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A History of Auschwitz

2025/1/27
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Dan Snow: 我认为纳粹政权上台后立即开始拆除德国仅存的民主制度,并迅速建立集中营来囚禁政治对手。随着二战的进行,这些集中营逐渐演变为大规模工业化屠杀中心,奥斯维辛集中营就是其中最臭名昭著的一个。 在奥斯维辛集中营,纳粹对犹太人和其他被视为“不受欢迎的人”进行了大规模的屠杀。集中营的运作方式极其残酷,从囚犯到达集中营到在毒气室中被杀害,整个过程都经过精心设计,旨在最大限度地提高效率和减少行凶者的负担。 盟国在战争期间逐渐了解奥斯维辛集中营的情况,并掌握了越来越多的证据。然而,由于优先考虑赢得战争,盟军并没有对奥斯维辛集中营进行轰炸。 即使在焚尸场停止运作后,奥斯维辛集中营的囚犯仍然面临着巨大的危险。苏军逼近时,党卫军开始撤离奥斯维辛集中营,销毁证据,并转移囚犯,许多囚犯在死亡行军中丧生。 奥斯维辛集中营的解放并非意味着苦难的结束,许多幸存者在解放后不久就去世了,幸存者们终身都背负着集中营的创伤。奥斯维辛集中营的暴行令人难以理解,普通人在明知情的情况下如何参与其中是一个挥之不去的谜团。 Nikolaus Wachsmann: 纳粹上台后几乎立即建立了第一批集中营,这是他们试图建立新独裁政权的一部分。1933年出现的集中营没有蓝图,纳粹政权是在不断摸索中建立和发展集中营的,集中营的规模和形式各异。 纳粹建立集中营的目的是为了巩固权力,消灭潜在的政治反对势力。早期集中营的目标是摧毁德国的政治反对力量,大部分囚犯都是左翼分子、工会成员、社会民主党人和共产党员。早期集中营主要目的是折磨、摧残囚犯,以此恐吓潜在的反对者。 纳粹集中营并非照搬其他模式,而是本土发展起来的,其长期存在性在初期并不确定。集中营系统自身发展出惯性,并形成自身的逻辑,培养出一批熟练管理集中营的成员,这些成员不再质疑集中营的合法性,反而被其残酷性所同化。 随着时间的推移,纳粹的迫害目标从政治对手转向宗教和种族对手,犹太人和罗姆人成为集中营囚犯的主要群体。30年代中期,集中营成为纳粹独裁政权的永久组成部分,纳粹开始将社会边缘人群和因种族原因受迫害的人(主要是犹太人)送入集中营。纳粹对犹太人的迫害在二战前并非直接指向种族灭绝,而是试图通过恐吓和迫害使其屈服。 德国入侵波兰后,集中营系统扩展到被占领的波兰,纳粹拥有了更大的囚禁和杀戮能力。二战期间,集中营囚犯数量大幅增加,来自被占领欧洲的囚犯越来越多,德国囚犯只占少数。奥斯维辛集中营吸取了之前集中营的经验,在镇压、恐怖主义、组织管理等方面都达到了新的高度。 奥斯维辛集中营最初主要关押波兰囚犯,既有战俘,也有政治犯。奥斯维辛集中营的选址考虑了交通便利性以及现有建筑的利用。奥斯维辛集中营最初并非设计为工业化屠杀工厂,其最初目的是为了摧毁波兰的政治反对势力。奥斯维辛集中营最初关押的主要是波兰政治犯,当时还不是死亡集中营,犹太囚犯数量相对较少。 “巴巴罗萨行动”对奥斯维辛集中营产生了重大影响,纳粹开始系统地屠杀苏联战俘,并计划将大量苏联战俘用于奴隶劳动。“巴巴罗萨行动”后,党卫军希姆莱计划将大量苏联战俘送入奥斯维辛集中营进行奴隶劳动,这导致了比克瑙集中营的建设。“巴巴罗萨行动”加速了纳粹“最终解决方案”的激进化,导致对犹太人的系统性大规模灭绝。纳粹在被占领的苏联领土上开始对犹太人进行大规模无差别杀戮。 万湖会议决定了对欧洲犹太人的系统性灭绝计划,奥斯维辛集中营也因此转变为主要的死亡集中营。万湖会议之后,奥斯维辛集中营才成为我们今天所熟知的奥斯维辛集中营。奥斯维辛集中营始终有多重功能,从1942年开始,它也成为大屠杀的死亡集中营。奥斯维辛集中营是唯一一个接收来自全欧洲犹太人驱逐的死亡集中营。 死亡集中营的解决方案是寻找对行凶者来说更轻松的大规模屠杀方法,例如使用毒气进行大规模灭绝。党卫军为了减少行凶者的负担,开始使用毒气进行大规模屠杀,这在“安乐死”计划中就已经有所尝试。除了奥斯维辛,还有其他几个专门用于屠杀犹太人的死亡集中营,例如赫尔姆诺和特雷布林卡。奥斯维辛集中营既是死亡集中营,也是主要的集中营,在站台上进行的“挑选”决定了囚犯的生死。 党卫军在“挑选”过程中故意制造混乱和恐惧,以防止囚犯反抗。那些被选中送往毒气室的犹太人会被强迫登上卡车,送往比克瑙集中营的毒气室。奥斯维辛集中营约有100万犹太人被毒死,并被焚烧。奥斯维辛集中营是纳粹统治下欧洲最大的犹太人墓地,约有100万犹太人死于奥斯维辛集中营。1944年春夏,纳粹占领匈牙利后,奥斯维辛集中营的屠杀达到顶峰,大量匈牙利犹太人被驱逐到奥斯维辛集中营并被杀害。 奥斯维辛集中营的焚尸数量超过了焚尸场的处理能力,尸体会被扔进壕沟中焚烧,导致整个营地弥漫着死亡的气味。党卫军强迫数百名囚犯加入特别行动队,这些囚犯知道自己迟早会被杀害,因为他们比其他囚犯更了解党卫军的罪行。 来自波兰地下组织的情报、盟军破译的党卫军通讯以及空中侦察照片都为盟国提供了关于奥斯维辛集中营的越来越多的信息。奥斯维辛集中营附近的德国居民和在附近工作的工人对集中营的情况有所了解。盟军没有轰炸奥斯维辛集中营的主要原因是优先考虑赢得战争,而且当时的精确轰炸技术还不成熟。 即使在焚尸场停止运作后,奥斯维辛集中营的囚犯仍然面临着巨大的危险。苏军逼近时,奥斯维辛集中营的囚犯们非常紧张,他们不知道自己会面临什么命运。党卫军开始撤离奥斯维辛集中营,销毁证据,并转移囚犯。苏军解放奥斯维辛集中营时,营地的大部分基础设施已被破坏,大部分囚犯已被转移或死亡。 奥斯维辛集中营的解放并非意味着苦难的结束,许多幸存者在解放后不久就去世了,幸存者们终身都背负着集中营的创伤。

