individual prisoners escaped. Unfortunately, Nazis would terrorize inmates by publicly starving ten prisoners for each escaped prisoner. Every prisoner at Auschwitz had to face the hard reality that every moment could be their last and no amount of good behavior or cooperation could prevent an arbitrary punishment.