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Hi, I'm Dan Snow, and if you would like Dan Snow's History Hit ad-free, get early access and bonus episodes, sign up to History Hit. With a History Hit subscription, you can also watch hundreds of hours of original documentaries with top history presenters and enjoy a new release every week. Sign up now by visiting historyhit.com slash subscribe.

ACAST powers the world's best podcasts. Here's a show that we recommend. Hey folks, it's Mark Maron from WTF. I've been talking to all kinds of famous people in my garage since 2009, including a sitting president. You know, I don't imagine you were flying in here on the chopper thinking like, you know, I am nervous about Mark. No, I wasn't. Okay, well that's good. That would be a problem. It would be a problem. If the president was feeling stressed about it.

Hi everybody, welcome to Dan Snow's History Hit.

It was January the 30th, 1933, that Adolf Hitler was appointed Chancellor of Germany. And immediately his Nazi regime began dismantling what was left of German democracy. Opposition newspapers were shut down. Political opponents were silenced. They were rounded up. And the Nazi regime instantly realised it needed somewhere to put them.

Within weeks of Hitler becoming Chancellor, the first concentration camp had opened at Dachau, 10 miles northwest of Munich in southern Germany. It was the start of a vast system of imprisonment through which the Nazis extended their control over Germany and then occupied territories as they invaded one neighbour after another. That system, already cruel, violent,

morphed into something truly terrible. Some of the most horrific places in the long and lamentable catalogue of human crimes. As the Second World War progressed, camps were built within that system that functioned as places of large-scale industrial slaughter, of murder, of genocide. Among them, famously, Auschwitz. Auschwitz.

At the end of January every year we mark Holocaust Awareness Day. The Red Army liberated the site of Auschwitz-Birkenau on the 27th of January 1945, 80 years ago.

This year we've got a series of podcasts looking at Auschwitz. In this episode, we're going to be hearing harrowing details about how Auschwitz worked. What happened there? We're going to break it down. We're going to look at the process of murder from the moment people arrived through to their death in gas chambers. They disposed of their bodies, clothes and valuables. This is the story of Auschwitz. Needless to say, elements of this podcast will be deeply upsetting.

Joining me on it, I've got one of the best historians working in this field, Nicholas Svaksman. He's a professor of modern European history at Birkbeck University of London. He's the author of the absolutely brilliant Wolfson History Prize winning book, KL, A History of the Nazi Concentration Camps. Every year we mark Holocaust Awareness Day, and every year it seems to get that little bit more urgent. I know I'm always bothering you, but please feel free to leave a comment.

to share this podcast or any other Holocaust-related material that you've come across over the last few days. Share it with people. Share it with people who might not otherwise engage with it. In the meantime, on the 80th anniversary of the liberation of Auschwitz, here's our history of that murder camp. Nicholas, thank you very much for coming on the podcast.

Thanks so much for having me, Dan. Are concentration camps part of that original package? Are they part of the Nazi starter pack when the Nazi party takes control of Germany?

Yes. I mean, I think the first camps are set up almost as soon as the Nazis come to power. They are part of the attempt by the regime to establish that new dictatorship. And within the first weeks or months, hundreds of camps are set up all over Nazi Germany.

Camps to us mean something very precise. They probably are indelibly the final years of the war, the horrors of Belsen when it's liberated. Initially, are camps just, are they prisons? Are they internment facilities? What are they for? One of the key points, I think, is that there isn't a blueprint for these kind of camps as they emerge in 1933. The Nazis don't come to power and draw a clear plan out of some drawers which they then implement.

There isn't national coordination either. Instead, there is plenty of improvisation. There's local initiative.

And that means that there isn't a typical early camp. These camps come in all shapes and sizes, and local and regional authorities use all kind of spaces, sites they can find, they can get their hands on, to set up these early camps. So they use rondin hotels, boats, pubs, old castles.

and derelict factories, like in the case of Dachau. So when the Nazis come to power, there isn't yet a Nazi concentration camp. And indeed, the regime still has to invent what a concentration camp actually is and how it will operate. Why do they discover they need them? Who are they putting in them? Who are they arresting suddenly in such large numbers?

Well, 1933 for the Nazis is in the first place about securing power. That means coordinating the state. It means coordinating Nazi society. And it also means destroying any potential political opposition. So there is a storm of political violence that sweeps the country in 1933.

And an estimated 200,000 men and women are dragged to camps and early prisons, most of them outside the law, and they are arrested and detained, not necessarily for what they've done, but more often than not for who they are, and that is suspected enemies of the political order, that new order that is emerging in Germany.

The aim of these early camps, as different as they are, I've said before, they come in all shapes and sizes, but as different as they are, they share one overriding aim, and that is to destroy the possibility of political opposition in Germany. And the great majority of these prisoners early on

are left-wing inmates, trade unionists, social democrats, and above all, German communists. And without these early camps, the regime would have never been able to establish itself as quickly as it does in 1933. You're physically removing the opposition, you're concentrating them into these detention facilities, just getting rid of them.

Yeah, but the plan isn't to hold them there forever or to murder them there, though there are deaths. But the main aim is to torment them, to torture them, to break them and to intimidate all those outside who might still be thinking of opposition.

that they better not rise up, they better not stand against the regime. The great majority of prisoners in these early camps are released again, but they're released broken and battered, and quite often these wounds are visible to their friends and their family when they come out. Not unlike the czarist and then communist so-called Gulag archipelago.

Yeah, I mean, I think sometimes, you know, there have been questions after the Second World War where the idea of the camps comes from. But what happens in Germany is not that the Nazi rulers are looking elsewhere. These are very much homegrown camps which spring up in 1933. And actually, it's not even clear at this point in time whether these camps are going to become a permanent part of the dictatorship or not.

There are some leading Nazi officials who believe that once the opposition is broken, once the regime is securely in place, these early camps can be closed down. And most of them are closed down. And these officials believe that some kind of authoritarian Nazi law, Nazi prisons are going to be enough places

to sustain and keep this regime in power. But what happens, of course, as we know, is something very different.

And I've just wondered, does this system of camps bring its own momentum and create its own logic? First of all, you build a mindset that accepts the existence of these places, but also do you create a generation of people who become veterans of these camps in terms of running them, who therefore start to no longer question their legitimacy, are in turn brutalized by their running of this system? I mean, does it develop its own energy?

Absolutely. I mean, a prisoner in Dachau, Dachau is the first SS concentration camp set up in March 1933 as part of this wave of early camps which are set up. A prisoner in Dachau in 1933 would have not recognized Dachau in 1939 or in 1945. There is a huge dynamic process here, massive momentum. And what drives this

increasing dynamic of violence in part are the core of SS men who are formed in these camps. Men like Rudolf Hess, the later commandant, the first commandant of Auschwitz, Hess joins the SS in Dachau and he goes through what can be called a school of violence in Dachau. This is where

SS men learn to treat prisoners as enemies of the people, as subhuman. They have to crush these enemies without any mercy and men like us

learn to do this and they impress their superiors with displays of violence and thus can have a career in the camp as Hess himself moves up the ranks, later is sent to Sachsenhausen, a new camp that is set up and then becomes the first commandant of Auschwitz. I mean, this is one of the ways in which these early camps influence later camps set up during the war like Auschwitz.

Auschwitz. Yeah, we've got a whole podcast devoted to the life and career of Huss coming up. As the 1930s goes on, the Nazis, you tell me, do they slightly switch their gaze from political opponents, people who threaten their grip on the country, to their religious and ethnic, if I'm to put it in better words, religious and ethnic opponents, you know, Jews, Romani peoples? Do they start to make up more and more of the prisoner population?

Yes, I think once it becomes clear in the mid-30s, very much with Hitler's backing, that the camps are going to be permanent parts of the Nazi dictatorship and under the SS and police apparatus, once that becomes clear, the camps are coordinated and expanded. So in addition to political prisoners,

The regime also forces thousands of social outsiders inside these camps. This is part of the drive by the regime to create its mythical national community. And amongst those who are dragged to the camps following massive police raids in 1937 and 1938,

are so-called asocials. This is a catch-all term for all those who are seen to be living on the edges, on the margins of society, homeless, beggars, prostitutes. And the regime also focuses on so-called criminals. In reality, these are, for the most part, minor petty offenders. And thousands of these are dragged to camps in the second half of the 1930s

where they are joined by those persecuted for racial reasons as well, and this is above all German Jews. So in the initial period after the camps are set up, the number of those who are dragged to the camps as Jews is relatively small. This changes shortly before the Second World War breaks out in 1938, above all after the

November program in 1938, when some 26,000 Jewish men are dragged to camps in Buchenwald, in Dachau, in Sachsenhausen. But the important thing I think here is that this isn't the start of the Holocaust.

The aim of the regime at this point is to intimidate Jews, to make life for German Jews so intolerable that they will integrate. So the great majority of those Jewish men who are dragged to the camps following the program are released again in the weeks after. But the camps are certainly changing in this period.

And this isn't just true for the prisoner population, it's also true for the camps themselves. So I've mentioned these early camps which are set up in 1933. Almost all of them are closed down. The only early camp that remains throughout the existence of the Third Reich is Dachau.

the first SS camp set up in spring 1933. Instead, the SS purpose builds a small number of large camps which can be extended at any time, for example, Sachsenhausen and others. And it is these camps where some 20,000 or so prisoners are held when the Second World War breaks out.

You mentioned the Nazis didn't have a blueprint at the beginning of their period of rule. But when they invade Poland in the autumn of 1939, and they discover they now have a very large population, both of Jews and of potential threats to the regime, aristocrats, educated people, socialists, the whole works. They now do have a blueprint. They can just extend this camp network into occupied Poland.

Yes. The camp as it had developed in the last year before the war is extended then into Nazi-occupied Europe. The regime, as it grabs more and more land in Europe, also extends the camp system into Europe. Before the war, the vast majority of prisoners are German men. During the war, more and more prisoners from occupied Europe are dragged into these camps so that by

By 1944-45, German prisoners only make up a small minority of the prisoner population. And more prisoners obviously means more camps as well. So the SS also starts building camps in occupied Europe. The first of these camps is Berlin.

Auschwitz and the SS certainly brings everything it has learned about repression, about terror, about the organization, the internal bureaucracy of terror, about prisoner hierarchies, about prisoner routines, the uniforms, the prisoner classifications on these uniforms. All of that is, if you will, exported to new camps set up in the warlike Auschwitz.

Auschwitz is set up primarily to deal with Polish prisoners. To what extent is it a prisoner of war camp and to what extent is it a camp for political prisoners? The elite of Poland sent there to be terrorised.

Yeah, the Germans invade Poland in autumn 1939, and the very clear aim is to crush, to destroy the Polish nation. So tens of thousands of Polish nationals are executed in the first months of the occupation, and many more are

are dragged to prisons, to makeshift camps, and these sites are very soon overcrowded. So the SS starts to scout. They actually have a party of officials who's looking at different sites for what they call their first concentration camp in the east. And in the end, they settle on the town of Oshvienchim,

This is in a part of East Upper Silesia that is incorporated into the German Reich of the occupation and is renamed by the Germans. Auschwitz. There are a number of reasons why they choose this particular site. Auschwitz has traditionally very good transport links. This is important for

moving prisoners to the camp and out of the camp. It's also important for moving building materials and other goods to the camp. The early uniforms which are used in Auschwitz come from places like Dachau. Later on, of course, the belongings of murdered Jews are deported or transported out

So transport links are important and there is also on the edge of town an existing structure of buildings which have been used before the war by the Polish military and the SS thinks it's

it can quite easily and cheaply convert this site into a concentration camp by building fences around it and some watchtowers. And this is indeed what happens. And that's the birthplace, if you will, of the Auschwitz camp. This is what we call the main camp where

prisoners are then marched through the gate with the inscription Arbeit macht frei, work liberates. Incidentally, Kommandant Hess had first seen this inscription, of course, at the camp in Dachau in Sachsenhausen. So this is another import from the camps in the German Reich. So no suggestion yet, though, that this would be an industrial murder factory?

No, Auschwitz is set up explicitly with the aim to destroy the Polish political opposition. The first prisoners, the first mass transport of prisoners in Auschwitz who arrive in June 1940 from the prison at Tarnow

are Polish political prisoners, for the most part young men accused of resistance against the regime. And it is Polish political prisoners who make up the vast majority of the prisoner population for more than a year now. They suffer great humiliation, terror, torment, torture, abuse by the SS on a daily basis, also hunger, overcrowding, illness and disease.

But the camp in Auschwitz has not yet become a death camp. And Jewish prisoners in particular are still in a relatively small number at this point.

Tell me how Operation Barbarossa changes everything and the gigantic German assault into the Soviet Union. Well, it has an immediate, almost immediate impact on concentration camps like Auschwitz in two ways. First of all, the Nazi regime

regime develops a program of systematic mass murder of those Soviet POWs who are seen as politically dangerous. And many thousands of them are taken to concentration camps, including to Auschwitz, and are executed there.

At the same time, the SS Himmler also develops a gigantic plan to force vast numbers of POWs from the Soviet Union into slave labor in concentration camps with the decided aim in Auschwitz to use them

to what the SS calls make the East German, in other words, to push forward the German settlement of the occupied territories. So Himmler has these visions of vast armies of Soviet POWs arriving in Auschwitz, and this leads then to the

plans for a new sub-camp across the train tracks on the other side of the main camp in Birkenau to be built and set up. The first of these Soviet slave laborers arrive in October 1941. There's about 10,000. But what was expected to be many, many, many thousands of prisoners never arrive.

And those 10,000 Soviet period obelisks who do arrive and have to start build this new camp in Birkenau, few of them survive for more than a few months. So out of the 10,000 or so, within six months, less than 1,000 are still alive and very few of them survive Auschwitz overall. But clearly, Barbarossa and the invasion of the Soviet Union has an immense effect in this way on the camp.

And also, more generally, it has a huge effect on radicalizing what the Nazis call the final solution. Right, because in those freshly occupied territories, there are vast populations of Jewish people.

Yes, so the regime sends in together with the Wehrmacht into the occupied Soviet Union's so-called task forces. There's also police units that operate there and may start the increasingly indiscriminate murder then of people.

Jewish men, women, and children. And this really is the point where Nazi policy towards Jews moves towards the systematic mass extermination of all European Jews during the Second World War. So this is a process in which policy radicalizes from summer 1941, from the invasion then to summer 1941.

1942. And a key stepping point in this process is the Wannsee Conference in January 1942, where leading German state and party officials come together in a Berlin suburb on the lake of Wannsee and effectively discuss ways of coordinating what they call the final solution and what they mean

by this is that the European Jews will be deported to the occupied East and either work to death there or murdered on arrival. And this very soon then also starts to change concentration camps above all the concentration camp of Auschwitz. You listen to Dan Snow's history. We're talking about Auschwitz, more coming up.

So it's after Wannsee that Auschwitz becomes Auschwitz, as we remember and understand it today.

Well, Auschwitz is always a site with multiple missions, with multiple functions. So you have Auschwitz being set up, as I said, as a camp to destroy the Polish political opposition. And throughout the entire life of Auschwitz, political prisoners are dragged here from Poland, but also from elsewhere in Europe. You also have other prisoner groups who are sent here, more than 20,000 prisoners.

Sinti and Roma. But from 1942, Auschwitz also becomes a death camp of the Holocaust.

Around about the time of the Wannsee Conference, so January 1942, there are only a few hundred prisoners who are registered as Jews in Auschwitz out of maybe about 10,000. But that changes very quickly because the SS selects Auschwitz as a destination point for deportations of Jews from Poland, but also from Europe. And Auschwitz is the only place

There are several Holocaust death camps. Auschwitz is the only one where the SS sends deportation trains from all over Europe. And this really transforms the camp in 1942. And we should maybe just briefly say here how the Holocaust changes in 1942, because the Holocaust was underway in the aftermath of the advancing units of the German army in Barbarossa. There would be groups of men who would

Kill Jews, bury them, shoot them, club them, burn them. What is the death camp solution? What are they trying to achieve there?

Well, effectively, what happens is that the SS starts to look for ways of mass murder, of mass extermination, which are less strenuous for the perpetrators. And one of the ways they come up with, one of the methods they develop is the mass murder of victims by gas. And

This had already been pioneered during the so-called euthanasia program in the early years of the war, where over 70,000 men and women who are classed as mentally ill and disabled were murdered in specially set up gassing facilities.

And the SS then moves towards, in 1941-42, the mass murder of Jews, the so-called Final Solution, what we now call the Holocaust, by setting up specially dedicated death camps.

Now, there are a number of these death camps which are being established in occupied Poland. There is Chelmno near the Lodz ghetto, and then there are three death camps in the so-called general government, of which Treblinka is the largest. These death camps...

only have a single function. That function is to murder as many Jews as quickly as possible. And this is what they do in 1942 in these camps. The SS murders perhaps around 1.5 million victims.

Auschwitz also becomes a death camp, but Auschwitz also always operates as a major concentration camp as well. And this is why you have the infamous selections at the platforms, at the ramps in Der Canal, because this is where the SS decides who will be murdered as supposedly unfit for work on arrival and who will be registered in the camp and work to death.

Yes, and this is why you meet survivors of Auschwitz. We tend not to meet survivors of Treblinka and Hilmner, as you say. The selection moment is such a profound one when you talk to the survivors. They're deliberately disorientated, exhausted, broken after long train journeys with no sanitary facilities and little food and little sleep and overcrowded. And suddenly, boom, into the daylight, you're on a platform and there are doctors, are they? And they're just saying, go right, go left. And that's the decision. Well, that was life or death.

Yes, and I mean, this is, like you said, a moment of complete confusion, of chaos, of fear and disorientation. A lot of these transports also arrive at night, so there's also the blinding spotlights. Nobody really knows where they are and they are rushed out of the train compartments.

often after days inside, not having eaten, not having drunk anything, the air in these compartments is rank with excrement, with sweat. It's hot. And suddenly they find themselves outside and do not know what is happening. They are ripped apart from their loved ones. And this is often the moment at the ramp

where they see their husbands, their wives, their children for the very last time. The SS, of course, tries to keep some control here and spreads lies that these prisoners will be taken to a work camp, that they are here as laborers, as workers.

And they're even told sometimes that families will meet again at weekends. And nobody suspects that the majority of those who arrive are going to be dead within a matter of hours. I'm sure like you, many, much of the research I've been able to do is the frustration that people feel among many emotions. At that exact moment, no one knew. So there was never an attempt to fight if they'd known that this was a moment of

of existential peril that they could at least have tried. It's the confusion, the sort of the bureaucracy of that moment that there is such a regret for so many people who saw their loved ones last at that exact second. That is a deliberate, of course, method which is used by the SS to disorientate those victims to

to try and prevent any uprisings, any resistance. Nonetheless, prisoners do try and escape. Prisoners do sometimes attack the SS. And there is an uprising of Jewish prisoners. And towards the end of

the existence of Auschwitz in autumn 1944. But the very method of the SS is to try to, again, kill as many victims as they can as quickly as possible. You mentioned those not selected for labour could be dead within hours. What just took me through the rest of that process? The elderly, the infirm, or the very young would be led into a different section of the camp towards the gas chambers.

Yes, early on in the existence of Birkenau, the platform where these trains arrive was some way outside of the camp itself. So what the SS often did is that they forced

Those Jews who were selected for the gas chambers without them knowing, onto trucks which were going at quite high speed from this platform towards the gas chambers in Birkenau. There are some testimonies by survivors who describe this moment. They describe how some assessment actually helped them

or children onto the trucks. And this led the others, those who looked on, to think that perhaps this camp wasn't going to be as bad as they thought. There was also a Red Cross vigil

which followed the last of these trucks. And again, that created the illusion that somehow this was a work camp, perhaps a camp where there would be some attention for the health of prisoners, for their well-being. What the new arrivals did not know was that inside of this Red Cross van,

Wann was the SS doctor who would supervise the gassing at the gas chambers, and indeed also the Cyclone B pellets, which the SS poured into the gas chambers, which then caused those inside to die an unimaginably dreadful death. So how many people do we think might have been gassed and their bodies incinerated at Auschwitz?

Well, the estimated number of Jewish victims of Auschwitz is about 1 million. About 1 million Jews died in Auschwitz, were murdered in Auschwitz. The vast majority of them in the gas chambers in Birkenau. And that makes Auschwitz the largest cemetery of the Holocaust. There's no other site there.

anywhere in Nazi-controlled Europe were no other single site where more Jews are murdered than in Auschwitz. Never does the SS murder more Jews in Auschwitz than in spring and summer 1944. What happens is that the Nazi regime occupies Hungary, its ally, and the Jews in Hungary had up to this point been mostly untouched by the Holocaust.

The SS comes into Hungary, the SS, killing and deportation experts, enter, led by Adolf Eichmann, and within a matter of weeks, deportation plans are made, and in mid-May, mass deportations from Hungary begin.

to Auschwitz-Birkenau begin. In the space of about two months from mid-May to mid-July, some 430,000 Jews are deported from Hungary to Birkenau, and the great majority of those are murdered on arrival. You've got to imagine that there are sometimes, that there are single days where five trains arrive from Hungary

This would be more than 15,000 Jews, the population of our town which arrives. Sometimes trains arrive at the same time. So one has to wait for hours until all those on the other train have been forced out and the great majority have been murdered.

So Auschwitz really in this period reaches the absolute height of destruction and mass murder to the extent that the SS is murdering more Jews than they can burn in the new crematoria which have been built.

by prisoners and private companies in 1942 and '43. So they also forced prisoners to throw bodies into ditches which are dug on the edges of Birkenau. And this leads to the camp, especially when there's a wind blowing from the west, the camp being enveloped in the stench of death, the smoke blowing over from the crematoria chimney.

and from these open pits. And that smoke really comes into every corner of the camp. It suffuses the clothes of prisoners. They breathe in that air. They gag, they cough, they vomit. And even the SS, much as they would like to, can't escape the stench of death which they've created. So the SS quarters in Birkenau are also full of this smoke.

And we talked about some of the headline numbers and the big picture. Take me through an individual story, someone that you've documented. Well, one of the...

prisoners I've been reading a lot about is a Polish Jew called Zaman Grudowski, who's deported with most of his family in December 1942 from one of the ghettos which the Nazis set up and are now clearing as they are emptying the ghettos and merging the great majority of Jews inside.

Gradovsky arrives in Birkenau, I think on the 8th of December 1942. Most of those on board of the train with him are

murdered on arrival. This includes his wife, his mother, I think two of his sisters. Gorodovsky himself is amongst the smaller number of Jews who are selected by the SS for slave labor, and he is put into what is called the Sonderkommando, and these are the prisoners who are forced by the SS to

to assist in the mass murder of others, in other words, those who have to work at the gas chambers and at the crematoria, these pits. Gradovsky, before the deportation, had been a clerk in a shop in an office, but his real ambition was to write. And he brings what he has learned about writing and his literary sensibilities back

to writing about the Holocaust, writing under the shadow of the crematoria chimney. And what he wants to do is leave some kind of testament there

for future generations to help them, he says, form an image of this hell in Birkenau Auschwitz. So Grudowski is one of a number of men in the Sonderkommando who write about the experiences, write about the daily carnage at the gas chambers, at the crematoria, write about their own emotions.

feelings as they see these processions of the doomed enter the gas chambers. And some of these notes are buried on the grounds of the crematoria, and a few of them have been found after the war. And this includes manuscripts written by Grudowski. So they survive, and they are amongst the most invaluable documents which we have about

about the Holocaust. Gradovsky himself does not survive. He perishes during the Sonderkommando uprising in the autumn of 1944. If you could quickly give me a praise of that, because it's an extraordinary moment. So the SS forces hundreds of prisoners into the Sonderkommando, and these prisoners know that the SS will sooner or later come for them.

because they know more about the perpetrators and about mass extermination in Auschwitz than any other inmates. And the danger to the prisoners' lives becomes greater and greater as the Red Army advances towards Auschwitz. And the closer the Red Army comes, the more these prisoners fear that the SS will kill them.

So there are a number of plans which they make for a possible mass uprising and mass escape.

They have to be postponed several times until on the 7th of October 1944, the uprising does break out. And it's really two separate uprisings, if you will. The SS appears around lunchtime at one of the crematoria, this is crematorium four, to lead away about 300 men from the Sonderkommando. The SS claims that they will be taken to another camp, but

But all of these men know that this is camouflage, this is a lie, and they will be murdered. So several of these men do not come forward and then start to attack the SS with sticks, with stones, with whatever they can find. The SS is initially

and beaten back. Several of those men are injured, but reinforcements soon appear and the vast majority of the men at crematorium four are executed. Not before, however, they manage to

burn part of the crematorium fall. When prisoners at crematorium two, which is a few hundred yards away, see smoke rising, an uprising breaks out here as well. And the prisoners at crematorium two manage to cut through the fence

And up to 100 of them managed to escape from the grounds of Birkenau. But none of them survived. The SS sends reinforcements to hunt them down. The men from the Sonderkommando stood no chance. They were barely armed. They tried to rise up in broad daylight.

They didn't have a clear plan and could not really develop a clear plan. And they were up against heavily armed SS men who could draw on reinforcements and, as I say, kill the great majority of the Sonderkommando within a few hours. So Gorovsky is killed in that, but thankfully some of his writing survives.

What was known outside the camps? What was known in Moscow, in London, in Washington about Auschwitz?

Well, the knowledge about Auschwitz grows and grows as the war progresses. There are secret notes and information which arrives in the West from the Polish underground, which partly draws on information which comes from inside the camp. There are prisoners who escape, who write reports, which then circulate in the West

The British also decrypt SS telecommunications and gain more insights into what is happening inside the camps in this way. In 1944, as the Allies get closer, the camps or camps like Auschwitz are also in reach of Allied airplanes. So there are aerial photographs of the camp, sometimes extremely detailed photographs. I mean, if you look at them, you can see

see tracks of prisoners marching. You can see smoke coming from these pits where Jewish victims are being burned. So all of this information together does over time

create an increasingly clear picture of what is happening in Auschwitz-Birkenau. More, of course, is known in the immediate vicinity of Auschwitz. I mean, local Germans who move into this area, civilian workers who work for German industry like IG Farben, which sets up a huge factory drawing in part on forced labor, slave labor from Auschwitz,

These officials, these workers who often live there with their families, of course, also hear rumors. And sometimes it is more than rumors. There is a memoir, an unpublished memoir by a female German teacher who moves to Auschwitz to teach German.

German kids in what is to become a German city in the East. And she describes how she comes home one time from school and finds that her desk is covered in some kind of fine dust, which has flown in through the windows. And her landlady tells her that

This is human ash which has blown over from the concentration camp. So there is even more known about Auschwitz in the immediate vicinity. And those local Germans who lived here had a general idea, at least, of what was going on inside the camp. You listen to Dan Snow's history. We're talking about Auschwitz. More coming up.

Was it too difficult to intervene? I mean, Churchill talks about his decision not to just bomb the camp. How has the debate sort of developed since the war on what the Allies could or could not have done earlier?

I think by summer 1944 or so, Birkenau was certainly in reach of allied planes. And there are voices in the US of Jewish organizations who try to push the allies or persuade the allies into bombing the train tracks. In the end, these calls are not heeded because the primary focus of the military is on

winning the war. That incidentally does not mean that no bombs ever fall on Auschwitz. There are several raids by US bombers, but they do not target the facilities, the infrastructure of the Holocaust. They target the huge IG Farm factory in

in Monowitz, where the Germans want to produce synthetic fuel and rubber. And this is seen as a prime target for the Allies. So there are bombing raids, big bombing raids in August and then September 1944, where some stray bombs fall on parts of the

camp itself and kill a number of prisoners. Had some of these bombs strayed just a little bit further, the casualties would have been much, much, much higher. What that shows, of course, is that in an age where you do not have precision bombing, the risks for the prisoner population also were incredibly high.

In the end, Auschwitz would be liberated by the advancing Red Army, but there was more horrors in store for the prisoner population there, even after the crematoria were turned off, weren't there? I mean, as the Soviets approached, what happened to the inmates? Well, for the prisoners, this is a time of almost unbearable tension because the closer the Allies were,

come the closer the Soviet army moves towards Auschwitz and prisoners know at least broadly about what is happening. They hear rumors. Some prisoners are able to look at Nazi newspapers lying around in the camps. Some overhear conversations by Zeskards or they listen in to German radio. So there is general knowledge of how the front is moving. And the closer the Red Army comes, the more nervous the prisoners get.

become because they don't know what will happen. Are they going to be liberated in the camps? Is the SS going to kill them all? There are rumors that the SS is going to murder all the prisoners. Or is the SS going to move all of them away? None of this is clear. At the same time,

The SS is beginning to start thinking and planning and then implementing the evacuation of Auschwitz. Auschwitz is the biggest SS camp and the SS is determined that nothing of value, nothing that could be of use is going to be left behind. So they start forcing prisoners to dismantle buildings,

to destroy buildings. Right at the end, just before the Soviets arrive, they burn the huge warehouses where the remaining belongings of murdered Jews are stored.

Documents are burned. There's a whole bonfire of evidence. The great majority of prisoner photographs of mugshots are burned. This goes on for weeks in advance of the actual liberation. The SS also forces prisoners.

prisoners from the Sonderkommando to dig up some of these pits filled with ashes and other human remains, to scatter them in a nearby river and thus somehow try to cover up the evidence of mass murder. The SS also tries to salvage whatever it can still find. SS men officially cannot say that the wall is going to be lost and they have to at least publicly

the belief that somehow Germany is going to turn around the war, so anything that could still be of use is being shipped, or the SS tries to ship it to other camps and other sites. This includes building materials, it includes clothing, it includes the X-ray machine that had been used in sterilization experiments, and equipment.

It includes parts of the crematorium and the gas chamber in Birkenau. So some parts of these are dismantled as prisoners do this. They find valuables which the doomed had hidden in the gas chambers just before the SS through the Cyclone B pellets inside. And these parts then of the gas chambers and crematorium are packed up and shipped back

to a secret site near the Mauthausen concentration camp, and the aim is to rebuild at least, I think, two of those crematoria here. So goods are shipped out, buildings are destroyed or dismantled, and prisoners are also taken out of the camp, sent elsewhere. And this already starts in the second half of 1944.

Tens of thousands of Auschwitz prisoners are moved out in the second half of 1944, in autumn 1944. One of these is Anne Frank. She'd been deported with her family on the last major deportation train from the Netherlands to Auschwitz.

Birkenau in September 1944 and is then sent to Bergen-Belsen on these trains going out of Birkenau in November 1944. You've got to imagine that for the greatest part at least of the life of Birkenau, this is a place where prisoners are arriving and never leave.

And now in the second half of 1944, tens of thousands of prisoners are moved out of Birkenau to other concentration camps. And the climax of this then comes in January 1945. The Soviet troops are only two

a couple of weeks away from arriving in Auschwitz. And in mid-January '45, the SS begins to move the great majority of prisoners outside, forces them on death marches, on seemingly endless marches through the frozen fields and streets of occupied Poland.

And thousands of prisoners die during these marches, either from the cold, from hunger, from disease. Anybody who cannot keep up with a column is shot by the SS and dumped on the side of the road. Those who survive these endless marches are then often forced into open freight trains and transported through the wintry landscape of what is left of Nazi Germany.

into remaining concentration camps like Buchenwald, like Mauthausen, like Ravensbrück. What does Auschwitz look like when the Soviets capture it, when the Soviets liberate it in late January 1945? Nothing like it would have done just a few months earlier. As I said, a lot of the infrastructure of the camp has been destroyed or dismantled. And

There's only a very small proportion of prisoners left as well. In summer 1944, there are more than 100,000 prisoners in the Auschwitz complex. When the Soviet troops arrive on the 27th of January 1945, less than 10,000 survivors are still there.

in Auschwitz. And a number of them are liberated only to then die within the first days or weeks after. I recently found or looked at a ledger

kept of surviving prisoners at the time, you have their names there and their dates of birth, and often you also have their date of death in there. It is heartbreaking to see that they only survived the SS and the camps for a few days or a few weeks at best.

Yes, and sometimes they ate food that their system was incapable of digesting at that point, such as their state of weariness and degeneration, and that food would kill them. The stories I get told by the survivors, that's some of the most tragic episodes, chapters of the stories you're told, aren't they?

Yes, and I think it's worth bearing this in mind. I mean, you know, sometimes there is a temptation maybe to see this as some kind of happy end to a terrible story. And it is not that. The survivors, even those few survivors,

Overall, prisoners who survive, of course, carry the trauma, the marks of the camp with them for the rest of their lives. Those who survive are far more likely to survive after months and months of suffering in other camps than in Auschwitz itself. More Auschwitz prisoners survive Auschwitz elsewhere. In other words, the end of Auschwitz isn't the end of suffering and it isn't the end of the concentration camps.

In early April 1945, you still have more than 500,000 prisoners in SS concentration camps and the remaining camps like Dachau, like Buchenwald, like Mauthausen. And a good number of them are survivors of Auschwitz.

They survived the camp, they survived the death marches and the transports, and very often they then perished in these remaining camps. Elie Wiesel writes about the death of his father, Schlomo, in Buchenwald, and only days after they made it to Buchenwald following the death march and the train transport.

So this isn't a story that somehow ends with the liberation of Auschwitz. It is really only the victory of the Allies and the total defeat of Germany that puts an end to the killings and the camps and the suffering.

As you lay out in your excellent prize-winning book, KL, A History of the Nazi Concentration Camps. Nicholas Wachsmann, thank you very much indeed for coming on the podcast on this important anniversary. Thanks so much, Dan. Well, thank you very much for listening to that podcast, folks. Thank you very much in particular to my guest, Nicholas Wachsmann. I hope this episode has helped you understand a little bit better how these atrocities were carried out.

But one thing that just remains an enduring mystery is how ordinary people could have taken part in such horror, knowing full well what was happening. These are the people that oversaw and facilitated and participated and planned the murder of millions of people. Men and women who lived otherwise ordinary lives, whose existence at that point had been unremarkable. People like you and me.

In the podcast he's listened to, you heard mention of Rudolf Hus, who was the commandant of Auschwitz. He oversaw the deaths of over three million people at the Nazi killing complex. It's been calculated that he is, as a result, one of the most, if not the most prolific mass murderer in human history. In our episode on Friday, we will be hearing his story. And we'll learn about the concept, the idea, articulated by the philosopher Hannah Arendt,

We'll talk about the banality of evil. As you listen to this, I am in Poland for Holocaust Memorial Day, visiting Auschwitz on the day, 80 years on, on which it was liberated by the Red Army. And I'm also going to be getting special access to the house where Hus lived, where he enjoyed what was described as idyllic family life with his children, his wife, sprawling gardens. He read to his kids. They ate well. It was a happy time for them. Just over the wall,

from Auschwitz, from the camp where he oversaw the gassing of hundreds of thousands of people. And then after a day's work he went home for dinner with his wife and kids. This is the first time visitors are allowed into the house which is being opened by the counter-extremism project and they've just bought the property and they'll be turning it into a space for exhibitions about fighting extremism. But before they make any changes History Hit has been invited to see the house which is

Remarkably, as you'll hear, it's still very much as it was when Huss and his family lived there. There are artefacts from the Holocaust period found in hidden spaces in the house just weeks ago. So join me on Friday to learn more about Huss and his house, where evil resided. But it looked like any other happy family. And we're also going to learn a little bit about what's being done to fight extremism in the present day. Just hit follow in your podcast player to get Friday's episode. See you then.

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